The Sense of Taste by Harry L. Hollingworth and Albert T. Poffenberger

(4 User reviews)   724
By Abigail Petrov Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Ideas & Debate
Poffenberger, Albert T. (Albert Theodore), 1885-1977 Poffenberger, Albert T. (Albert Theodore), 1885-1977
English
Hey, I just finished this wild little book from 1917 called 'The Sense of Taste,' and it's not at all what you'd expect. Forget fancy recipes or food memoirs. This is a full-blown psychological investigation into why we like what we like. Two early 20th-century scientists, Hollingworth and Poffenberger, basically locked a bunch of volunteers in a lab for days and fed them the same bland mush over and over, just changing one variable at a time—salt, sugar, bitterness—to see how it affected their mood, attention, and even simple physical tasks. The main 'mystery' is our own taste buds. They treat taste not as a luxury, but as a fundamental force that shapes our behavior and mental sharpness. It's a strange, methodical, and surprisingly gripping look at the science behind a sense we totally take for granted. If you've ever wondered why you crave something sweet when you're tired, or why food tastes different when you're sick, this old book has some fascinating, data-driven guesses.
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Published in 1917, The Sense of Taste is a fascinating snapshot of early experimental psychology. Authors Harry Hollingworth and Albert Poffenberger weren't writing for foodies; they were scientists trying to measure the unmeasurable: how flavor influences the human mind.

The Story

There's no traditional plot here. Instead, the 'story' is the experiment. The researchers designed a series of rigorous tests where participants lived under controlled conditions. Their diet was reduced to a basic, tasteless base. Then, carefully and separately, elements like sucrose (sweetness), citric acid (sourness), salt, and caffeine were added. After consuming these altered meals, the subjects would perform standardized tasks—checking lists for errors, doing multiplication problems, tapping a key rapidly—while the scientists recorded their speed, accuracy, and reported moods. The book walks us through each experiment, the data collected, and the conclusions drawn about how even a tiny bit of sweetness might boost attention, or how bitterness could cause a subtle drag on performance.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was the sheer curiosity of it all. This isn't dry data; it's the record of a hands-on quest to understand a piece of everyday magic. You get a real sense of the 'Aha!' moments, like when they realized taste perception isn't static—it changes with hunger or fatigue. Reading their careful notes from a century ago, you see the foundations of modern sensory science being laid. It makes you appreciate how much work went into proving something that seems obvious now: what we taste directly affects how we think and feel.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for anyone interested in the history of science, psychology, or food culture. It's a short, focused read that offers a big payoff in perspective. You'll never look at a pinch of salt or a spoonful of sugar the same way again. It's not a beach read, but for a curious mind, it's a compelling and rewarding look into the lab where our understanding of taste began.

Lucas Hernandez
10 months ago

Just what I was looking for.

Emma Clark
4 months ago

Five stars!

Ethan Martin
11 months ago

Solid story.

George Anderson
1 year ago

After finishing this book, the character development leaves a lasting impact. One of the best books I've read this year.

5
5 out of 5 (4 User reviews )

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