Search articles from thousands of Examiners
Write for us
Minneapolis Restaurants Baltimore Dining Examiner
Baltimore Dining Examiner

Tainted Tongue

June 16, 2:31 PMBaltimore Dining ExaminerDara Bunjon
3 comments Print Email RSS Subscribe

Subscribe


Get alerts when there is a new article from the Baltimore Dining Examiner. Read Examiner.com's terms of use.
Email Address


  Include other special offers from Examiner.com
Terms of Use

It was just less than 2 weeks ago I got an e-mail from Roopa K., writer of Raspberry and Eggplant Blog inviting Baltimore’s food bloggers to a gathering where our taste receptors on our tongues will be altered.
 
The invitation “ Have you heard of miracle fruit?  (If so, feel free to skip ahead.)  Miracle fruit is an amazing little berry-like fruit that contains a protein called miraculin.  Miraculin alters your taste buds' perception of foods such that any sour or bitter foods you eat taste sweet; the effect of each berry lasts anywhere from 20-60 minutes.  After you eat one, lemons taste like lemonade; goat cheese tastes like cheesecake, Guinness tastes like chocolate, and vinegar tastes pleasant.  It has been written about in a number of publications and on many blogs, and, most recently, the New York Times ran an article on it in Wednesday's dining section - take a look at it for more info on a recent miracle fruit party in NY.” 
 
I, in fact, had read the story in the Times and was right there for the gathering just this past Friday night. Meghan, writer of Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme was co-hosting and was on WYPR discussing the Miracle Fruit  
 
The Experiment:
 

There were a number of us bloggers gathered at Roopa’s Mt. Vernon apartment. She spent a great deal of time putting together food items to taste; plates of citrus, pickles, cheeses, vinegars, hot sauces, beer, unsweetened tea – one blogger brought a can of artichoke soda that was already sweet so when tasted the cloying sweet was too much.
 
We were to coat our tongues for about 30 seconds with the berry and I actually felt a tingle or numbing on the tip of the tongue. Most of us went immediately for the lemon and grapefruit which rather than being sour were a sweet tart. The vinegars were sweet, the hot sauce if it was sweeter I didn’t notice because the heat took over. The pickled items took on the “sweet bread & butter pickle” flavor profile.
                            
I squeezed straight lemon juice in water and it tasted like lemonade and the ice tea, unsweetened tasted bitter but once I squeezed citrus in the tea it tasted sweet. So for me, it didn’t alter bitter it only altered the tart items. I could munch on a fresh piece of rhubarb with no wincing.
 
The Bloggers:
 
Those bloggers who have posted their Miracle Berry story are linked to their name, the others are links to their sites.
       
 

 

Along with our food bloggers from Baltimore, Rob Kasper of the Sunpapers attended as well.
 
In conclusion:
 
My tongue was challenged, tainted and taunted - it has fully recovered.
 
 

Comments

Name:


Comments:
characters left

NOTE: Do Not Alter These Fields:

Holiday Guide
Examiners spread the seasonal cheer with the Examiner.com Holiday Guide.

Recent Articles

Friday, December 4, 2009
As a food blogger it is tendency to make individual posts about these stories but when time is tight, both literally and figuratively, you get my …
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
December 1st to December 6th is National Cookie Cutter Week – who knew? And December 4th is National Cookie Day, again, who knew? Now you do! …

Things to see and do

George Winston
20 Dec 2009 - 7 pm
Orchestra Hall
More music »
Holiday Lights Tours
Mall of America

Dara's NPR Radio Interview on YUM Tasty Recipes from Culinary Greats

My Cookbook: Yum - Tasty Recipes from Culinary Greats - Where to Purchase

Help the Hungry - Cure Empty Plates!

Where You Can Find Dining Dish (aka Dara Bunjon)