← Home About Archive Photos Replies The Point Engineering Sea and Shore Also on Micro.blog
  • Enjoyable sacrifices

    I’ve long had troubles with my digestive tract and focussed mostly on FODMAPs as the key driver for them, with varying degrees of success. The worst “delivery units” of oligo-fructans for me are onions and garlic, which poses limits on our cooking at home, and makes eating out a real minefield.

    Yesterday we attended a German-Sri Lankan wedding, which was a lot of fun. Some Sri Lankan cousins of the groom provided the meal, and it was time for me to simply say “right, that’s it” and simply eat the food, which was delicious.

    I suffered in the night, but not all that much more than I have been recently whilst trying to be careful and it made me think: alcohol is also bad for us, but drinking together has real social benefits that shouldn’t be underplayed. It was the same for me yesterday with the curries: I enjoyed them so much, and we all suffered the spiciness (the Sri Lankans primarily because it was all so mild for them) together that I realised:

    Some “enjoyable sacrifices” are worth making.

    → 2:15 PM, May 3
  • Winding down from orchestra

    So: Our Espagna series of concerts is done and dusted, Bolero is behind me and I can let my embouchure relax again (the benefits of being an amateur). Enjoyed a ride down to the old bridge in Heidelberg yesterday to see the submarine on its way to Sinsheim, followed by a frozen yoghurt affrogato with my wife at Yolicious.

    → 7:51 AM, Jul 8
  • Mixing the senses


    There was an article in the Economist this week that strongly resonated with me. It concerned the "condition" of synaethsesia, whereby the signal from one sense is interpreted by another. The most famous example is that of seeing sound in colours. The Economist article reported a study into how people link taste with sound.

    This is something that I have long experienced. Whilst I could never claim to be a good taster, whenever I try to describe a taste, it is usually in terms of a graphic equaliser or in the choir voices - soprano, alto, tenor, bass. The research described in the Economist article ascribes particular taste sensations to types of musical sound - bitterness with the higher strings (I can agree with that on so many levels!), vanilla was most associated with the woodwinds - and brass? Well, they got musk, which I don't fully understand.

    Photo from Thara M Flickr page, Creative commons license


    Not only that, it worked the other way around too, in that sounds could affect the way people tasted things. They ran the experiment of people eating toffee with varying high or low pitched music playing in the background. Indeed, that led to different descriptions of the taste, even though it was always the same toffee variety in all cases.

    I cannot claim that there is any direct link betwen their findings and my own experiences, but it was a great feeling to see it all confirmed in print. I spoke about it with my wife that evening and found her questions personally enlightening. I had always felt that I had a very poor taste memory. I can't even imagine a Chardonnay wine "taste". Yet when she asked me about how I would describe various foods (or drink, especially this Madog's Ale I had recently) directly in terms of sound, I found it astoundingly easy to recall them (apart from water).

    So for 2012 I will try to be more active in "saving" my impressions in those terms. In particular I want to see if I can recall the wines that we'll be drinking this year, or at least the archetypes. Let's see / taste / hear how I get on...
    → 11:43 PM, Feb 6
  • RSS
  • JSON Feed
  • Micro.blog