The Food Chain

Can you learn to love the foods you hate?

Feb 5, 2026
Claire Thornton-Wood, a paediatric dietitian offering low‑pressure, practical techniques. Dr Rachel Herz, a neuroscientist who studies smell and memory. Dr Dana Small, a brain and metabolism researcher explaining neural flavor learning. They discuss why dislikes form, how smell and memory shape aversion, and practical, gradual ways people try to shift food preferences.
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INSIGHT

Genetics And Early Learning Shape Tastes

  • Food dislikes come from both genetics and learning, beginning as early as in utero.
  • Exposure to flavours in the womb and early life can shape preferences into childhood and beyond.
INSIGHT

Smell Activates Emotion And Caution

  • Smell and the amygdala link aromas to emotion, creating immediate likes or dislikes.
  • Novel food smells often trigger cautious neophobia as an adaptive protection against toxins.
INSIGHT

Flavor Is Constructed In The Brain

  • Flavor is a brain construct integrating taste, touch and olfaction, so smell often defines food identity.
  • After learning, the olfactory component usually drives whether we like or dislike a food more than basic tastes.
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