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Eating in a cafeteria makes food taste worse.

Discover the influence of eating environment on food acceptance and how ratings vary across settings like restaurants and cafeterias.

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Photo: flickr/USDAgovLike real estate, when it comes to eating, it's all about location. In this study, the authors tested whether the "acceptability" ratings of pre-prepared food would vary when the food was served in different locations (restaurant, laboratory, cafeteria). Not surprisingly, the food in the restaurant was rated highest; however, more surprisingly, the food served in the cafeteria was rated lowest, even below the food in the laboratory (although the laboratory food was free, and as all grad students know, free food is good food). Perhaps the participants were still scarred after all of those bad school cafeteria meals?Demonstrations of the influence of the eating environment on food acceptance. "In two independent demonstrations, pre-prepared food was served in different environments: first, identical prepared meals were served in both a training restaurant and in a student cafeteria; second, a prepared main dish was served in a food science laboratory class, and ...

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