Cilantro Haters, It’s Not Your Fault
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
By HAROLD McGEE
Published: April 13, 2010
FOOD partisanship doesn’t usually reach the same heights of
animosity as the political variety, except in the case of the anti-cilantro
party. The green parts of the plant that gives us coriander seeds seem to
inspire a primal revulsion among an outspoken minority of eaters.
Culinary sophistication is no guarantee of immunity from
cilantrophobia. In a television interview in 2002, Larry King
asked Julia Child
which foods she hated. She responded: “Cilantro and arugula I don’t like at
all. They’re both green herbs, they have kind of a dead taste to me.”
“So you would never order it?” Mr. King asked.
“Never,” she responded. “I would pick it out if I saw it and
throw it on the floor.”
Ms. Child had plenty of company for her feelings about
cilantro (arugula seems to be less offensive). The authoritative Oxford
Companion to Food notes that the word “coriander” is said to derive from the
Greek word for bedbug,
that cilantro aroma “has been compared with the smell of bug-infested
bedclothes” and that “Europeans often have difficulty in overcoming their
initial aversion to this smell.” There’s an “I Hate Cilantro” Facebook
page with hundreds of fans and an I Hate Cilantro blog.
Yet cilantro is happily consumed by many millions of people
around the world, particularly in Asia and Latin America. The Portuguese put
fistfuls into soups. What is it about cilantro that makes it so unpleasant for
people in cultures that don’t much use it?
Some people may be genetically predisposed to dislike
cilantro, according to often-cited studies by Charles J. Wysocki of the Monell
Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. But cilantrophobe genetics remain
little known and aren’t under systematic investigation. Meanwhile, history,
chemistry and neurology have been adding some valuable pieces to the puzzle.
The coriander plant is native to the eastern Mediterranean,
and European cooks used both seeds and leaves well into medieval times.
Helen Leach, an anthropologist at the University of Otago in
New Zealand, has traced unflattering remarks about cilantro flavor and the bug
etymology — not endorsed by modern dictionaries — back to English garden books
and French farming books from around 1600, when medieval dishes had fallen out
of fashion. She suggests that cilantro was disparaged as part of a general
effort to define the new European table against the flavors of the old.
Modern cilantrophobes tend to describe the offending flavor
as soapy rather than buggy. I don’t hate cilantro, but it does
sometimes remind me of hand lotion. Each of these associations turns out to
make good chemical sense.
Flavor chemists have found that cilantro aroma is created by
a half-dozen or so substances, and most of these are modified fragments of fat
molecules called aldehydes. The same or similar aldehydes are also found in
soaps and lotions and the bug family of insects.
Soaps are made by fragmenting fat molecules with strongly
alkaline lye or its equivalent, and aldehydes are a byproduct of this process,
as they are when oxygen in the air attacks the fats and oils in cosmetics. And
many bugs make strong-smelling, aldehyde-rich body fluids to attract or repel other
creatures.
The published studies of cilantro aroma describe individual
aldehydes as having both cilantrolike and soapy qualities. Several flavor
chemists told me in e-mail messages that they smell a soapy note in the whole
herb as well, but still find its aroma fresh and pleasant.
So the cilantro aldehydes are olfactory Jekyll-and-Hydes.
Why is it only the evil, soapy side that shows up for cilantrophobes, and not
the charming one?
I posed this question to Jay Gottfried, a neuroscientist at Northwestern
University who studies how the brain perceives smells.
Dr. Gottfried turned out to be a former cilantrophobe who
could speak from personal experience. He said that the great cilantro split
probably reflects the primal importance of smell and taste to survival, and the
brain’s constant updating of its database of experiences.
The senses of smell and taste evolved to evoke strong
emotions, he explained, because they were critical to finding food and mates
and avoiding poisons and predators. When we taste a food, the brain searches
its memory to find a pattern from past experience that the flavor belongs to.
Then it uses that pattern to create a perception of flavor, including an
evaluation of its desirability.
If the flavor doesn’t fit a familiar food experience, and
instead fits into a pattern that involves chemical cleaning agents and dirt, or
crawly insects, then the brain highlights the mismatch and the potential threat
to our safety. We react strongly and throw the offending ingredient on the
floor where it belongs.
“When your brain detects a potential threat, it narrows your
attention,” Dr. Gottfried told me in a telephone conversation. “You don’t need
to know that a dangerous food has a hint of asparagus and sorrel to it. You
just get it away from your mouth.”
But he explained that every new experience causes the brain
to update and enlarge its set of patterns, and this can lead to a shift in how
we perceive a food.
“I didn’t like cilantro to begin with,” he said. “But I love
food, and I ate all kinds of things, and I kept encountering it. My brain must
have developed new patterns for cilantro flavor from those experiences, which
included pleasure from the other flavors and the sharing with friends and
family. That’s how people in cilantro-eating countries experience it every
day.”
“So I began to like cilantro,” he said. “It can still remind
me of soap, but it’s not threatening anymore, so that association fades into
the background, and I enjoy its other qualities. On the other hand, if I ate
cilantro once and never willingly let it pass my lips again, there wouldn’t
have been a chance to reshape that perception.”
Cilantro itself can be reshaped to make it easier to take. A
Japanese study published in January suggested that crushing the leaves will
give leaf enzymes the chance to gradually convert the aldehydes into other substances
with no aroma.
Sure enough, I’ve found cilantro pestos to be lotion-free
and surprisingly mild. They actually have deeper roots in the Mediterranean
than the basil version, and can be delicious on pasta
and breads and meats. If you’re looking to work on your cilantro patterns,
pesto might be the place to start.

Comments
Post a Comment