Researchers have found a new way to control the amount we eat: use a bigger fork.
While numerous studies have focused on portion sizes and their influence on how much we eat, researchers Arul and Himanshu Mishra and Tamara Masters looked at how bite sizes affect quantities ingested. To do this, they conducted field research in a popular Italian restaurant in the southwestern US.
Two sets of forks were used to tinker with bite size: a larger fork that held 20% more food than the fork usually used in the restaurant, and a smaller fork that held 20% less. Servers, including one of the study's authors, took customers' orders, and weighed the full plate of food that they had ordered before serving it to them. A small sticky note was attached to the underside of each plate, noting the weight and other information - just in case the fork and plate were separated when the table was cleared.
At the end of the meal, the plate was brought back to the kitchen and weighed again, and the researchers found that diners who used the bigger fork ate less of their food than those who used the smaller one.
But the big fork, less eaten theory only worked in a restaurant setting. A study conducted in the lab, which also used Italian food, found that people who used big forks actually consumed more.
The researchers concluded that there are different motivations when we eat in a restaurant or a lab. Diners went to the restaurant with a "well-defined goal of satiating their hunger, and, because of this well-defined goal, they are willing to invest effort and resources to satiate their hunger." In the lab, participants were told they were taking part in a study and did not have that same motivation.
The restaurant diners felt that the small fork gave them "a feeling that they are not making much progress" towards their goal, and this resulted in them eating more of the food on their plate than the large-fork group, the researchers reasoned.
"Given people's busy lives and the trend of eating in restaurants, if we are not chewing longer, then consuming from a larger fork may actually be more helpful in controlling overconsumption," they write.
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