COOKING GLOSSARY

A dictionary of culinary terms

Flavor

Disclosure: Product links, including Amazon links, will take you to our affiliate partner websites. We may earn a commission on purchases.

Definition:

What’s the difference between flavor and taste?

Flavor is a combination of taste and other senses (primarily, but not limited to, smell/aroma) that’s responsible for the pleasure we get out of eating.

Taste is divided into five categories: saltiness, sweetness, sourness, bitterness, and umami. When it comes to aromas, five categories aren’t enough, as aromas number in the thousands. Aromas become part of the flavor experience when we chew our food. During chewing, small molecules are released from the food and they float up to the nasal cavity.

To further understand how taste and aroma combine to produce flavor, try plugging your nose the next time you eat your favorite food. For example, if you plug your nose while eating salted caramel ice cream, you will taste both the sweetness of the sugar and the saltiness of the salt. Unplug your nose, and the aromas from the caramelized sugars will enter your nasal cavity, creating a much more pleasurable and complex experience. That experience is flavor.

Other senses such as sight (how the meal is plated), touch (texture), and sound (e.g. dinner music) can play major roles in flavor development. Even memories can influence flavor.

There are endless combinations of taste, aroma, sight, texture, sound, and memories. This allows a cook infinite possibilities when it comes to flavor development.

Sizzle and Sear Kitchen Equipment Deal Alerts In Your Inbox

Kitchen Equipment Reviews

Pro-Surface Thermapen Review
Made In Nonstick Cookware Review: Is It Worth It?
Review: Breville PolyScience Control Freak Induction Cooker

Delicious Recipes

Frosted Lemonade | Ninja SLUSHi Recipe
Margarita | Ninja SLUSHi Recipe
Royal Peach Chill | Ninja SLUSHi Recipe

Food Articles

Where is the Ninja CREAMi in stock? – 2024
Best Cookbooks of All Time
Simple Deep Frying Oil Solution if you Only Deep Fry a Couple Times a Year