October to March:
10:00 - 17:00
April to September:
10:00 - 18:00
Adults: CHF 15.00
Reduced rate: CHF 12.00
Children 6-15: CHF 6.00
Children 0-5: Free
Quai Perdonnet 25
CH-1800 Vevey
Switzerland
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The aim is to understand the role our five senses play in our relationship to food.
The arrival of chemistry was to be the start of a new era in the understanding of digestion. We discovered how pancreatic and gastric juices and bile act, based on human studies.
SPALLANZANI
In the 18th century, Spallanzani studied digestion in animals but wanted to do research on humans. He decided to make himself vomit on an empty stomach, then filled a tube with the liquid he had harvested. He then put cooked, chewed beef into the tube and placed it in an oven to imitate the temperature in his stomach. After some 35 hours, the meat had lost all its texture.
BEAUMONT
In the 19th century, Beaumont, an American surgeon, took advantage of the opportunity of having a patient, who had been wounded by a bullet in the abdomen, to explore things further. The wound healed but left a direct entry point into the stomach. Beaumont was then able to remove digestive juices and watch digestion as it was happening in the patient's stomach.
MECHANICAL AND CHEMICAL TRANSFORMATION
Digestive juices were identified at the start of the 20th century and it was established that digestion is a series of mechanical and chemical transformation.