Salt, Sweet, Bitter, Sour.... and now, The Fifth Eleme-- I mean, Taste!
The taste of Umami, based on a Japanese word, is that sensation found in savoury foods (such as highly protein-rich foods and and especially tomato) rich in glutamate in particular, triggering a particularly deep and rich, "yummy" sensation when applied to the taste buds.
Now, I'm no Heston Blumenthal, but it is something that neurophysiologists have been aware of for quite some time now, and something I was taught about about 10 years ago in University. However, this week the specific taste is now available in supermarkets in a concentrated tube of the stuff marketed as.... Taste No. 5™:
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...tter-and-now-its-the-fifth-taste-1893309.html
I also listened to a feature on this on one of the radio shows this week - apparently some say that it has a subjectively synergistic effect on our taste buds when combined with other tastes.
Personally, I don't generally like to think of umami when I taste something that's, well, tasty.
But at least there's a name for it, I guess, if nothing else - although when hearing it, I can't help but think of this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCCuOLqwZv8

The taste of Umami, based on a Japanese word, is that sensation found in savoury foods (such as highly protein-rich foods and and especially tomato) rich in glutamate in particular, triggering a particularly deep and rich, "yummy" sensation when applied to the taste buds.
Now, I'm no Heston Blumenthal, but it is something that neurophysiologists have been aware of for quite some time now, and something I was taught about about 10 years ago in University. However, this week the specific taste is now available in supermarkets in a concentrated tube of the stuff marketed as.... Taste No. 5™:
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...tter-and-now-its-the-fifth-taste-1893309.html
Since its discovery 102 years ago by a Japanese scientist, "umami" has been the object of fascination by chemists and avant-garde chefs determined to discover the secret of the so-called "fifth taste".
But now the esoteric flavour – described as the trigger for the sensation of deliciousness when detected by the brain alongside the primary tastes of sweet, salty, sour and bitter – is about to jump from the rarefied surroundings of Michelin-starred restaurants and university labs to the high street, with the arrival of umami in a tube.
Two British supermarket chains are to start stocking a paste of ingredients developed by a London restaurateur and food writer, which is rich in the naturally occurring chemicals that create the sense of umami, amid growing scientific evidence that the fifth taste plays a key role in stimulating the digestive system.
....
I also listened to a feature on this on one of the radio shows this week - apparently some say that it has a subjectively synergistic effect on our taste buds when combined with other tastes.
Personally, I don't generally like to think of umami when I taste something that's, well, tasty.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCCuOLqwZv8
