Do you not like Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cabbage or other vegetables and are you sometimes called a poser? American scientists claim that the appetite for vegetables is due to this…
Research from the University of Kentucky shows that genes determine whether some vegetables taste bitter to humans. One may experience a more bitter taste than the other. The research was presented at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Philadelphia and is linked to an earlier study showing that a gene causes people to like or dislike vegetables.
Read also: 'Itching in your mouth from vegetables and fruit'
A person is born with two taste genes. The most common taste gene is the AVI genotype. This gene ensures that you can taste bitterness. People who inherit two types of AVI are not sensitive to bitter tastes. There are also people who have inherited one AVI gene and one PAV gene. They are sensitive to bitter tastes. People with two types of PAV genes are hypersensitive to bitter food and are also called super tasters. People who contain two types of this gene cannot tolerate vegetables like Brussels sprouts.
To still get vegetables, you can cook the vegetables. This can reduce the bitterness. Your taste buds also become less sensitive as you get older. Did you not like Brussels sprouts as a child? Please try again.
Can't get a piece of green into your children? Perhaps these tips will help:
Source:hln.be