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Is texture the new taste? The effect of sensory food descriptors on restaurant menus on visit intentions

Marion Garaus (School of International Management, Modul University Vienna, Vienna, Austria)
Christian Weismayer (School of Sustainability, Governance, and Methods, Modul University Vienna, Vienna, Austria)
Elisabeth Steiner (University of Applied Sciences Wiener Neustadt, Wiener Neustadt, Austria)

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 12 July 2023

Issue publication date: 10 October 2023

226

Abstract

Purpose

This study investigates the impact of sensory food descriptors on restaurant menus on the intention to visit a restaurant and to spread positive word-of-mouth.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing on the signalling theory and the assimilation-contrast theory, two online experiments and one field experiment test the assumption that food descriptors prompt food-quality inferences before and after consumption, and that in both stages, food-quality inferences prompt favourable behavioural intentions.

Findings

Sensory food descriptors impact positively on behavioural intentions through quality inferences, although not all aspects of food quality mediate this effect.

Research limitations/implications

Not all four factors (deliciousness, visual attractiveness, variety and nutritiousness) prompt behavioural intentions to the same extent. While the signalling theory explains the positive impact of food-quality inferences on behavioural intentions before consumption, the assimilation-contrast theory explains the positive effect food-quality inferences have on the intention to revisit and word of mouth after consumption.

Practical implications

Managers should use either oral somatosensory descriptors alone, or in combination with flavour descriptors to prompt quality inferences and behavioural intentions.

Originality/value

The findings challenge the prevailing assumption that food descriptors addressing multiple senses have a superior effect on food-quality inferences compared to food descriptors stimulating only one sense. Instead, food descriptors referring to the texture, viscosity or mouthfeel of a dish, (i.e. oral somatosensory descriptors), impact on food-quality inferences, while adding flavour attributes did not have favourable effects.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the reviewers for very helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. They also thank Leonie Rocek for her help in collecting data for Study 3.

Citation

Garaus, M., Weismayer, C. and Steiner, E. (2023), "Is texture the new taste? The effect of sensory food descriptors on restaurant menus on visit intentions", British Food Journal, Vol. 125 No. 10, pp. 3817-3831. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-08-2022-0693

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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