Sipping beer straight can be "blah." Try chugging it down with some music on for a tasty twist, suggests a recent study.
The research found that music can influence how much you like the taste of beer, implying that a range of multisensory information, such as sound, sensation, shape and color, can sway the way we perceive taste.
The Brussels Beer Project collaborated with UK band The Editors to produce a porter-style beer that took inspiration from the musical and visual identity of the band.
The ale had a medium body and used an Earl Grey infusion that produced citrus notes, contrasting with the malty, chocolate flavors from the mix of grains used in production. This taste profile was designed to broadly correspond to The Editors latest album, 'In Dreams.'
Then, researchers led by Felipe Reinoso Cavalho from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and KU Leuven designed an experiment to see if the influence of music and packaging design would result in a more positive tasting experience.
They invited 231 drinkers to experience the beer in three different conditions.
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The first served as a control group and drank the beer along with a bottle without a label. In this case, they didn't listen to any specific song.
The second group, testing the influence of packaging, tasted the beer after seeing the bottle with the label.
The third group drank the beer presented with the label while listening to 'Oceans of Light', one of the songs on the band's latest album which the beer was created to reflect.
Before the test the participants rated how tasty they thought the beer might be. Then after tasting they rated how much they had actually enjoyed the drink.
The results showed that those presented with the label and track reported both greater enjoyment than those presented with the beer and label alone.
Filipe said: "We have been able to see that people tend to feel more pleasure when experiencing beverages along with sounds that are part of the beverage's identity. In this case, we have shown that people that previously knew the song that was used in the experiment, not only liked the multisensory experience of drinking beer more while listening to it, but they also liked the beer itself more.
"It seems that the added pleasure that the song brought into the experience was transferred into the beer's flavour," noted Filipe.
Research into the interaction of different sensory information on taste has opened up the way for food and beverage retailers to create a range of novel eating and drinking experiences.
"We believe that this is just the beginning;" said Felipe, "We will also be able to work with other food and beverage types and progressively include other senses in this pairing process, such as vision, smells, touch."
The study appears in Frontiers in Psychology.