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Anyone who has ever eaten something they liked can cook without recipes. That combination of raspberries and chocolate you enjoyed in a cafe can be served as chocolate ice cream and raspberries at home; if you liked salmon and avocado in sushi or a baguette, that’s the basis of a salad plate.
In fact, everyone already has a personal bank of great ideas to put on a plate. To perfect your palate and your plates, here are the Top 10 flavour-trail tips.
1. KNOW YOUR TASTE BUDS
Know whereabouts on your tongue to taste and you’ll recognise what’s missing or overdone in a mouthful.
We recognise most tastes all over the tongue, but you first taste sugars in a small area at the tip of the tongue; salt to either side and behind that area, and acidity in narrow strips on the edges of your tongue: bitterness at the back of the tongue and down the throat. The brothy taste of umami, the most satisfying but elusive taste, seems to have receptors in many parts of the tongue.
Then learn the difference between fruitiness (it ends with acidity) and sweetness; and realise acidity on the front of the palate is too often dismissed as bitterness, which is tasted at the back
2 . . . AND THE REST OF YOUR MOUTH
Both nose and tongue get easily bored and refuse to acknowledge the same flavours and aromas continuously. Such nose/tongue blindness is why it’s not always a good idea to taste, taste, taste.
They get bored, stop tasting; you panic and overseason at the last moment. If you must taste continuously ensure plenty of ventilation so the nose and tongue are kept stimulated.
3. UNDERSTAND THE BITE-BACK PRINCIPLE
The bigger the flavour of food, the less we need for both mouth and stomach to be satisfied – just as we easily drink less of fine wine than cheap quaffing wine.
Fats and oils mask taste buds and so give less taste and flavour experiences. Using the tastiest ingredients with only fats and oils which have bite-back flavour of their own means you eat and drink better, perhaps weigh less, too. Bite-back enjoyment also comes with delicious long finishes, staying on the palate well after you have swallowed
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Thanks for all your comments. I do know different chillies have flavour, honestly I do! I talk about the different flavours in My previous book REAL FLAVOURS. But chillies are so rarely chosen for flavour in Britain - if they were I'd welcome it but they are usually added only for heat.
Glynn Christian, Londojn, UK
A lot of pompous twaddle!
Eat what you like, and plenty of it!
Richard Haggis, Oxford, UK
Glynn Christian has obviously never tried a variety of chillies. If he's too timid to cope with the heat, discard the seeds and membranes before tasting birds-eye chillies, long green and red chillies, white chillies (if he can get them) and say honestly that they don't taste different.
Wendy Hutton , Kota Kinabalu, Sabah MALAYSIA
This theory doesn't work with cakes and pastries where the exact proportions are linked to a chemical balance to create the desired effect. By all means experiment - but not on guests, Just throwng eggs, butter, sugar and flour together won't necessarily make a cake.
Janet Brown, lincoln, UK
I'm reading a really great book right now about a man who moved to Paris to study cooking for exactly this reason - he actually burned all his recipe books. It's called Sacre Cordon Bleu by Mark Booth. very funny and loads of really great tips too. I think this stuff is a little advanced.
Sharon, London, UK
I disagree - chillies have a distinct and delicious flavour to me, and vary by variety. If chillies are exceedingly hot then the burn may mask the taste, but anyone who hasn't tasted chilli flavour as opposed to just than heat either suffers bad cooking or poor or ruined tastebuds.
Hilary, Sydney, Australia