Engineering a mouthful
Universiteit
van Amsterdam
We like some foods, and dislike others. Of course, the way food tastes is important, but mouthfeel, and even the sound that food makes when we bite it, also determine whether we enjoy the eating experience.
Is it possible to design edible materials that optimize this enjoyment? Physicists and food researchers show that indeed it is.
In research that was published in Soft Matter this week, researchers from the University of Amsterdam, Delft University, and Unilever, demonstrate that the mouthfeel of an edible substance can be designed, just like properties of many other materials can.
That is: they create metamaterials,
materials that are not found in nature but that are carefully constructed in
the lab. Their building material of choice is not wood, concrete or glass --
they build their materials from chocolate.
Designing mouthfeel
As both professional and amateur bakers know very well, chocolate is not an easy material to work with. Simply heating it up and cooling it down can turn soft chocolate into much more brittle tempered chocolate, or vice versa. Therefore, the first challenge for the researchers was to get their building material under control.
They did this by very carefully heating it up, adding some cold
chocolate, cooling it down again… and then putting it in a 3D printer. This
allowed them to print essentially any shape of chocolate material they wanted,
while guaranteeing that the base material always had the same properties.
The first shape of edible material that the scientists experimented with was an S-shaped chocolate with many twists. The goal was to test how this material would break and how that breaking would be experienced in the mouth. Not surprisingly, the breaking properties depended strongly on the direction of 'biting'.
When the chocolate was pressed from above, many different cracks
occurred one after another, but when pressed in the direction perpendicular to
the picture, usually only a single crack occurred. This was tested
mechanically, as in the picture linked to below, but also by feeding the
chocolates to a panel of 10 -- very willing -- test persons. Both the
mechanical tests and the test panel confirmed moreover that the ease of bite
was better in the direction shown in link to the picture below.
The
more cracks, the better
Most
people enjoy the experience of food crackling down in their mouths -- the more
cracks, the better. Having shown that such an experience can be designed, the
researchers now tried some different structures, searching for a structure
where the number of cracks can be 'programmed' into the material.
It turned out that spiral-shaped chocolate metamaterials like the ones displayed above have quite interesting and tunable properties.
Not only does the number
of windings directly control the number of cracks when the material is pressed
mechanically; the test panel could also clearly distinguish between less and
more cracks when eating the chocolates. Moreover, sound recordings showed that
the sound the chocolates makes when being bitten reflects the number of cracks,
adding to an enjoyable eating experience.
The
perfect piece of chocolate
The
final question was of course: is designing an enjoyable eating experience a
matter of trial and error, or can nice edible materials actually be designed
and fine-tuned before creating them? The researchers found that with a
well-chosen mathematical model, they can indeed optimize certain shapes of
chocolates with respect to, for example, their resistance to break when bitten
from certain directions.
The design of edible metamaterials had not been studied before. The new research opens the door to ways to design foods that are enjoyable to eat -- and more generally, to design materials that optimize the interaction between humans and matter.