Miracle Berry: When life hands you lemons, make lemonade
![]()
![]()
“Is this something we should do at work…or will we get fired for partaking of illicit substances? asked science editor Todd Runstad as he popped a miracle berry tablet in his mouth. “Go ahead, I’m your boss, I’ll back you up (maybe),” I said. Such was the start of the conversation for the Supply Portfolio team experiential taste test.
Within minutes of dissolving the tiny tablet on our tongues, we were under the influence. As we dug into a pile of tart lemons and bitter kumquats, our minds said “sour” but our taste buds said “sweet.” Lemonade sweet. This African berry, called the miracle fruit, or synsepalum dulcificum for all you botanists, turns sour and bitter foods into a sweet surprise. The miraculous taste bud transformation is thanks to a protein, ironically named miraculin, that binds with taste buds and when exposed to acidic foods gives everything sour a sweet flavor.
There are no known side affects, except a slightly sweet aftertaste as if you scarfed down an entire birthday cake while no one was watching (good news–each pill is only 1 kcal). Our team is not alone in our experimenting; across the nation people are hosting “flavor tripping” parties. If you are lucky enough to find the actual fruit, scrape the pulp off the seed and roll it around in your mouth, or order premade tablets from http://www.miracleberrypill.org/. There is no indication this berry will sweetened our sour economy, nor has the FDA approved its use for foods and beverages.








April 24th, 2009 at 3:00 pm
So I too, was involved in this taste test (see tongue picture) and my first thought was why… Why would you want to take this berry tab to make the sour sweet, however after sucking on a lemon and having it taste just like fresh lemonade I started to wonder could you dissolve this into a pitcher and use as a sugar substitute for things like making lemonade. I don’t if it’s possible or not, but sure seems like an easy way to add flavor without the calories
I’m not quite sure I’d run to the store and buy more tabs, but I’d certainly say this fruit is deserving of its miraculous name.
Leave a Comment