Taste of Sunlight

 In Preventive Medicine Column

 

Why Some Foods Taste Good

Can a leaf taste sunlight? I guess: no. I suspect plants cannot taste sunlight because there is no value for them in doing so. By value, I mean the only truly universal currency: survival. Taste serves survival.

There has been no value for plants in tasting sunlight because there has been no competition for their culinary inclinations. The only source of daily sustenance close enough to matter to plants on this planet is the one sun resident in our solar system. All plants dine accordingly.

In contrast, I suspect roots can “taste” soil. I don’t mean the perception of taste, per se, although for all I know, it could be exactly that. From the perspective of survival, the distinction is inconsequential. Taste is really just the name for a neurosensory perception that is all about differentiation. Plants can certainly differentiate among rich and poor soil, loam and clay, acidic or alkaline. They can tell whether they are happy and inclined to thrive rooted as they are, or otherwise. For all intents and purposes, that’s…taste.

With this in mind, why do some foods taste “good” to us? You may think that good taste is the intrinsic property of certain foods. But it is no such thing. It is the translation of a chemical signal, or a complex array of such signals, to receptors on your tongue (clustered, famously in “buds,” which are further clustered into papillae), which in turn convey the message to specific circuitry in the brain in the language of neurochemistry. Good taste is not a property of food; it is a calculation by our brains. Like all calculations, it is informed by data. In biological systems, the data in question always relate to survival.

In other words, the job of taste buds is not about good, or bad; pleasure, or displeasure. It is about differentiating helpful from harmful, in the service of survival. As we evolved, there came a juncture when we acquired food choices. Choice brought the advantage of surviving on Y when the environment failed to offer X. But it was, as well, rife with the peril of consuming Z, toxic to our progenitors.

There would obviously be an enormous survival advantage in distinguishing immediately between Y and Z, and “liking” the former while “disliking” the latter. That capacity would in turn derive from some evolutionary advance, the product of a randomly beneficial mutation. The genes of those favored to survive are the genes that get passed along, so here we all are- the distant daughters and sons of artful Y/Z differentiators. Replicate that proposition in a panoply of nuance over many ages, and you arrive at the exquisite subtleties of taste we enjoy today.

But there’s the rub. We are adapted to like what was advantageous at the time we adapted to like it. Most of that action, although not all, is of Stone Age vintage.

The result is that we are all programmed to like sweet, salty, creamy, savory, and umami not because they are intrinsically “tasty,” but because they are how we perceive properties of the foods that fostered our survival when the going was tough. If, for instance, we like meat, it by no means indicates that the kind of meat we eat today- bacon over burgers- is good for us. Rather, it means that wild, lean, Paleolithic meat was a boon to the subsistence of our struggling, Stone Age forebears.

We still like all the same taste sensations now, when such properties do not merely abound in the modern food supply, but are willfully mingled and manipulated to maximize our eating for the profit of others.

That taste buds are not organs of pleasure, but survival, and that their messages are substantially obsolete in a modern world of multicolored marshmallows as part of the prevailing breakfast could be a sad story that ends there. It could be a story that ends with the popular dictum: if it tastes good, it’s bad for you; if it’s good for you, it tastes bad. But it’s not. The story continues with another, much happier chapter, replete with opportunity.

Unlike genes we either have or have not, the epigenome remains forever responsive to the environment. Our taste preferences begin to take shape in utero, or even before, and are further cultivated by flavors transmitted through breast milk. But we may then take matters into our own hands, and cultivate a preference for foods that truly nourish us, those that do so without ravaging the planet. We can love foods that love us back. It is a choice.

Plants consume sunlight without tasting it, because there is no survival advantage in that perception. Our own taste buds evolved to serve our survival, not to establish immutable truths about what foods are “good.” If we wish to thrive in the modern world, we have decisions to make. Decisions that take their place among the very root determinants of the quality, and likely length, of our lives.

-fin Dr. David L. Katz;www.davidkatzmd.com; author, Disease Proof; founder, True Health Initiative

Dr. David L. Katz
DAVID L. KATZ MD, MPH, FACPM, FACP, FACLM, is the founding director (1998) of Yale University's Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, and current President of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine. He earned his BA degree from Dartmouth College (1984); his MD from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine (1988); and his MPH from the Yale University School of Public Health (1993). He completed sequential residency training in Internal Medicine, and Preventive Medicine/Public Health. He is a two-time diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine, and a board-certified specialist in Preventive Medicine/Public Health. He has received two Honorary Doctorates. Dr. Katz has published roughly 200 scientific articles and textbook chapters, and 15 books to date, including multiple editions of leading textbooks in both Preventive Medicine, and nutrition. Recognized globally for expertise in nutrition, weight management and the prevention of chronic disease, he has a social media following of well over half a million. In 2015, Dr. Katz established the True Health Initiative to help convert what we know about lifestyle as medicine into what we do about it, in the service of adding years to lives and life to years around the globe.
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