Eating in the Dark
We’re all familiar with the folk wisdom concerning blind folks: their sense of hearing allegedly becomes more acute. If this is true, maybe the blind are compelled to develop their remaining senses more completely; perhaps, given the vast amount of sensory data the brain can handle, what normally would have been handled by the optical centers is channeled to auditory centers.
Any way, my question: do you taste food more acutely if you eat in low light conditions or even total darkness?
We all appreciate a good-looking meal, of course, but it seems there may be some advantage in reducing optical stimuli so as to enhance olfactory and taste perceptions.
I feel there is some recognition of this physiological dynamic when people taste something really good, and they close their eyes to concentrate on the taste by shutting out the sight. Think of Rachel Ray.
I remember when I was a kid, I read in
L’Entranger that you could not enjoy a cigarette in the dark. At the time, this seemed true, because to savor the toxic pleasure of smoking you really need to see blue, carcinogenous clouds billowing out of your piehole. With food, it doesn’t seem to work that way – what you don’t see may actually taste better.
Contrariwise, eating in bright light, with maximum visual clarity, seems to diminish the flavor of food. Imagine the times you’ve been sitting on the beach or at a picnic table in the bright sunlight, visibility 100% -- did the food taste as good as it should? It doesn’t for me. I prefer the shade. It tastes better.
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins