FAQs
What’s the difference between flavour and taste?
Taste is what your tongue senses – sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami. Flavour includes taste, smell, texture, and even memory and emotion. Many people use the words ‘flavour’ and ‘taste’ interchangeably, but in food training, it’s important to distinguish them, just like how we differentiate between cross-contamination and cross-contact.
What makes food taste more flavourful?
Using fresh ingredients, proper seasoning, and balancing tastes like sweet, sour, and salty can make food more flavourful.
How does flavour work?
Flavour works through a mix of taste, smell, and texture. When you eat, your brain combines all these signals to create the flavour experience.
What are the main components of flavour?
Taste, aroma (smell), and mouthfeel (texture) are the key components of flavour.
Why is flavour important in food preparation?
Flavour makes food enjoyable, helps build customer loyalty, and sets your dish or brand apart.
What is umami?
Umami is a savoury taste often described as meaty or broth-like. It is one of the five basic tastes and adds depth to many dishes.
What is aroma?
Aroma is the smell or fragrance of food that greatly influences how we perceive flavour. It is detected by the nose and plays a key role in the overall eating experience.
What does mouthfeel mean?
Mouthfeel refers to the texture and physical sensations of food in the mouth, such as creaminess, crunchiness, or smoothness, which contribute significantly to flavour perception.