Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
Why does chocolate feel so good? Well, it’s all down to how it’s lubricated by fat and saliva, a team of engineers has revealed. The researchers studied the processes in play when chocolate melts in the mouth, changing from a solid to a smooth, irresistible emulsion. The team found it is the fat on the surface of chocolate — not inside it — that gives it its sublime mouthfeel. Accordingly, it should be possible to make a layered, lower-fat chocolate that tastes just as delicious, they said.
Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
Paper author and food scientist Professor Anwesha Sarkar of the University of Leeds said: “Lubrication science gives mechanistic insights into how food actually feels in the mouth. You can use that knowledge to design food with better taste, texture or health benefits.
Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
“If a chocolate has 5 percent fat or 50 percent fat it will still form droplets in the mouth and that gives you the chocolate sensation.
Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
However, it is the location of the fat in the make-up of the chocolate which matters in each stage of the lubrication, and that has been rarely researched.
Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
“We are showing that the fat layer needs to be on the outer layer of the chocolate — this matters the most — followed by effective coating of the cocoa particles by fat, these help to make chocolate feel so good.”
Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
In their study, Prof. Sarkar and her colleagues did not investigate the question of how chocolate tastes — but instead focussed on its feel and texture.
Lubrication Is What Makes Chocolate Feel So Good, Experts Find | Science | News
Their tests of a luxury brand of dark chocolate were undertaken on an “artificial tongue”, using analytical and imaging methods from a field of engineering known as tribology.
Tribology is the science of interacting surfaces in relative motion — and includes the study of both friction and lubrication. When it comes to eating chocolate, tribological analysis considers both the liquids from the chocolate and the saliva produced in the mouth.
According to the researchers, when chocolate comes into contact with the tongue, it releases a fatty film that coats the surface of the mouth, making the treat feel smooth.
After this, it is the release of solid cocoa particles that become important in terms of the chocolate’s tactile sensation — not…