Summary
Chili burns without heating you: capsaicin tricks heat-sensing nerves. That’s why cold water helps briefly, while fatty foods can calm it more effectively.
Switching language...
Please wait
Summary
Chili burns without heating you: capsaicin tricks heat-sensing nerves. That’s why cold water helps briefly, while fatty foods can calm it more effectively.
Chocolate was once real money. A rabbit was worth 10 cocoa beans.
Vanilla smells like sweetness, yet it comes from the pod fruit of an orchid. Fermenting and curing the pod slowly develops the familiar aroma.
When you cut an onion, cells burst and sulfur compounds go airborne. They react at your eyes to form a mild acid—tears are your eyes washing themselves clean.
Well-tempered chocolate breaks with a clean snap. That’s because cocoa butter crystals are arranged in the right form—bringing shine and that satisfying break.
Feeling awake just from coffee aroma is common. Smell can trigger expectation and attention circuits, priming your body for the day even before a sip.
That toasted smell from fresh bread isn’t random. When sugars and proteins react under heat, the Maillard reaction creates hundreds of aroma compounds at once.
Expand your knowledge with new facts, interesting trivia and useful content every day!
Discover All Info