Why do kids hate broccoli? Truth revealed by a recent research.

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Children and vegetables are not exactly a match made in heaven. In fact, many parents will probably admit getting their kids to eat greens like broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts can be next to impossible. While some may think children are just being picky, a new study finds there’s an actually scientific explanation for why kids dislike these vegetables.

Now, researchers reporting in ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry revealed the truth. They founded that an enzymes from these vegetables when mixed with a bacteria present in saliva, an unpleasant, sulfurous odors produced. High levels of these enzymes cause children to dislike the vegetables.

Brassica vegetables contain a compound called S-methyl-ÊŸ-cysteine sulfoxide that produces potent, sulfurous odors when acted upon by an enzyme in the plant's tissues, as well as by the same enzyme produced by bacteria in some people's oral microbiomes. Previous studies have shown that adults have different levels of this enzyme in their saliva, but whether children also have different levels, and whether this influences their food preferences, is unknown. 

Damian Frank and colleagues, who conducted this research at CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, wanted to investigate differences in sulfur volatile production in saliva from children and adults and analyze how they affect Brassica acceptance.

The researchers used gas chromatography-olfactometry-mass spectrometry to identify the main odor-active compounds in raw and steamed cauliflower and broccoli. Then, they asked 98 child/parent pairs, with children between 6 and 8 years of age, to rate the key odor compounds.

Dimethyl trisulfide, which smells rotten, sulfurous and putrid, was the least liked odor by children and adults. The team then mixed saliva samples with raw cauliflower powder and analyzed the volatile compounds produced over time. Large differences in sulfur volatile production were found between individuals, and children usually had similar levels as their parents, which is likely explained by similar microbiomes. 

Children whose saliva produced high amounts of sulfur volatiles disliked raw Brassica vegetables the most, but this relationship was not seen in adults, who might learn to tolerate the flavor over time.

These results provide a new potential explanation for why some people like Brassica vegetables and others (especially children) don't, the researchers say.

References:

  • Information provided by American Chemical SocietyNote: Content may be edited for style and length.
  • Damian Frank, Udayasika Piyasiri, Nicholas Archer, Jessica Heffernan, Astrid A. M. Poelman. In-Mouth Volatile Production from Brassica Vegetables (Cauliflower) and Associations with Liking in an Adult/Child CohortJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2021; DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.1c03889

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