Sweet or Salty: What Your Food Preferences Say about You

Sweet or salty
Sweet or salty? See more candy pictures.
Kathrin Ziegler/Taxi/Getty Images

Sugar and salt take a rap today because they're so easy to overindulge in. But before high fructose corn syrup and deep-fried onion rings, a taste for sweet and salty foods identified something as nourishing and safe to eat, a kind of a genetically programmed survival guide.

Why do some people relish one taste over the other? Again, it's heredity: Except for identical twins, everyone inherits a unique combination of genes that determine taste sensitivity. Genes also determine the number of taste buds you have. Environment plays a role, too.

Advertisement

For starters, let's look at how nature cultivates a sweet tooth.

Sweet Indulgence

Some people are just born with a sweet tooth.
Some people are just born with a sweet tooth.
Bambu Production/The Image Bank/Getty Images

Sweet fiends were born that way: A craving for sweets leads infants to important, high-energy foods. Perception of sweetness has been directly linked to a specific DNA fragment in taste receptor cells, which are found in the intestines as well as the tongue. Mice that were genetically engineered to have "human" taste buds, for instance, showed a human weakness for sweets.

However, people with a high sugar threshold may actually have a low sensitivity to sweetness. These "nontasters" may have only one-third as many taste buds as "supertasters," meaning they need more sugar in foods to get the same satisfaction.

Advertisement

Salty Characters

If you crave salt, you may simply have a sodium deficiency.
If you crave salt, you may simply have a sodium deficiency.
David Roth/Digital Vision/Getty Images

Even ants seem to know that salt is essential for life. In one study, ants in environments where salt is less abundant preferred it to sugar when given the choice.

As for people, salt is well-known for improving other tastes and masking bitterness. Because they're more sensitive to all tastes, including bad ones, supertasters may also be salt cravers.

Advertisement

Then again, salt lovers, you may be making up for lost time -- or sodium. Some studies suggest that premature infants who had low sodium levels at birth grow up to be salt-seeking adults.

Environmental Awareness

What you ate when you were younger probably influenced what you like.
What you ate when you were younger probably influenced what you like.
Bambu Productions/Taxi/Getty Images

You know the phrase "You are what you eat"? You're probably what your mother ate, too. A mother's diet while pregnant or breastfeeding can sway an infant toward developing a taste for sweet or salty foods.

Later, exposure to different foods can turn your tastes. Tastes associated with pleasant experiences are more likely to become favorites. Food cravings and choices in comfort food, for instance, can come from emotional rather than physical needs. Take chocolate: It does contain tryptophan, the amino acid needed to produce the mood-lifting chemical serotonin. But soybeans contain much more tryptophan -- and when did you last hear, "I need tofu right now"?

Advertisement

Lots More Information

Related Articles

Sources

  • Mennella, Julia A., and Gary K. Beauchamp. "Understanding the Origin of Taste Preferences." Chemical Senses. Oxford University Press: 2005. (July 29, 2010) http://chemse.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/30/suppl_1/i242
  • Msnbc.com "Born with a taste for salt?" Jan. 29, 2007. (Aug. 6, 2010) http://www.msnbc.com/id/16877100/
  • National Institutes of Health. "How Sensitive to Sweet Are You?" July 17, 2009. (Aug. 3, 2010) http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/news/releases/09/07_17_09.htm
  • Neiman, Peter. "Taste Preferences." HealthyKids. (Aug. 4, 2010) http://www.healthykids.ca/secure/articles/taste-preferences.html
  • Pressman, Peter, and Roger Clemons. "Are food cravings the body's way of telling us that we are lacking certain nutrients?" Scientific American. May 23, 2005. (Aug. 5, 2010)http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=are-food-cravings-the-bod
  • Sanders, Robert. "Inland ants prefer salty snacks to sweet." UC Berkley News. Oct. 27, 2008. (Aug. 4, 2010) http://Berkley.edu/news/media/releases/2008/10/27_salt.shtml

Advertisement

Loading...