All that to say, our brains are hardwired to evoke strong emotional responses tied to certain tastes, times and places. The vanilla cake with chocolate frosting your mom baked you for every birthday gives you a feel-good wave of nostalgia because of your unique brain chemistry. Unfortunately, the same goes for the foods we associate with negative emotional experiences like fear, anxiety, illness… a global pandemic.
If my humble prediction is correct, the taste memories we’ve formed in the last 14 months will impact the way we cook and eat moving forward. Like me, you might have already banned a once-beloved recipe from your dinner rotation. But joyfully, this leaves room for newfound favorites. And then there are the food substitutions, culinary flexibility and waste-not mentality we picked up along the way. (When the supermarket is fresh out of lemons, you can probably substitute with vinegar, right? And that kale isn’t rotting, just wilted.) I’ve since eased up on my panic-stricken, once-a-month-grocery-trip rule, so I’m no longer desperately blanching a month’s worth of greens for the freezer, but I’m also much more flexible in my daily cooking. I mastered sourdough bread! And I haven’t eaten at a restaurant in well over a year. (Soon though…)
According to Chambers, the aversion to a taste can be long-lasting and will remain “until the food is experienced repeatedly without ensuing illness.” Replace “illness” with “pandemic-induced terror” and I’ve found my cure: It looks like I’ll be making a lot of stew. I think I’ll pass and find a new recipe—what about you?
What Your Post-Pandemic Fantasy Says About You, According to a Psychotherapist