Well let's see. Acceptable, as in meeting only minimum requirements; barely adequate, capable of being endured, hardly tolerable.
Sounds yummy.
'Acceptable' can also be interpreted by A LOT of people as 'wonderful' or 'just right' (given that someone else besides the 'loved one' or the character itself made it).
No, it probably comes out as good as it's ever going to get. It isn't just like real food "down to the molecular level." What it actually is, is something that looks like the real thing, the shape and external appearance. The internal composition is a approximation. Not a side by side genetic duplication.
An approximation?
Who are you trying to convince?
The recipe and the entire molecular structure of a meal is stored in the ships computer as stated on-screen.
People can also make changes to the recipe that's inside the computer, or they can input new recipes to create their own meals.
Your argument doesn't really hold ground.
Then explain why Starfleet personnel don't do just that? They been eating replicator food for years, they understand how to give verbal instruction to a computer, they could order dish after dish, take a small taste, making small incremental changes to the "recipe."
But there is no sign that anybody ever has. Or that a replicator can be adjusted in this fashion.
They DID.
'I slaved over the replicator for hours' was mentioned several times on Voyager for one thing... because when you fiddle with the recipe of something, you still have to make sure it comes out the way YOU like it.
That can easily take time when you are cooking a meal.
We've mostly seen the crew eating in the mess hall that already has replicators with pre-programmed meals in the ships database, but they won't have access to their modified meals there most likely unless they request it (usually, they make these changes in the privacy of their quarters), and why would they spend long amount of time in the mess-hall changing the recipe when other people would be waiting to order their meals?
They go to the mess-hall for socializing and replicators are taken for granted in that era, as is the food, so why would they rave about it?
It was also mentioned that the replicator can create whatever you want as long as you know it's molecular composition.
Except, by dialog replicators don't dish up anything worth raving about.
Next time you watch the episode New Ground, listen to the enthusiasm in Geordi's voice as he speaks of the soliton wave. How many times can you remember people going on that way about replicator food?
Because the soliton wave was a completely new piece of technology whereas the replicators were already taken for granted and they were based on pre-existing technology. And the soliton Wave was mentioned in but 1 episode, then completely discarded.
Plus, alien races that didn't have replicator technology were continuously amazed at what it could do - and I hadn't seen the Kazon or Neelix complaining about the water not 'tasting right'.
Enthusiasm. Picard speaking on archeology. Riker as he plays jazz. Crusher producing her theater. When people talk with enthusiasm on the subject of food, it's because it is being prepared "by hand."
But not a word of enthusiasm on what falls out of the hole in the wall.
So what?
As Riker himself said, the computer replicates a meal exactly as the recipe states.
They were excited at the prospect that someone was actually HAND MAKING a meal.
These people were mostly accustomed to foods that came out directly from a replicator and was more than adequate for their needs.
Also, on Voyager, the replicator on board the Delta Flyer was programmed with certain dishes that Neelix himself prepared.
Making a statement that you cannot change the recipe of a pattern is nonsensical as you are merely instructing the computer to modify the pre-existing molecular structure by adding or removing certain aspects.
For the love of man, these people are creating something using manipulation of particles on a subatomic scale to re-arrange the structure from one state into something else.
Modifying a simple recipe is a 'no brainer'.
One other thing...
Season 7 of TNG showed Ro-Laren making a very strong hasparat for that old Maqui guy.
They only had access to replicators when it came to food as we've seen.
Plus, the guy's praise of her ability to make such a strong hasparat would be an indication that the meal was indeed 'superb'.
As I've already mentioned twice before, the only 'complaints' we've seen about replicated food came on less than a handful occasions, and from people who either preferred/emphasized actually preparing the food with their bare hands instead of allowing the computer to do all the work for them, or because it didn't taste 'right' because the recipe in the database did not obviously agree with a single persons taste buds (who probably would had to modify every single replicator he came across off to make the meal the way he wanted to).