scientists_reveal_why (2024)

Researchers from the University of Warwick are sharing food for thought about the humble sprout this Christmas and tell us:

• Why having a gene mutation makes sprouts taste horrid

• Why sprouts taste better after frost

• Why they make us gassy

An area covering 3,240 football pitches is dedicated to Brussels sprout growing in the UK – if you were to line them up individually, they’d stretch from London to Sydney. And there may be more to humble sprouts than our nation gives them credit for.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, 25% of total sprout sales occur in a two-week window in December – but sprouts are not just for Christmas. Disappointingly, as the UK gripples with anxieties of food security and crop resistance, only half of the 750 million sprouts produced a year are eaten.

Sprouts can be traced back to Brussels from the 13th Century, though the phrase Brussels Sprouts was coined later in the 1700s, by the French. Like many others tucking into their Christmas dinners this year, Brussels sprouts are part of a huge and complicated family. They are Brassicacious vegetables, alongside cabbages, broccoli, cauliflower, kale and their spicier cousins, wasabi, horseradish and mustard. It is also known as the Cruciferae family – from the Latin word meaning ‘cross-bearing’ – owing to the four coloured petals of these vegetable flowers appearing like a cross.

Unlike its relatives, the sprout is the only vegetable to grow as a bud from a stem. Sprouts are rich in vitamins and minerals, and even contain anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory properties. They also contain a sugar called raffinose, which the human body can’t digest, instead producing lots of gases and perhaps commotion at the dinner table!

Nowadays modern breeding methods, including those used at the University of Warwick, can help to make Brussels sprouts more palatable. Lauren Chappell, of the University’s School of Life Sciences (SLS), is part of the Defra funded Vegetable Genetic Improvement Network (VeGIN), a collaboration of researchers and institutions set to improve crop resistance and yield, particularly in relation to the twin challenges of climate change and food security.

Research Fellow Lauren Chappell said: “Sulphur is responsible for the bitter sprout taste. As we age, we lose tastebuds, which can make them more palatable – potentially why adults who hated sprouts as children now embrace them in seasonal dishes. What’s more, frosty weather converts bitter starches into sugars, leading to sweeter tasting sprouts (hence the logic behind grandparents remarking they “won’t eat sprouts until the first frost”).

“Sprouts contain a chemical, similar to phenylthiocarbamide, which only tastes bitter to people who have a variation of a certain gene. Around 50 per cent of the world’s population have a mutation on this gene. The lucky half don’t taste the bitterness usually associated with sprouts, and therefore like them a whole lot more than everyone else.”

Further details of VeGIN can be found here https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/lifesci/research/vegin/

Ends

University of Warwick press office contact:

Annie Slinn

Communications Officer | Press & Media Relations | University of WarwickLink opens in a new window
Email: annie.slinn@warwick.ac.uk

scientists_reveal_why (2024)

FAQs

Does science answer why questions? ›

It's the answer to a “How?” question. Science does not answer why.

How do scientists know they have the right answer? ›

Experimental evidence is used to confirm the answers in science. Results are validated (found truthful) when other scientists repeat experiments and come up with the same results. A history of evidence and validations show that the original statements were correct and accurate.

How do scientists check a possible answer to a question? ›

Scientists find answers using tests: When scientists want to answer a question, they search for evidence using experiments. An experiment is a test to see if their explanation is right or wrong. Evidence is made up of the observations a scientist makes during an experiment.

Why is science not able to answer all questions? ›

Like all disciplines, it is limited by the unique tools at its disposal: in the case of science, it is the tools of mathematics and empirical observation. The tools of science are quantitative; they are therefore limited in the possible answers they might give to quantitative answers.

Can science explain the why? ›

Physics, by construction, cannot explain the why of phenomena, only the how. In fact, you may even argue that why-like questions are not scientific.

Does science always provide the right answer? ›

Science helps us describe how the world is, but it does not make any judgments about whether that state of affairs is right, wrong, good, or bad.

Does science tell us the truth? ›

Science does try to build true knowledge of how the world works, but there are other sorts of knowledge that people also call “the truth.” For example, many have faith in spiritual truths, yet science cannot investigate this truth at all — or even tell us whether it exists.

Can science tell us what right and wrong is? ›

The domain of science is to describe nature, and then to explain its descriptions in terms of deeper patterns or laws. Science cannot tell us how to live. It cannot tell us right and wrong. If a system of thought claims to be doing those things, it cannot be science.

What are the 3 ways scientists answer questions? ›

Scientists can gather their data by observing the natural world, performing an experiment in a laboratory, or by running a model.

What determines if a question can be answered scientifically? ›

Scientific questions are different from other kinds of questions because they must be objective, and they must be testable. This means that the answer to a scientific question must be able to be proven true repeatedly. A good scientific question should be about a factual matter that can be answered using data.

Why are scientists always curious? ›

The scientist is curious about the things that form our world and the universe - elements, life, environments, galaxies. They apply that curiosity by learning as much as they can about the topics that spark their interest. The scientist always wants to know more and the answers they find often lead to more questions.

How do scientists know what they know? ›

Scientists spend a lot of time doing similar studies over and over, testing and building on each other's work. When many studies come to similar conclusions, we can be more confident that those conclusions are right. This can lead to scientific consensus and help build knowledge.

What are 5 questions science can't answer? ›

What happens to us after we die? How did so much life appear on our planet when others seem devoid of any species at all? Who, if anyone, pulls the strings of our universe? Is it some all-powerful god in control or are there physical and mathematical principles driving the engine of our existence?

What is a question that Cannot be answered? ›

When something is rhetorical that means it is made for style or effect, likewise a rhetorical question is a question that is asked for mere effect, rather than a question that needs to be answered. Questions like “Who knew?” or “Who's better than me?” are often rhetorical.

Which two questions cannot be answered through science? ›

On the other hand, questions of morality or metaphysics, such as whether the consumption of animal products is wrong or whether pigs have souls, are not within the scope of empirical science as they cannot be tested or measured using evidence and logical reasoning.

Can a scientific question start with why? ›

Questions that cannot be answered by direct observation or by evidence gathered through experimental inquiries (i.e., “why…” questions), are not testable questions. Questions which require an opinion, or could be answered differently by different people, are also not testable questions.

Is science an answer to all questions? ›

>> No, it can provide only such answers that can be confirmed through scientific experiments.

Do you like science why or why not? ›

Since you asked for a simple answer: I love science because it helps me make sense of the things around. Science helps me to understand myself and the world around me,and instead of just accepting the world as it is,it gives me the exact reason to why the things are the way they are.

What is science answer questions? ›

A system of knowledge about the physical, chemical, and biological universe and the things that occur in it is called science. It is an objective observation that explains the basic rules of nature. Another approach to defining science is as the information gained through practice.

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