How some foods are designed to make you want to eat more

Everyone knows it’s hard to stop eating fries or cookies – but what makes them so irresistible, ask Kaitlyn Rohde and Tera Fazzino

Thursday 19 December 2019 15:39 GMT
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Foods that are highly rewarding, easily accessible and cheap are unsurprisingly associated with obesity
Foods that are highly rewarding, easily accessible and cheap are unsurprisingly associated with obesity (Shutterstock)

All foods are not created equal. Most are palatable, or tasty to eat, which is helpful because we need to eat to survive. For example, a fresh apple is palatable to most people and provides vital nutrients and calories.

But certain foods, such as pizza, crisps and chocolate chip cookies, are almost irresistible. They’re always in demand at parties, and they’re easy to keep eating, even when we are full.

In these foods, a synergy between key ingredients can create an artificially enhanced palatability experience that is greater than any key ingredient would produce alone. Researchers call this hyperpalatability. Eaters call it delicious.

Initial studies suggest that foods with two or more key ingredients linked to palatability – specifically, sugar, salt, fat or carbohydrates – can activate brain-reward neurocircuits similarly to drugs like cocaine or opioids. They may also be able to bypass mechanisms in our bodies that make us feel full and tell us to stop eating.

Our research focuses on rewarding foods, addictive behaviours and obesity. We recently published a study with nutritional scientist Debra Sullivan that identifies three clusters of key ingredients that can make foods hyperpalatable. Using those definitions, we estimated that nearly two-thirds of foods widely consumed in the US fall into at least one of those three groups.

Cracking the codes

Foods that are highly rewarding, easily accessible and cheap are everywhere in our society. Unsurprisingly, eating them has been associated with obesity.

Documentaries in the last 15-20 years have reported that food companies have developed formulas to make palatable foods so enticing. However, manufacturers typically guard their recipes as trade secrets, so academic scientists can’t study them.

Instead, researchers have used descriptive definitions to capture what makes some foods hyperpalatable. For example, in his 2012 book Your Food Is Fooling You: How Your Brain Is Hijacked by Sugar, Fat, and Salt, David Kessler, former commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), wrote: “What are these foods? ... Some are sweetened drinks, chips, cookies, candy, and other snack foods. Then, of course, there are fast food meals – fried chicken, pizza, burgers, and fries.”

But these definitions are not standardised, so it is hard to compare results across studies. And they fail to identify the relevant ingredients. Our study sought to establish a quantitative definition of hyperpalatable foods and then use it to determine how prevalent these foods are in the US.

Three key clusters

We conducted our work in two parts. First we carried out a literature search to identify scientific articles that used descriptive definitions of the full range of palatable foods. We entered these foods into standardised nutrition software to obtain detailed data on the nutrients they contained.

Next we used a graphing procedure to determine whether certain foods appeared to cluster together. We then used the clusters to inform our numeric definition. We found that hyperpalatable foods fell into three distinct clusters:

* Fat and sodium, with more than 25 per cent of total calories (abbreviated as kcal) from fat and at least 0.30 per cent sodium per gram per serving. Bacon and pizza are examples.

* Fat and simple sugars, with more than 20 per cent kcal from fat and more than 20 per cent kcal from simple sugars. Cake is an example.

* Carbohydrates and sodium, with over 40 per cent kcal from carbohydrates and at least 0.20 per cent sodium per gram per serving. Buttered popcorn is an example.

Then we applied our definition to the US Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrient Database for Dietary Studies, or FNDDS, which catalogue foods that Americans report eating in a biennial federal survey on nutrition and health. The database contained 7,757 food items that we used in our analysis.

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Over 60 per cent of these foods met our criteria for hyperpalatability. Among them, 70 per cent were in the fat/sodium cluster, including many meats, meat-based dishes, omelettes and cheese dips. Another 25 per cent fell into the fat/simple sugars cluster, which included sweets and desserts, but also foods such as glazed carrots and other vegetables cooked with fat and sugar.

Finally, 16 per cent were in the carbohydrate/sodium cluster, which consisted of carbohydrate-dense meal items like pizza, plus breads, cereals and snack foods. Fewer than 10 per cent of foods fell into multiple clusters.

We also looked at which of the USDA’s food categories contained the most hyperpalatable foods. Over 70 per cent of meats, eggs and grain-based foods in the FNDDS met our criteria for hyperpalatability. We were surprised to find that 49 per cent of foods labelled as containing “reduced”, “low”, or zero levels of sugar, fat, salt and/or calories qualified as hyperpalatable.

Finally, we considered whether our definition captured what we hypothesised it would capture. It identified more than 85 per cent of foods labelled as fast or fried, as well as sweets and desserts. Conversely, it did not capture foods that we hypothesised were not hyperpalatable, such as raw fruits, meats or fish, or 97 per cent of raw vegetables.

Tackling obesity

If scientific evidence supporting our proposed definition of hyperpalatable foods accumulates, and it shows that our definition is associated with overeating and obesity-related outcomes, our findings could be used in several ways.

First, the FDA could require hyperpalatable foods to be labelled – an approach that would alert consumers to what they may be eating while preserving consumer choice. The agency also could regulate or limit specific combinations of ingredients, as a way to reduce the chance of people finding foods that contain them difficult to stop eating.

Consumers also could consider the role of hyperpalatable foods in their own lives. Our team needs to do further work validating our definition before we translate it for the public, but as a first step, individuals can examine whether the foods they eat contain multiple ingredients such as fat and sodium, particularly at high levels. Recent surveys show increased interest among US consumers in making informed food choices, although they often aren’t sure which sources to trust.

One starting point for people concerned about healthy eating is to consume foods that are unlikely to be hyperpalatable – items that occur naturally and have few or no additional ingredients, such as fresh fruit. As food writer Michael Pollan recommends, “Don’t eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognise as food.”

Tera Fazzino​ is assistant professor of psychology; associate director of the Cofrin Logan Centre for Addiction Research and Treatment and Kaitlyn Rohde​ is a research assistant, Cofrin Logan Centre for Addiction Research and Treatment, both at University of Kansas. This article first appeared on The Conversation

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