PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Taste
  • TAStE
rdfs:comment
  • Sensation detected by the tongue. There are four basic tastes perceived by taste buds. The four basic tastes: sweet, sour, bitter, salty.
  • Taste (味, Aji) is a special chapter of the OnePunch-Man manga series included with Volume 9.
  • Taste is a command to consume one nibble of food, slightly alleviating your hunger. Taste can be a useful alternative to eat when wishing to test food for poison.
  • Taste is the Greek god of individual preference. Inbred son of Zeus and Apollo, Taste usually governs endless and pointless debates between retarded entities on internet forums. In sculptures and various other artworks he is depicted wearing a bean flavoured cape and ice-cream shoes, holding a banana-like sceptre
  • Taste reformed in 2000 with drummer John Wilson, guitar player Sam Davidson and bass player Albert Mills.
  • Many people report that solar-cooked food actually tastes better than food that is cooked conventionally. This is especially true with carrots, which are much sweeter, and with meat, which is more tender. Taste can be an issue in places where people are used to eating food that has a somewhat smokey taste from cooking fires.
  • "Taste" is a short story by Roald Dahl that appeared in the 1953 collection Someone Like You. There are six people eating a fine dinner at the house of Mike Schofield, a London stockbroker: Mike, his wife and daughter, an unnamed narrator and his wife (neither of whom speak or take part in the story), and a wine connoisseur, Richard Pratt. Pratt often makes small bets with Schofield to guess what wine is being served at the table, but during the night in the story he is uninterested, instead attempting to socialize with Schofield's eighteen-year-old daughter, Louise.
  • Taste is the sensory ability to detect the properties of molecules of solid and liquids in the mouth, generally those in food. Specialized cells on the tongue known as taste buds react with different chemicals in solids and liquids and invoke a particular sensory reception. For example an ion of an alkalai metal such as sodium triggers two different receptors. These reactions are now generally classified into five types - salty, sweet (typical of glucose), bitter (typical of quinine), sour (typical of acids) and umami (typical of monosodium glutamate). Taste works together with smell to give foods their flavor.
  • Will you sign my Am I really all the things that are outside of me? Would I complete myself without the things I like around? Does the music that I make play on my awkward face? Do you appreciate the subtleties of taste buds? My friend and me were having laughs In a living room filled with arts and crafts He said "I like their clothes and their charming plates But what I really want is a simple place With no fashion clothes 'cause you can't eat those" Is your best wish your taste? Am I really all the things that are outside of me?
owl:sameAs
Length
  • 233.0
dcterms:subject
#views
  • 400
songtitle
  • "TAStE"
original upload date
  • April.17.2016
dbkwik:onepunchman/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:uncyclopedia/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:wotmud/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Previous
Singer
Label
Album
Producer
Release Date
  • 2015-04-23
dbkwik:solarcooking/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:one-punch-man/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:vocaloidlyrics/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:animalcollective/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Song
  • Taste
Link
Volume
  • 9
Title
  • Taste
Description
  • This is a song about struggling to come to terms with who you are. It also represents pretending to be who people see you as, as opposed to who you actually are.
Color
  • gold
Released
  • 2009-01-06
Track
  • 8
  • Taste
Artist
  • Animal Collective's
NEXT
abstract
  • Sensation detected by the tongue. There are four basic tastes perceived by taste buds. The four basic tastes: sweet, sour, bitter, salty.
  • Will you sign my Am I really all the things that are outside of me? Would I complete myself without the things I like around? Does the music that I make play on my awkward face? Do you appreciate the subtleties of taste buds? My friend and me were having laughs In a living room filled with arts and crafts He said "I like their clothes and their charming plates But what I really want is a simple place With no fashion clothes 'cause you can't eat those" Only Ma'd pretend to like the clothes she showed to me Something in my heart can tell me it's a weakness And maybe you would have more luck playing those tasty games But me, I called and called and never heard from her again She's too good to share our favorite things I'll keep an open mind if you let me in Don't let your temper rise, don't get a bitter face Try not to judge me on my kind of taste And don't go changing clothes when they don't like yours Is your best wish your taste? Am I really all the things that are outside of me?
  • Taste (味, Aji) is a special chapter of the OnePunch-Man manga series included with Volume 9.
  • Taste is the sensory ability to detect the properties of molecules of solid and liquids in the mouth, generally those in food. Specialized cells on the tongue known as taste buds react with different chemicals in solids and liquids and invoke a particular sensory reception. For example an ion of an alkalai metal such as sodium triggers two different receptors. These reactions are now generally classified into five types - salty, sweet (typical of glucose), bitter (typical of quinine), sour (typical of acids) and umami (typical of monosodium glutamate). Taste works together with smell to give foods their flavor. Taste serves as both positive reinforcement and a warning. For example, most energy rich foods taste sweet, and most toxins taste bitter. Taste, like other things, tends to get less reliable as people age. In this case, the taste buds tend to lessen in number as people get older. This has a dual effect as most adults can tolerate healthy but bitter foods that are completely unpalatable to a child, such as broccoli. The ability to perceive levels of taste appears to be genetic, with some people having a lesser sense of taste (and preferring spicier foods) and some having a greater sense (and, once again, avoiding broccoli) A sudden lost of taste, the inability to distinguish different tastes, or having an atypical taste reaction, can be a symptom of a more serious underlying disorder. However, due to the importance of smell to flavor, the loss of taste sensation during nasal congestion is perfectly normal.
  • Many people report that solar-cooked food actually tastes better than food that is cooked conventionally. This is especially true with carrots, which are much sweeter, and with meat, which is more tender. Taste can be an issue in places where people are used to eating food that has a somewhat smokey taste from cooking fires. David Whitfield recalls one year he did a cooker course on the Chile Bolivian boarder, and he had a local coordinator who was doing a strong follow-up for a masters class. The participants didn't like the solar food to begin with because it tasted different than the resineous taste from burning the evergreen Tolah bushes, that produced a heavy oily substance on the posts, but after 2 months they began to prefer the solar taste and the women's health was better because they were not ingesting so much oily substance into their lungs.
  • Taste is a command to consume one nibble of food, slightly alleviating your hunger. Taste can be a useful alternative to eat when wishing to test food for poison.
  • Taste is the Greek god of individual preference. Inbred son of Zeus and Apollo, Taste usually governs endless and pointless debates between retarded entities on internet forums. In sculptures and various other artworks he is depicted wearing a bean flavoured cape and ice-cream shoes, holding a banana-like sceptre
  • Taste reformed in 2000 with drummer John Wilson, guitar player Sam Davidson and bass player Albert Mills.
  • "Taste" is a short story by Roald Dahl that appeared in the 1953 collection Someone Like You. There are six people eating a fine dinner at the house of Mike Schofield, a London stockbroker: Mike, his wife and daughter, an unnamed narrator and his wife (neither of whom speak or take part in the story), and a wine connoisseur, Richard Pratt. Pratt often makes small bets with Schofield to guess what wine is being served at the table, but during the night in the story he is uninterested, instead attempting to socialize with Schofield's eighteen-year-old daughter, Louise. When Schofield brings the second wine of the night he remarks that it will be impossible to guess where it is from, but Pratt takes that as a challenge. The tough talk on both sides leads the two to increase the bet until Pratt declares that he would like to bet for the hand of Schofield's daughter in marriage--if he loses, he will give Schofield both of his houses. Though his wife and daughter are understandably horrified, Mike eventually convinces them to accept the bet--it is too good a deal to pass up, especially since the wine will be impossible to identify. However, Pratt proceeds to name the district, commune, vineyard, and the year of the wine (though Mike doesn't turn over the bottle, his reaction appears to be one of disbelief that Pratt could've guessed correctly). At this moment, however, the maid walks in and returns to Pratt his glasses, which he had left on the cabinet in the study earlier in the evening where the bottle had been left out to reach room temperature. (Pratt had picked out this place in the study on an earlier visit as the ideal place to sit the wine--his glasses being left there reveals that he knew the wine in advance and cheated on the bet.) The story ends with Mike starting to get angry and his wife telling him to calm down.
is Previous of
is Manga of
is NEXT of