Letter/Communication
The great is the enemy of the good: Hedonic contrast in a coursed meal
Food quality and preference, v 45
Oct 2015
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
• We hypothesize that hedonic contrast occurs in real-world meals between courses.
• We discuss the history of appetizers in Western restaurant dining.
• A main course is liked less after a good than after a mediocre appetizer.
• Appetizers, meant to pique appetite, may cause customer dissatisfaction with mains.
This study investigates whether hedonic contrast occurs between foods served in different courses within a meal. In particular, does the hedonic value of an appetizer affect the hedonic value of the subsequently eaten main course? Hedonic contrast is known to occur in laboratory settings, but so far it has not been demonstrated in ecologically valid, real-world meal situations. To that end, this study was conducted in an ecologically valid setting – a training restaurant in a culinary school. Two groups of subjects (Ns=35 and 29) were served the same pasta main course after either a good or mediocre bruschetta appetizer. The pasta was rated worse (and hedonically negative, M=−9.4) by subjects eating the good appetizer than by subjects eating the mediocre one (who judged it as hedonically positive, M=17.4). This suggests that the hedonic value of an appetizer can influence the degree to which a diner likes the main course of a meal. Implications for the phenomenon of hedonic contrast and for meal services in restaurant settings are discussed.
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Details
- Title
- The great is the enemy of the good: Hedonic contrast in a coursed meal
- Creators
- Jacob Lahne - Drexel UniversityDebra A. Zellner - Department of Psychology, Montclair State University, United States
- Publication Details
- Food quality and preference, v 45
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Number of pages
- 5
- Resource Type
- Letter/Communication
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Culinary Arts & Food Science
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000357836800009
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-84936803631
- Other Identifier
- 991021866806204721
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Food Science & Technology