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In recent clinical trials, researchers investigate whether<i>Synsepalum dulcificum</i> berries can help people with cancer improve taste dysfunction and increase food intake ...
Humans How miracle berries turn sour foods sweet. The fruit of Synsepalum dulcificum, a plant native to West Africa, doesn't taste sugary on its own, but any sour food you eat afterwards will turn ...
The tablet, also known as mBerry, consists of powder from a West African fruit called Synsepalum dulcificum, or miracle fruit. When consumed, the berry alters your taste buds in a way that sour ...
But after chewing the fruit and rubbing the pulp against the tongue, the berry, known by a promising name -- "miracle fruit" or Synsepalum dulcificum -- releases a sweetening potency that alters ...
I f you have any foodie friends, you’ve probably heard of miracle fruit (Synsepalum dulcificum), a native West African berry that looks like a cranberry, but acts like a psychedelic for your ...
IT WAS hard to believe I was eating a lemon. Earlier, I had let a tiny, tasteless tablet linger on my tongue, the dried powder of a fruit from the Synsepalum dulcificum shrub from West Africa ...
However, there is a real “red miracle berry” fruit (Synsepalum dulcificum) that produces a protein known as “miraculin” that can cause other sour foods subsequently consumed to taste sweet ...
Have you ever heard of a fruit that can make sour foods taste sweet? It’s called the miracle berry, and it’s gained the attention of many TikTokers and adventurous eaters alike for its unique ability ...
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