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A bite of cake, a sip of tea, and suddenly you are somewhere else entirely.
Marcel Proust captured this moment in his writing, describing how a simple madeleine unlocked vivid memories of his childhood. What feels like a fleeting emotional response can also reflect something more structured. The brain can play an active role in building the experience of flavor, drawing on memory, context, and the senses all at once.
This idea sits at the center of neurogastronomy, an emerging field that brings together neuroscience and cooking to better understand how we perceive taste. For chefs and culinary students, this perspective can open up new ways to think about the dining experience.
Rethinking How We Taste: What Is Neurogastronomy?
Neurogastronomy is the study of how your brain creates the experience of flavor. While taste begins on the tongue through sensations like sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami, what you recognize as flavor can be shaped by a much broader set of inputs. Aroma, texture, temperature, and even visual and environmental cues can all play a role in how a dish is perceived.
Taste vs. Flavor: What’s the Difference?
Taste happens on the tongue. It’s limited to five basic sensations: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami.
Flavor happens in the brain. It builds on taste, but also pulls in aroma, texture, temperature, and context. This is why the same dish can feel completely different depending on how and where it’s served.
Because flavor sits at the intersection of science and experience, neurogastronomy draws from multiple fields, including neuroscience, psychology, and food science. Within that collaboration, chefs play a central role. They are the ones applying these insights in real time, shaping how dishes are designed, presented, and ultimately experienced.
Rethinking the Restaurant Menu
From plating and tableware to the wording of a description, every element of the dining experience is increasingly being guided by how the brain processes flavor. For chefs, this means that what surrounds the food can play a meaningful role in how it is ultimately experienced.
What Diners Experience Before the First Bite
Before a guest even takes a bite or a sip, visual and tactile cues can begin shaping how a dish is perceived. Color, composition, plateware, and even the weight of cutlery can all influence expectations of flavor.
In a study by cognitive scientist Frédéric Brochet, trained wine tasters were served a white wine that had been dyed red with a neutral coloring. When asked to describe it, many used language typically associated with red wines, referencing notes like cherry or blackberry rather than the citrus or floral qualities expected of white wine. The shift in description suggests that visual cues influenced how the tasters interpreted what they were experiencing.

In one study, wine tasters described a white wine dyed red using language typically reserved for red wines, showing how visual cues can shape flavor perception.
Even the plate itself can play a role. In another experiment, a strawberry-flavored dessert served on a white plate was perceived as more intense, sweeter, and more enjoyable than the exact same mousse served on a black plate.

Served on a darker plate, the same dessert may be perceived differently, highlighting how plate color can influence sweetness and intensity.

The same strawberry ice cream can be perceived as sweeter when served on a white plate, showing how visual contrast can shape flavor.
Presentation can also influence how much people enjoy and even consume a dish. In a talk on multisensory dining, experimental psychologist Charles Spence describes an experiment where the same salad ingredients were arranged to resemble a work of art inspired by painter Wassily Kandinsky rather than served as a simple tossed salad. Diners not only rated the dish more highly, but also ate more of it, suggesting that visual composition can shape both perception and behavior.
Tactile elements can also contribute. Heavier cutlery has been associated with higher perceived quality, and the size of a plate or bowl can influence how much a diner consumes, suggesting that perception of quantity is shaped not just by the food itself, but by how it is presented.
For chefs, these details extend beyond aesthetics. Visual and physical choices can help guide expectation, influence perception, and shape how a dish is ultimately experienced.
Designing a Multisensory Experience
Flavor is not experienced through taste alone. Texture, temperature, aroma, and even sound can all contribute to how a dish is perceived, because the brain integrates these sensory inputs into a single experience of flavor.
Some chefs are already applying these ideas in highly controlled ways. At The Fat Duck, chef Heston Blumenthal serves a seafood dish alongside the sound of ocean waves played through headphones, reinforcing the connection between environment and flavor perception. Diners have reported that the dish tastes more vivid and complete when paired with these sounds.
Other restaurants take this even further. At Ultraviolet in Shanghai, diners experience a multi-course meal accompanied by coordinated lighting, sound, and visuals designed to match each dish. By aligning sensory cues, chefs can guide how flavors are interpreted in real time.
Shaping Memories and Stories with Menu Language
How a dish is described can also shape expectation and perception. More descriptive or evocative language can lead diners to anticipate certain flavors or qualities, which may influence how the dish is ultimately experienced.
For example, describing a dish as “slow-braised beef with rosemary and red wine” creates a different expectation than simply listing “beef stew.” Highlighting origin, such as “heirloom tomatoes” or “local honey,” can signal freshness and quality. Even sensory cues like “crispy,” “silky,” or “charred” can guide how a diner anticipates texture and flavor before the dish arrives.
Some chefs take this a step further. At her restaurant Atelier Crenn, Dominique Crenn presents her menu as a poem, using language to shape emotion and expectation before a dish is even seen. In this way, words become part of the sensory experience, influencing how diners interpret what follows.
These small shifts in wording can help shape the experience in advance, allowing chefs to guide perception beyond the plate itself.
What Else Can Neurogastronomy Do?
When you think about menu design, it is often in the context of a restaurant. But the same principles that shape how a diner experiences a dish can extend into healthcare settings, where perception can directly impact how and whether people eat.
Changes in taste and smell can reduce appetite for patients undergoing cancer treatment or recovering from head trauma or neurological conditions. This can make food less appealing, even when nutritional needs are high. Neurogastronomy offers another approach. By adjusting aroma, texture, and visual presentation, chefs can enhance perceived flavor without relying only on added salt or sugar.
This also becomes especially relevant with aging. As noted by Charles Spence in his talk, individuals in their 60s or 70s may require five to ten times as much salt to experience the same level of taste as younger diners. Instead of increasing salt, small changes like amplifying aroma, adding texture contrast, or even adjusting plate color can help make food feel more flavorful.
In settings like hospitals or care facilities, these shifts can make meals more appealing and more likely to be eaten. For culinary professionals, this expands the role of the chef beyond traditional kitchens, opening opportunities to apply these principles in healthcare and food innovation.

Neurogastronomy is also being explored in healthcare and research, where understanding perception can help improve how people experience food.
From Madeleines to the Modern Plate
When Marcel Proust wrote what would become his well-known lines about the madeleine, he likely wasn’t thinking about neuroscience. But his observation points to something chefs continue to explore today: that flavor is shaped not only by ingredients, but by memory, context, and perception.
For culinary students, understanding the neuroscience of flavor adds another layer to the craft, one that goes beyond technique alone and into how diners actually perceive what’s on the plate. If you’re interested in exploring the science behind flavor, culinary training at Auguste Escoffier School of Culinary Arts can help you develop both technical skill and a deeper understanding of how people experience food.