Turns out, your sweet tooth may not be shaped by your diet. Findings from a new randomized controlled trial suggest that eating more sweet-tasting foods doesn't increase someone's preference for sweet ...
Have you ever worried that enjoying a sweet treat today will make you crave even more sugar tomorrow? It’s a common belief that eating sweet foods trains your palate to want more sweetness, a ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . The level of exposure to sweet foods did not influence adult’s preferences for sweet-tasting foods. The ...
A six-month randomized trial challenges the idea that eating more sweet foods increases a person’s preference for sweetness. Participants on diets with high, low, or mixed sweetness levels showed no ...
A new study suggests that eating less sweet food doesn’t make people crave it any less—or improve their health markers. Participants who increased or decreased sweetness in their diets showed no ...