Umami

Umami (旨味?) is one of the five basic tastes sensed by specialized receptor cells present on the human tongue.[1] The same taste is also known as xiānwèi (traditional Chinese: 鮮味; simplified Chinese: 鲜味) in Chinese cooking.

Umami is a Japanese word meaning savory, a "deliciousness" factor deriving specifically from detection of the natural amino acid, glutamic acid, or glutamates common in meats, cheese, broth, stock, and other protein-heavy foods. The action of umami receptors explains why foods treated with monosodium glutamate (MSG) often taste "heartier".

Glutamate has a long history in cooking: it appears in Asian foods such as soy sauce and fish sauce, and in Italian food in parmesan cheese and anchovies. It also is directly available in monosodium glutamate (MSG).[2]

In as much as it describes the flavor common to savory products such as meat, cheese, and mushrooms, umami is similar to Brillat-Savarin's concept of osmazome, an early attempt to describe the main flavoring component of meat as extracted in the process of making stock.

Contents

Chemical properties

Main article: Monosodium glutamate

Umami was first identified as a basic taste in 1908 by Kikunae Ikeda of the Tokyo Imperial University while researching the strong flavor in seaweed broth.[3][4] Ikeda isolated monosodium glutamate as the chemical responsible and, with the help of the Ajinomoto company, began commercial distribution of MSG products.

Taste receptors

Acknowledged subjectively as a special taste by Eastern civilizations for generations, umami has been described in biochemical studies identifying the actual taste receptor responsible for the sense of umami, a modified form of mGluR4[5] named "taste-mGluR4".

Umami tastes are initiated by these specialized receptors, with subsequent steps involving secretion of neurotransmitters, including adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and serotonin.[6] Other evidence indicate guanosine derivatives may interact with and boost the initial umami signal.[7]

Cells responding to umami taste stimuli do not possess typical synapses but instead secrete the neurotransmitter ATP in a mechanism exciting sensory fibers that convey taste signals to the brain. These taste receptors are located everywhere on the tongue.

In monkey studies, most umami signals from taste buds excite neurons in the orbitofrontal cortex of the brain, showing spatially-specific characteristics:[8]

See also

Notes

  1. Sherry Seethaler, "UCSD-led Team Discovers How We Detect Sour Taste", University of California, San Diego, August 23, 2006.
  2. Moskin, Julia (2008-03-05). "Yes, MSG, the Secret Behind the Savor", New York Times. Retrieved on 2008-08-09. 
  3. Ikeda, Kikunae (1909). "New Seasonings[japan.]". Journal of the Chemical Society of Tokyo 30: 820–836. 
  4. Ikeda, Kikunae (2002). "New Seasonings" (PDF). Chemical Senses 27 (9): 847–849. doi:10.1093/chemse/27.9.847. PMID 12438213. http://chemse.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/27/9/847. Retrieved on 2007-12-30. 
  5. Nelson G, Chandrashekar J, Hoon MA, et al (2002). "An amino-acid taste receptor". Nature 416 (6877): 199–202. doi:10.1038/nature726. PMID 11894099. 
  6. Roper, SD (2007 Aug), "[1] Signal transduction and information processing in mammalian taste buds]", Pflugers Arch 454 (5): 759-76, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17468883] 
  7. Daniels, S (February 18, 2008), "Scientists develop new umami taste enhancers", FoodNavigator.com-Europe, http://foodnfoodnavigator.com/news/ng.asp?id=83328-umami-msg-gmp 
  8. Rolls, ET (2000 Apr), "The representation of umami taste in the taste cortex", J Nutr 130 (4S Suppl): 960S-5S, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10736361 

References

  • Flavor Chemistry: Thirty Years of Progress By Roy Teranishi, Emily L. Wick, Irwin Hornstein; Article: Umami and Food Palatability, by Shizuko Yamaguchi and Kumiko Ninomiya. ISBN 0306461994

External links