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Your Sense of Touch Can Change How Coffee Tastes
Coffee lovers often debate beans, brewing methods, and cup materials, but new research from Japan suggests something even simpler can influence flavor: how the cup feels in your hand.
Researchers at Chuo University found that the texture of a cup sleeve can change how people perceive coffee’s acidity, even when the coffee itself is exactly the same.
Rough vs. Smooth
To isolate the sense of touch, the research team created two removable cup sleeves: one with a rough sandpaper surface and another made from smooth kraft paper. Both were wrapped around identical cups of black coffee served at 68°C.
Ninety-two blindfolded participants tasted coffee from each cup in sequence, ensuring that visual appearance and lip contact couldn’t influence their impressions.
The results were surprising. Participants who first held the rough sleeve and then the smooth one consistently judged the second cup of coffee to be less acidic. However, participants who experienced the smooth sleeve first and the rough sleeve second did not report the same reduction in acidity.
Why Does This Happen?
According to the research published in the international journal Multisensory Research on June 3, people naturally associate rough textures with stronger acidity, while smooth surfaces evoke a milder flavor. After first experiencing the rough texture, switching to the smooth sleeve reinforced the impression of lower acidity, which combined with normal sensory adaptation during repeated tastings.
When the order was reversed, the rough texture’s association with stronger acidity offset that adaptation, making the second cup seem just as acidic.
What It Could Mean
Lead researcher Atsunori Ariga believes the findings could influence everything from café design to reusable drinkware. Choosing cups or sleeves with different textures may help people subtly adjust how they experience beverages without changing the recipe itself.
The study also suggests another benefit: if people carry reusable cups or sleeves that match their taste preferences, it could encourage more environmentally friendly habits alongside a better coffee experience.
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