Dec 10, 2012

Umami dearest!

"Food is our common ground, a universial experience". James Beard   




"Umami" is a japanese term meaning "essential savoury taste " or "essential meatlike taste".
Umami taste, however is universial and can be tasted in many signature dishes from around the world. In sushi, beef with oystersauce, in pasta puttanesca, pizza, hamburgers, bacalao, demi glace (french essence of a complex sauce), in bacon, hams, various cheeses and in fungi and sun riped tomatoes.


The "common ground" in all umami tasting essences, condiments, ingredients, and dishes are the result of a process of denaturated or somehow changed protein chains, forming into smaller amino acids. Free glutamate (GLU og L-glutamate) is the  most present amino acid in most food, and also for bringing to you and me, the savoury taste universally known as umami. But the most interesting aspect of the taste, is when you combine free glutamates with a few other taste components ( known as purines) to create synergistic umami. This blog will deal with that. And thsi is not an asian taste, not european either. Beware, and  stay tuned! 


Umami has a mild, complex taste that lasts longer in the mouth compared to the four other basic tastes, beeing sweet, salt, sour and bitter. The umami taste receptors on our tongue, in the mouth and  in the intestinal tract,  capture the glutamates in a trap, then signalling that important nutrition is on its way. The mouth waters, and thenerve signals go down through thousands of nerves to our stomach and further back into our brain in an area not far from the happiness and sugar centre. So, umami rich food is transforming you into a mouthwatering happy fool, craving for more of the savoury stuff. 

And it starts with breastmilk. Human breastmilk has enough umami to make you an addict, once you identify why you crave certain food. Join me on the journey of umami sensation. You're very welcome to share!

Regards Elisabeth 









No comments:

Post a Comment