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It smells very nice when it is intact, as soon as you cut it, it smell like
decomposed flesh. You can buy them in Asian stores.
Cadamom has a pleasant smell, it is used for candies and Indian dishes.
Mara Cosillo-Starr
Resource Center Manager
The Field Museum
On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 10:52 AM, Daniels, Alissa <
[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
> Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related
> institutions.
>
> *****************************************************************************
>
> Hey all.
>
> Here's an earth-shatteringly not-of-great-importance but still interesting
> question:
>
> We were planning out some activities for our Sense of Smell Day next
> month, and one of my coworkers suggested we have durian fruit avaiable. I'm
> not familiar with it, but apparently it smells awful (like pig s**t,
> according to one well known description) but it tastes great. It got me
> wondering about other foods like that (some cheeses come to mind).
>
> If smell contributes something like 75% of the flavor experience when you
> eat something, how can something that smells so awful still manage to be
> tasty? Thoughts?
>
>
> bringing you the Big Questions, as always,
> AD
> aka SLOB (the Smell Lady of Boston--thanks, Jonah!)
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Alissa Daniels, Science Program Manager
> Boston Children's Museum
> 617-426-6500 x342
> www.BostonChildrensMuseum.org <http://www.bostonchildrensmuseum.org/>
> The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new
> discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny..." --Isaac
> Asimov
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
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For information about the Association of Science-Technology Centers and the Informal Science Education Network please visit www.astc.org.
Check out the latest case studies and reviews on ExhibitFiles at www.exhibitfiles.org.
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