Abstract

Dried bonito dashi, a complex mixture of sour, bitter, and umami substances as well as over 400 odorants, is the most widely used Japanese fish broth that enhances palatability of various dishes. Recent studies have suggested that prior experience with dried bonito dashi produces strong enhancement of subsequent intake and preference for dried bonito dashi. The present study investigated taste substances in dried bonito dashi that enhance subsequent dashi preference by its prior exposure. Male C57BL/6N mice were initially exposed for 10 days to (1) dried bonito dashi, (2) a chemical mixture of taste substances identified in dried bonito dashi (artificially reconstituted dashi), or (3) individual chemical solutions such as NaCl, monosodium l-glutamate (MSG), inosine 5′-monophosphate (IMP), lactic acid, histidine, and glucose. Intakes of 0.01–100% dried bonito dashi with water were then measured using ascending concentration series of 2-day two-bottle choice tests. Prior exposure to 1–100% dashi enhanced subsequent dashi preference in a concentration-dependent manner and the greatest effects were attained with 10–100% dashi exposure. Exposure to the reconstituted dashi also enhanced subsequent dashi preference. Among individual chemical solutions, 0.1% IMP produced modest enhancement of subsequent dashi preference, but neither NaCl, MSG, histidine, lactic acid, nor glucose did. These results suggest that IMP is at least a key substance that produces experience-based enhancement of dried bonito dashi preference.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call