The Silent Enemy of Sensory Enjoyment – Olfactory Fatigue
George Manska
(CSO) Corporate Strategy Officer, inventor and entrepreneur, (CRD) Chief Research and Development Arsilica, Inc.
What is it?? Olfactory fatigue, also called olfactory adaptation referred to as nose-blindness, is a phenomenon in which olfactory receptors decrease in sensitivity due to prolonged odorant exposure, resulting in the inability to perceive, differentiate, or identify aromas. Olfactory fatigue is a dynamic, adaptive, protective mechanism that prevents sensory overload from continuous exposure. It allows the olfactory system to adapt to constant background odors while maintaining sensitivity to new or changing odors, constantly on the vigil to detect potential dangers (fire, poison) or opportunities (Gram’s apple pie).
Mechanisms of Olfactory Fatigue:? Several mechanisms are involved in olfactory fatigue:
Signs of Olfactory Fatigue:? Ethanol (alcohol) is an anesthetic and numbs olfactory receptors.? Olfactory fatigue occurs without awareness, and is painless and gradual, with no warning signs.? It’s seldom discussed at tastings, and few know it exists, even though we have all experienced it.? Few are concerned, “I never noticed it.? If I don’t know it’s there, it’s not an issue.”? Many deny, “My nose is good, I’ve been drinking (type of spirit) for a long time, and never bothered me.”? Three questions indicate you are most likely in some stage of olfactory fatigue.
Memory Distracts:? Of course, the next question asked is “It’s (type of spirit, e.g. bourbon).? What should I smell?”? Experiential memory comes to the rescue by recalling your last (name of spirit type) tasting and the attending aromas, and you begin to search for them.? Now you are no longer evaluating the sample in front of you, but attempting to validate a spirit you are familiar with while nosing a new, different spirit.?
Ignorance and Denial are Proportional to ABV:? High ABV (alcohol by volume) of spirits (40%+), is too much nose-numbing, pungent, anesthetic for the human olfactory to handle.? Wine tasters have frequent bouts of olfactory fatigue.? Wine ABVs have increased some over the years from 5-9%? to 8-16%, with fortified wines up around 22%.? Wine tasters seem to be open about nose blindness.? It is a common occurrence during tasting competitions, and wine store tastings, yet no one seems ashamed to mention they are experiencing nose blindness.
?Spirits drinkers are another story, as machismo permeates whiskey clubs, clouding objectivity, punctuated by the fact that four times the alcohol is present in spirits as opposed to red wine.? Spirits drinkers are reluctant to admit they have an aroma detection problem when it occurs, even when tasting cask-strength spirits. ?Does olfactory fatigue occur in spirits drinkers?? You bet it does, on steroids.
These factors strongly suggest that spirits, with their higher ABV and concentrated aromas, lead to olfactory fatigue. ?Olfactory fatigue and volatile compounds go hand-in-hand.? More volatile compounds = more numbing of ORNs (olfactory neuron receptors), leading to quicker onset.? The chart points to ethanol as the most volatile culprit
How do we avoid olfactory fatigue and enhance smell-ability?
Did you come to a tasting to drink, or to enjoy the nuances the distillers created in their spirits?? Discipline and an open-rimmed glass will enhance the experience.
Follow us on:
领英推荐
You can Print, Email, and PDF this Post from the Website just click the Link Below and scroll to the end of the article to see your options.
Bio:??George F Manska, CR&D, Arsilica, Inc.
Qualifications:??Published sensory science researcher, and entrepreneur. BSME, NEAT glass co-inventor
Mission:?Replace myth and misinformation with scientific truth through consumer education.??
Comments Welcome – Contact:??[email protected], phone 702.332.7305.?
More Information:?www.theneatglass.com/shop??