Why Airplane Food Tastes So Bad? Turns Out It May Not Be The Airline’s Fault Ever Wondered

Admin 22-Mar-2016 11:56:27 Inothernews

 Why Airplane Food Tastes So Bad? Turns Out It May Not Be The Airline’s Fault Ever Wondered


This is the ONE thing that is so uniform across countries, races, religion and every kind of (other categories of) people, SO uniform that this question unites us all - Why does airplane food taste so(ooooo) bad? What better to do than eat-and-read or eat-and-watch-a-movie or eat-and-sleep in an airplane that you're stuck in for hours? The food almost feels like they sucked the moisture and taste right out of it - and, if we were to taste disappointment, it would taste exactly like it. *Aargh* Who should we blame? Turns out, our taste buds are the real culprits. “At 35,000 feet, the first thing that goes is your sense of taste. The quality of the food and its ingredients isn't to blame, it's the way you experience it." explained Grant Mickels, the executive chef for the culinary development of Lufthansa's LSG Sky Chefs. Now we know a Lufthansa chef giving a reason that blames our taste buds (of ALL things) multiplies our doubts and is REALLY suspicious. Lame blame, right? But relax your trust issues, looks like it has been tested and proven. (Sorry, Lufthansa guy) The dish that tastes sumptuous in a fine-dining restaurant is bound to taste dull (or like disappointment, as already discussed) up in the air. It's even been tested: The Fraunhofer Institute, a research organization based in Germany, did a study on why a dish that would be delicious in a fine dining restaurant could be "so dull in the air."



It also doesn't help that the decreased humidity in the cabin dries out your nose and dulls the olfactory (odour) sensors essential for tasting the flavor of an ingredient or dish.

At about 30,000 feet, humidity is less than 12%, which is drier than most deserts. It takes a toll on our sense of smell, and since for up to 80% of what people think is taste, is in fact smell, it contributes to the dull tasting food all the more.

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Another contributing factor to the food that tastes like disappointment (sorry, can't get over it) may be the noise of the aircraft.

In a study published this past June in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, researchers found "that individuals subjected to the simulated noise of an aircraft cabin had a tougher time recognizing ‘sweet’ flavors than individuals trying the same flavors in otherwise normal conditions".

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