Friday, September 14, 2012

Love To Hate Cilantro? It's In Your Genes And Maybe, In Your Head

The very sight of this lacy, green herb can cause some people to scream. The great cilantro debate heats up as scientists start pinpointing cilantrophobe genes.

The very sight of this lacy, green herb can cause some people to scream. The great cilantro debate heats up as scientists start pinpointing cilantrophobe genes.

The very sight of this lacy, green herb can cause some people to scream. The great cilantro debate heats up as scientists start pinpointing cilantrophobe genes.

There's no question that cilantro is a polarizing herb. Some of us heap it onto salsas and soups with gusto while others avoid cilantro because it smells like soap and tastes like crushed bugs.

Some people despise the lacy green herb so much that there's even an I Hate Cilantro website. There, cilantrophobes post haikus expressing their passionate anger and disgust at the leafy green: "Such acrid debris! This passes as seasoning? Socrates' hemlock!" writes user Dubhloaich.

But what separates the cilantro lovers from the haters? Is it hard-wired in our genes, as Harold McGee suggested a few years ago in the New York Times, or can we learn to enjoy cilantro if we associate its flavor with fresh fish tacos or bowls of spicy pho? It's probably not so simple.

Two studies published this week link the aversion for cilantro with specific genes involved in taste and smell. But, just like the flavors of the herb itself, the findings are nuanced: The genes appear to influence our opinion of cilantro but probably not as much as we initially thought.

Geneticists at 23andMe in California asked about 25,000 people whether they like cilantro or think it smells soapy. When they searched the people's DNA for regions that correlate with a distaste for the herb, a single spot jumped out. And, it sits right next to a cluster of odor-detecting genes, including one that is known to specifically recognize the soapy aromas in cilantro's bouquet. (They'll analyze your genome, too, for $299.)

The authors propose that this odor gene contributes to a person's dislike for cilantro because it increases the herb's soapy smell.

But, "it didn't make a huge a difference in cilantro preference from person to person," Nicholas Eriksson, the lead author on the study, tells The Salt. In fact, their results suggest that a hatred for cilantro has only a small underlying genetic component. He and his team just published their findings on the arXiv.org.

The second study, which was published in the journal Chemical Senses, takes a similar approach. Geneticists from the Monell Chemical Senses Center asked 527 twins whether they thought fresh, chopped cilantro tastes pleasant and smells good.

The scientists pinpointed three more genes that influence our perception of cilantro: Two of the genes are involved with tasting bitter foods and one gene detects pungent compounds, like those in wasabi.

Overall, Eriksson says these studies demonstrate that DNA does shape our opinion of cilantro, but probably not enough that we can't overcome it. "It isn't like your height, that you're stuck with. People can change it," he says.

So is there hope for the extreme cilantrophobes? Maybe.

As Nature reports, McGee offers a strategy for building up an appreciation for the herb: Try a cilantro pesto. Crushing the leaves, he says, releases enzymes that convert the soapy, stinky compounds into more mild aromas. The recipe for the pesto is on the website.

But Julia Child, an avowed cilantro hater, said she would just pick it out and throw it on the floor, Nature reports.


The Curious Cook - Why Cilantro Tastes Like Soap, for Some ... FOOD partisanship doesnt usually reach the same heights of animosity as the political variety, except in the case of the anti-cilantro party. Quick Cilantro Tasting Question - what percentage taste soap ... maria lorraine's objective post is all we need to know really. It tastes like soap because it has some of the same stuff in it that soap has. I love cilantro AND I ... Teach Your Child to Love Healthy Food Practical tips to teach your young child to love vegetables, fruit, whole grains and other healthy food. Men Who Hate Women Lovesick Love The misogynists. You may have heard of them. But what you may not know is that they can be anywhere around you. They are notoriously hard to spot. The Great Cilantro Debate Food & Think - blogs.smithsonianmag.com Cilantro, an innocuous-seeming herb, featured prominently in many of my favorite Asian and Latin American cuisines, looks deceptively like flat-leaf parsley. Do You Hate Cilantro? It May Be Genetic. Gizmodo The Kitchn Cilantro: you love it or you hate it. However, a new study finds it may not be as simple as that. This study, conducted by scientists at the University of Toronto ... MM MIDIFILE DEMOS - BandTrax Australia MIDIfiles for MIDIphiles - MM MIDIFILE DEMOS Lost! Re-Set The Complete BandTrax WEB. You Have Been Directed To A Very Old Site Location. Please go to www.bandtrax.com.au And ... Tasters Choice: Why I Hate Raw Tomatoes and You Dont ... I have a confession: I hate raw tomatoes. Really hate them. Really, really hate them. Its a positively visceral reaction, beyond my conscious control. Even the ... Is Cilantro Hating Genetic? - Gizmodo, the Gadget Guide There are a small, but vehement, group of people that hate cilantro with a passion. But it turns out that they might not be fussy; instead, they might just be unlucky ... Kalyn's Kitchen: Recipe for Black Bean, Rice, and Cilantro Salad A home cooking blog featuring healthy low-glycemic recipes with step-by-step photos, as well as cooking tips, vegetable gardening, and products Kalyn loves.

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