Feast logo

šŸ½ļø Why Food Tastes Different on a Plane

How Air Pressure, Humidity, and Sound Change the Way You Taste Food

By Ahmet KıvanƧ DemirkıranPublished 10 months ago • 4 min read
ā€œWhy Does Airplane Food Taste So Bad? The Science Behind It!ā€

Introduction: The Mystery of Bad Airplane Food

Have you ever noticed how airplane food always seems bland, dry, or just… off?

Even a meal you’d normally enjoy—like pasta or chicken—suddenly tastes like cardboard when you eat it at 35,000 feet.

Is it just bad cooking? Cheap ingredients? Airline conspiracy?

Actually, it’s science.

Your taste buds, sense of smell, and even your ears react differently in an airplane cabin. Food that tastes amazing on the ground loses its magic in the air—and here’s why.

āø»

1. The Science of Taste: Why Airplanes Mess With Your Flavor Perception

Taste isn’t just about your tongue—it’s also affected by smell, air pressure, humidity, and even noise.

āœˆļø At 35,000 feet, your taste buds don’t work the same way they do on the ground.

šŸ”¬ Here’s what happens to your body during a flight:

🌬 Lower Air Pressure = Weakened Taste Buds

• At high altitudes, your blood oxygen levels drop slightly, which affects your ability to perceive flavors.

• Your sweet and salty receptors are the most affected, meaning food tastes up to 30% blander.

šŸ’Ø Dry Cabin Air = Weak Sense of Smell

• Humidity in an airplane is around 10-15%—drier than most deserts!

• Since 80% of taste is actually smell, this weakens your ability to detect flavors.

• This is why wine, coffee, and fruit taste duller on a plane.

šŸŽ§ Loud Engine Noise = Different Flavor Perception

• Studies show that loud background noise (like airplane engines) suppresses your ability to taste sweet and salty foods.

• However, it enhances umami (savory flavors like tomato, mushroom, soy sauce).

• This is why airlines often add extra umami-rich ingredients like tomatoes and mushrooms to their meals.

šŸ’” The result? Bland food that tastes nothing like what you expect.

āø»

2. Why Airlines Add More Salt and Sugar to Your Food

Since your taste perception is weaker at high altitudes, airlines modify their recipes to compensate.

šŸœ More Salt & Sugar:

• Airlines add 30% more salt and sugar to meals so they taste ā€œnormalā€ in-flight.

• This is why food that tastes fine on a plane might seem overly salty or sweet on the ground.

šŸ… More Umami Flavors:

• Since umami is less affected by altitude, airline meals often include more tomato-based sauces, mushrooms, and soy sauce.

• Fun fact: Tomato juice is way more popular on planes because its flavor stands out at high altitudes.

🄤 Less Carbonation in Drinks:

• Cabin pressure changes reduce the fizz in sodas and beer, making them taste flat or less bubbly.

šŸ’” Airlines basically ā€œhackā€ food to trick your taste buds into thinking it’s normal.

āø»

3. Foods That Taste Better (or Worse) on a Plane

Some foods survive the altitude better than others.

āœ… Foods That Taste Better in the Air:

• Tomato juice & Bloody Marys → More umami flavor.

• Spicy dishes → Capsaicin (the spicy compound) isn’t affected by altitude.

• Savory snacks (cheese, nuts, meats) → High umami levels = stronger taste.

āŒ Foods That Taste Worse on a Plane:

• Coffee & Tea → Bitter flavors are enhanced, while sweetness is muted.

• Pasta & Rice → Lose moisture, become dry and unappealing.

• Wine & Beer → Tastes more acidic and loses depth.

šŸ’” This explains why so many people crave Bloody Marys on flights but rarely drink them on the ground!

āø»

4. Why First-Class Food Tastes Better

If you’ve ever seen first-class airline meals, they look way better than economy class meals. But is the food actually different?

šŸ½ Yes! Here’s why:

• Better Ingredients: First-class meals use fresher, higher-quality ingredients that hold up better at altitude.

• Better Cooking Methods: Meals are freshly prepared or reheated with care, unlike economy meals, which are mass-produced.

• Real Plates & Cutlery: Studies show that eating from real plates enhances flavor perception compared to plastic trays.

• Wider Flavor Options: First-class passengers get richer, umami-heavy meals (steak, seafood, fresh fruit).

šŸ’” First-class food isn’t just more expensive—it’s scientifically designed to taste better in the air.

āø»

5. Can You Hack Your Taste Buds for Better Airplane Food?

Want to actually enjoy your next in-flight meal? Here are some science-backed tricks:

āœ… 1. Drink Water → Staying hydrated improves taste perception.

āœ… 2. Choose Savory (Umami) Dishes → Tomato-based meals, mushrooms, or soy sauce will taste stronger.

āœ… 3. Avoid Coffee & Tea → The bitterness is exaggerated in-flight.

āœ… 4. Try Spicy Foods → Spice levels aren’t affected by altitude.

āœ… 5. Bring Your Own Snacks → Nuts, dark chocolate, and protein bars keep their flavor.

šŸ’” Next time you fly, try these tricks and see if your food tastes better!

āø»

Final Thoughts: The Weird Science of In-Flight Eating

The next time your airplane meal tastes like cardboard, remember—it’s not just bad food.

It’s science messing with your taste buds.

āœˆļø Air pressure, humidity, and noise all change the way you experience flavors.

šŸ… That’s why tomato juice is weirdly delicious on flights (but boring on the ground).

šŸ‘Øā€šŸ³ First-class meals are engineered to taste better using real plates and umami flavors.

So, is airplane food actually bad? Or do we just experience it differently?

šŸš€ Next time you fly, pay attention—your taste buds might surprise you!

healthyhow tohumanitylistrestaurantstravelveganvegetarianrecipe

About the Creator

Ahmet KıvanƧ Demirkıran

As a technology and innovation enthusiast, I aim to bring fresh perspectives to my readers, drawing from my experience.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    Ā© 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.