Correlation between perceived sweetness and sugar content
A couple of months ago I started to take note that the perceived sweetness of foods isn't always correlated with its sugar content. One stark example was yogurt, where yogurts that tasted mostly plain or even tart would sometimes have higher sugar content than yogurts that were appreciably sweet.
Unfortunately, I don't have any great examples to show at the moment.
I was munching on one of these: Kirkland Protein Bars which got me thinking about this topic again. The bars are fairly sweet, but the product claims to only have 1 gram of sugar and it doesn't have any artificial sweeteners.
I understand that serving size is a confounding factor, especially given that I don't have any good examples to show on hand, but from what I recall, the serving sizes for the yogurts were comparable.
TL;DR: is there a strong correlation between how our tongues perceive sweetness and the stated sugar content? Are there other ingredients that can contribute to sweetness without contributing to the net sugar content?
Best Answer
Different sugars have different relative sweetness (in %) (Elmhurst College):
- Sucrose: 100
- Fructose: 140
- High fructose corn syrup (HFCS): 120-160
- Glucose: 70-80
- Lactose: 20
Relative sweetness of some non-sugar sweeteners (NutrientsReview):
- Aspartame: 180
- Acesulfam potassium: 200 (in some diet colas)
- Stevia: 300
- Saccharin: 400
- Sucralose: 600
Plain yogurt (100 g) contains 4.7 g sugars, but mostly lactose, which is not sweet. (NutritionData, milk composition)
Kirkland Protein Bars contains stevia (300% sweetness) (link - read at the bottom of the Nutrition Facts), which explains its sweetness. Stevia is a natural non-sugar sweetener.
Perceived sweetness can increase with the food temperature (ScienceDirect) and salt content (a study in mice). Liquid and solid foods with the same sugar content can have different perceived sweetness (ScienceDirect). And there are sweet taste enhancers...(ChemistryWorld)
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How does sugar contribute to sweetness?
Hydrogen bonds between sugar and nearby molecules help to determine the level of sweetness. Sugars are thought to owe their sweet taste to the particular pattern of bonds that atoms in sugar molecules form with receptor proteins in taste buds.How do we perceive sweetness?
In the oral cavity, sweet taste receptors signal the sensation of sweetness to the brain whereas in the pancreas and the gastrointestinal tract, sweet taste signaling elicits release of metabolic hormones, such as insulin (from pancreatic \u03b2-cells) or GLP-1 (from enteroendocrine L-cells in the intestine).What are the factors affecting sweetness intensity?
Effects of concentration, solids, pH, temperature, and flavor systems may all affect the perception of sweetness during an evaluation. Sweeteners also display variations in onset, intensity, and duration of sweetness.What are the theories of sweetness?
Simply put, they proposed that to be sweet, a compound must contain a hydrogen bond donor (AH) and a Lewis base (B) separated by about 0.3 nanometres. According to this theory, the AH-B unit of a sweetener binds with a corresponding AH-B unit on the biological sweetness receptor to produce the sensation of sweetness.The Science of Sweetness
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Answer 2
The linked protein bars are sweetened using stevia, a sugar substitute that's extracted from plants, but like artificial sweeteners, isn't actually sugar, so it's not going to show up in nutrition facts. It's on the ingredient list for both:
Hard to say about the yogurt. Could have been one or more of many reasons:
- stevia or some other sweetener you missed
- differences in acidity (which counters sweetness)
- other flavors that make us perceive sweetness more easily (even salt works)
- other flavors that we associate with sweetness
Answer 3
Was there salt in the bar? Salt can bring out and intensify sweetness like in chocolate lava cake (sea salt tops) or on pineapple (typically Asian norm).
The other possibility are the many varied natural sweeteners that may be in the bar.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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