What is Umami?

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I’m falling in love with cooking and I see on all these shows talk about Umami with ingredients. I get the idea behind the flavor but they don’t excite my taste buds. I feel like I’m missing something.

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14 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

I have read all the comments on this thread and have absolutely no idea what umami still is. I am seeing it tastes like tomatoes, meat drippings, salty but not salty, msg-related taste, etc. I googled umami, and not seeing much of a straight answer…

So is this a prominent taste, or is it more or a vague background taste because it’s seeming to be something that isn’t obvious

Anonymous 0 Comments

Umami is new. People used to think of sweet and salty. It is the meaty texture that you get from mushrooms, for instance. Also soy.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s one of the basic taste, caused primarily by glutamates and a few other substance when it’s detected by your tongue.

It’s hard to separate this taste from other taste because most food has stronger taste that overwhelm it, but without it the food would still taste less good; it’s like the bass playing behind the lead singer. I think a good way to taste it is to make boiled tenderloin with no seasonings whatsoever. No salts, no sugar, no spices, no oils nor fats, just pure lean pork.

Anonymous 0 Comments

You could try this – make two little hamburger patties and get two small skillets hot. Salt and pepper one of them, and drizzle the other one with a 50/50 combo of soy sauce and fish sauce. Cook them both until browned and crispy and try the difference between them.

I think fish sauce is pretty nasty when overdone in uncooked things, but when it’s seared, it’s kinda magical-umami-bomb. It’s really amazing on things like grilled burgers, if you don’t overdo it. I consider the fish sauce/soy sauce combo a real secret weapon for grilling burgers.

Anonymous 0 Comments

“Tastes like chicken” is because of umami.
I did a tasting course that explained the 5 core flavors really well. Tasting umami was having pure msg (blind taste of course) and it was very odd to taste chicken soup with no textures and no salt.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Umami is what steak has that chicken doesn’t (or at least the white meat). The term is more technically accurate than saying savoury because savoury is used to describe both Umami and some other types of flavors.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your body needs certain nutrients in amounts greater than nature provides in ordinary plant and animal-based food. Your taste buds evolved to help you find them: salty is for sodium (it was a lot harder to come by for early man), sweet is for sugars, sour is probably to find things safely fermented (not an avoidance: even young children and chimpanzees crave sour foods), Bitter is more likely for avoidance… And umami? That’s for compounds containing nitrogen. There may be additional taste buds for fats, calcium, and water.

For more info, read the book Flavor by Bob Holmes.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Umami is a savory taste. It is distinct from sour, bitter, sweet, and salty, and corresponds to the taste of glutamates (including MSG).

Anonymous 0 Comments

I have never tried this…and this post and it’s responses having me thinking. Could you just taste monosodium glutamate and experience umami in a more pure way?

Anonymous 0 Comments

It used to be called/is sometimes called “savoury” maybe that helps, maybe it just makes you more confused.