What is Umami | Umami Information Center (2024)

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What is Umami | Umami Information Center (11)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (12)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (13)

  • Umami: critical to delicious cookingThe basic tastes and commoncorresponding foods/componentsWhere can we find umami?Umami and aging/fermentation
  • Umami and babiesUmami and our bodiesThe discovery of umamiWhat umami tastes like : three properties
  • Umami synergyComparing soups the world overThe growing use of umami

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (14)

It has been over a century since umami was discovered in Japan, but umami is just now attracting global attention, primarily from chefs and others with a strong interest in food.

Umami is the fifth taste, joining sweet, sour, salty and bitter. These are unique tastes that cannot be created by mixing other tastes, and are known as the basic, or primary tastes. Umami is a generalterm used mainly for substances combining the amino acid glutamate, and/or the nucleotides inosinate and guanylate, with minerals such as sodium and potassium.*

How humans experience their food

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (15)

*In scientific terms, umami is defined as the taste of salts combining glutamate, inosinate or guanylate with the likes of sodium ions, such as monosodium glutamate, or potassium ions, but for the purposesof this pamphlet, except for sections requiring scientific precision, we describe umami as the taste of glutamate, inosinate and guanylate. Salts of the amino acid aspartate and the nucleotide adenylate arealso types of umami substance, weaker than glutamate. Succinic acid, which gives shellfish their distinctive taste, has also been identified as another possible umami substance.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (16)

Since the word “umami” is originally Japanese and the Japanese expressions “to have umami” and “umai” can mean “tastiness” or “deliciousness,” “umami” is often confused with“deliciousness.” Whether something tastes good or not is a comprehensive yet subjective evaluation determined by elements such as taste, aroma, texture and temperature, besides other factors such asappearance, color and shape, as well as one’s physical condition, surrounding environment, cultural background, and previous experiences. Of these various elements, umami in balance with the other basictastes (sweet, sour, salty, and bitter) plays an important role in determining the deliciousness of a dish.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (17)

For human beings, being able to distinguish the five basic tastes is an indispensable survival skill, because it allows us to avoid risky foods and obtain nutrients safely.

By detecting the sour taste of organic acids in unripe fruit or rotting food, or the bitterness of alkaloids, for example, our tongue enables us to avoid danger. In contrast, when we detect the sweetnessof sugars that serve as our energy source, or the saltiness of minerals necessary to maintain the balance of body fluids, we actively consume them.

Umami meanwhile serves as a signal to the body that we have consumed protein. Sensing umami triggers the secretion of saliva and digestive juices, facilitating the smooth digestion ofprotein.

Common examples of foods/taste substances for each of the basic tastes

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (18)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (19)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (20)

The main components of umami are glutamate, inosinate and guanylate.

Glutamate is found in a variety of foods including meat, fish and vegetables. Inosinate is found in generous quantities in animal-based foods such as meat and fish, while large amounts of guanylate canbe found in dried mushroom products such as dried shiitake.

We also know that the umami component of food increases as a result of processing such as ripening and fermentation. Many traditional foodstuffs from around the world, such as soy sauce and otherfermented condiments made from grain, fish sauces such as Thailand’s nam pla and nuoc mam from Vietnam, and cheeses are excellent sources of umami.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (24)

Meat generally undergoes a certain period of aging prior to being sent to the market. The main component of meat is protein, which is made up of a long chain of 20 amino acids. Glutamate constitutes thelargest proportion of these amino acids, around 15 percent.

Protein itself has no taste. Taste is only perceived when protein breaks down and the amino acid chain disintegrates. These scattered amino acids are known as free amino acids, and are usually referredin this pamphlet as amino acids. This is why instead of “free glutamate,” we simply use “glutamate.” As well as the likes of free glutamate and free aspartate containing umami, free amino acids canimpart a sweet taste (from glycine or alanine) and bitterness (from leucine or valine).

The flavor peculiar to meat emerges when the protein in the meat breaks down during the aging process, and the umami-carrying free glutamate increases.

A similar phenomenon occurs in foods such as cheese, cured ham, miso and soy sauce. In the case of cured ham a leg of pork is salted, allowed to develop mold, dried and carefully aged. Duringthis process the volume of glutamate is boosted by around a factor of fifty. In cheese, the longer the aging process, the higher the glutamate.

Changes in glutamate content during cured ham ripening

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  • *cool temperature, high humidity, 2 months (winter)
  • **higher temperature, lower humidity, about 11/2 months (spring)

Glutamate levels of cheddar cheese aging

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  • What is Umami | Umami Information Center (27)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (28)

Connection between protein and free amino acids

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What is Umami | Umami Information Center (30)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (31)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (32)

Umami is an important taste for newborn babies. Breast milk is rich in the umami component glutamate. It is also contained in amniotic fluid, making umami a familiar taste even before birth.

For babies too, the basic tastes are a vital signal that tells them whether what they have consumed is nutritious or harmful. When sour and bitter solutions were placed in the mouths of four-month-oldinfants transitioning to solid food, their facial responses indicated rejection of the tastes. On the other hand, when offered a sweet liquid, they appeared calm and happy.

When then given vegetable soup, the infants screwed up their faces slightly, but when given vegetable soup with umami added, they exhibited the same degree of satisfaction as when given the sweet liquid.

Amino acids in mother’s milk 7 days after birth

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Infant taste responses

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What is Umami | Umami Information Center (35)

*This experiment was conducted under expert supervision and in accordance with the method of Dr. J. E. Steiner. Because infants are less sensitive to saltiness than adults, and out ofconcern for any possible health effects, no experiments were undertaken with salty tastes.

( J. E. Steiner et al., 1987)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (36)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (37)

Where do we sense umami?

Dotted over the tongue are patches of tissue called papillae, which contain bud-shaped organs that detect taste.These taste buds, as they are commonly known, consist of dozens of taste cells clumpedtogether. The taste cells in turn contain receptors for sweet, sour, salty, bitter and umami substances. From these receptors, information is transmitted to the brain,and we perceive the taste ofthe food.

Umami substances function as the keys and their receptors as the keyholes.

When the receptors in taste cells receive the umami substance glutamate, that information is swiftly passed on to the brain via taste nerves, and umami is recognized.

A signal for protein

Each of the basic tastes acts as a signal for nutrients or harmful substances. Umami is the taste of amino acids and nucleotides, and tells us when a food contains protein, a nutrient essential tosurvival.

The role of glutamate

Recent studies have revealed the presence of umami receptors not only on the tongue, but also in the stomach.

When food enters the stomach, and receptors in the stomach detect an umami substance (glutamate), the umami information is conveyed to the brain via the vagus nerve. The brain in turn transmits amessage to the stomach that triggers the digestion and absorption of protein.

Thus umami is closely involved in protein digestion and absorption, giving it a vital role in our bodies. No doubt the future will bring further discoveries about glutamate’s role in digestion andabsorption.

The Perception of Taste

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What is Umami | Umami Information Center (39)

Intake of Umami-Rich Food

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What is Umami | Umami Information Center (41)

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Umami and the history of seasonings

Throughout history, human beings have created various seasonings and condiments to improve the palatability of food. Salt has been a familiar flavor-enhancer for thousands of years. Foodssuch as sugar and vinegar have also been known since ancient times. This is why we can all readily imagine sweet, sour and salty tastes.

Umami too is contained in a variety of foodstuffs, and is familiar to us from the taste of traditional foods such as soy sauce, miso and cheese. However, it is only around a century ago that umamiwas discovered as a basic taste, and monosodium glutamate invented and launched as an umami seasoning.

A Japanese discovery

There were long thought to be just four basic tastes: sweet, sour, salty and bitter. Then a scientist in Japan Professor Kikunae Ikeda of Tokyo Imperial University (now the University ofTokyo) noticed the presence of a taste that did not fit into any of these categories. Professor Ikeda discovered the main taste component in kombu dashi (broth or stock) to be glutamate, and dubbingit “umami,” penned an academic paper explaining the existence of umami as one of the basic tastes.

Following in Professor Ikeda’s footsteps, other Japanese scientists discovered the umami substances inosinate and guanylate.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (43)

Glutamate extracted from kombu by Professor Ikeda
12 kilograms of kombu yielded 30 grams of glutamate

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (44)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (45)

Professor Kikunae Ikeda

1908Professor Kikunae Ikeda identifies the “fifth taste” component as glutamate, an amino acid found in large quantities in kombu seaweed, and dubs this taste “umami.”
1913Shintaro Kodama, Professor Ikeda’s leading disciple, identifies the nucleotide inosinate as the umami component of katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes).
1957Dr. Akira Kuninaka of the Yamasa Shoyu Research Laboratories identifies the nucleotide guanylate as an umami component, and later confirms it to be the umami component in dried shiitakemushrooms.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (46)

Adelicate taste. A mild, subtle taste. A taste that spreads across the tongue, coating it completely. A persistent, lingering taste. A mouthwatering sensation. This is how chefs who have experienced andrecognized umami describe its characteristics.

Let us take a look at three properties of umami.

Spreading across the tongue

Umami is frequently described as a taste that “spreads across the tongue, coating it.” Experiments on the tongue’s areas of taste receptivity have shown that sweet and salty tastes are sensed more intenselyon the tip of the tongue, while umami is sensed all across it.

Persistence

One study had participants separately take solutions of the umami substances glutamate and inosinate, table salt, and tartaric acid (the acid component of wine) into their mouths, then spit the solutions outand compare the intensity of taste left in their mouth. While the salty and sour tastes of table salt and tartaric acid soon faded, umami was found to linger for several minutes. This suggests that evenamong the basic tastes, umami has a major impact on the aftertaste of foods.

Promotes salivation

Sour or acid taste is widely known to promote salivation, but in fact it has been revealed that umami triggers the sustained secretion of saliva for a longer period.
Furthermore, the saliva produced with sour tastes has a lighter quality, whereas the saliva produced with umami is more viscous, and this seems to moisten more the inside of the mouth.
Without saliva we are unable to sense taste or swallow food smoothly. Umami holds the key to these functions.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (47)

Synergistic effects which have been made use of for a long time.

The main umami substances are glutamate, inosinate and guanylate, and it has been scientifically proven that umami taste of glutamate is dramatically enhanced by inosinate or guanylate. This is referred to as umami synergy.

Yet people have been capitalizing on umami synergy for centuries, long before this effect was scientifically proven. All over the world, in dishes from soups combining glutamate-rich vegetables andinosinate-rich meat and fish, to the tang of Chinese cuisine extracted from chicken or pork bones and green onions, to Japanese dashi made from kombu (high in glutamate) and katsuobushi (high ininosinate), people have acquired an empirical understanding of umami synergy and applied that knowledge to cooking.

The strength of the umami synergy between glutamate and inosinate varies according to the ratios of each. When solutions containing slightly varying proportions of glutamate and inosinate were used toperform a sensory evaluation, umami was found to be most powerful with a glutamate to inosinate ratio of exactly 1:1. This proportion was deemed 7 to 8 times the intensity of tasting either glutamate orinosinate in isolation.

An analysis of the ichiban (primary) dashi used at one venerable Japanese restaurant revealed the glutamate/inosinate ratio to be exactly 1:1, suggesting that top restaurants know from experience theoptimal proportions for greatest umami.

Synergistic effect in various cooking

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (48)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (49)

Umami intensity
by Glutamate/Inosinate ratio

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*Proportions of glutamate and inosinate were adjusted to maintain a fixed total concentration (0.05g/100ml) of umami substance.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (51)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (52)

The dashi of Japan, bouillon from France, Chinese tang ingredients and uses may differ, but all are indispensable to their respective cuisines. Analysis of their content reveals all to be rich in theumami substances glutamate and inosinate, and all are striking in their intense taste. Both east and west make clever use of umami.

Japanese dashi is simple, composed mainly of glutamate, inosinate, and the weaker umami substance aspartate. In contrast, bouillon and tang have high levels of amino acids that are not umami substances,and consequently have more complex tastes.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (53)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (54)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (55)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (56)

* Ichiban dashi is high in a weak sour amino acid by the name of histidine, found in katsuobushi.
Analysis courtesy of : AJINOMOTO Co., Inc.

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (57)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (58)

The functions of umami are attracting growing interest not only in the world of cooking, but from medical and nutrition professionals as well.

Umami allows for less salt

Umami also helps to reduce salt content in cooking. Numerous studies and statistics link excessive salt intake to many different lifestyle diseases. Yet food does require a certain amount of salt totaste good. Drastically reducing salt content renders food tasteless, and while we know that cutting down on salt is good for our bodies, a low-salt diet is difficult to maintain.It has been demonstrated that making use of umami allows salt content to be reduced without compromising palatability. In an experiment comparing egg-drop soup prepared according to a standard recipewith a soup made with extra umami, it was found that salt could be reduced in the umamiboosted soup by around 30 percent with no loss of palatability. In a similar manner, some Japanese restaurants areexperimenting with serving healthy kaiseki food able to be savored equally by those on a salt-reduced diet, by focusing on boosting umami in food preparation.

 Incorporating umami skillfully into our daily diet allows us to enjoy tasty meals, even with less salt.

Improving quality of life for the elderly

Umami is mouthwatering, literally. Recent advances in taste physiology confirm that the umami substance glutamate promotes salivation. Salivation is further encouraged by the addition of inosinate.Taste impairment among older people is deemed primarily due to a decline in salivation, and with some reports suggesting that such impaired taste sense can be ameliorated using umami to promotesalivation, moves are underway to use umami as a means of improving quality of life for the elderly. In the UK, for example, chefs and scientists are working together to develop umami-rich meals forthis purpose.

Umami foods for delicious,low-fat French cuisine

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By reducing cream and butter content, boosting the boullion component and using umami-rich ingredients, this potage is made with only one-third the calories of a more conventional recipe.Enhancing umami allows more intense flavor with fewer calories.

Courtesy of : Koji Shimomura (Tokyo, Edition Koji Shimomura)

Healthy kaiseki cooking using the umami of dashi

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Kaiseki restaurants can serve equally enjoyable low-calorie or salt-reduced diets, by using umami of dashi. One example is preparing simmered dishes with more umami-rich dashi. This can beachieved by increasing the quantities of dashi ingredients.

Courtesy of : Takashi Tamura (Tokyo, Tsukiji Tamura)

Healthy Japanese cuisine in the global spotlight

Recent years have seen a growing shift in the developed world toward fewer calories and animal fats, as people look to prevent lifestyle diseases and maintain good health. As part of this dietary trend,Japanese cuisine has enjoyed burgeoning popularity, thanks to its health properties.Rather than relying on animal fats, Japanese cooking uses the umami of dashi to highlight the intrinsic flavors of ingredients, and chefs from all over the world have started visiting Japan to studythese cooking techniques. Learning how to make Japanese dashi, they master the use of umami as an alternative to animal fats before going on to develop their own approaches to umami-oriented cooking.For instance, a kaiseki-style bento box made by one traditional Japanese restaurant uses over 40 different ingredients, yet contains fewer than 500 calories. The secret is the Japanese cooking techniqueof using the umami of dashi to enhance flavors.

Bento box high in variety yet low in calories

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This kaiseki-style bento box uses over 40 ingredients, but contains fewer than 500 calories, by using the umami of dashi to highlight individual flavors.

Courtesy of : Yoshihiro Murata (Kyoto, Kikunoi)

What is Umami | Umami Information Center (2024)

FAQs

What is Umami | Umami Information Center? ›

*In scientific terms, umami is defined as the taste of salts combining glutamate, inosinate or guanylate with the likes of sodium ions, such as monosodium glutamate, or potassium ions, but for the purposes of this pamphlet, except for sections requiring scientific precision, we describe umami as the taste of glutamate, ...

What is umami quizlet? ›

Umami. -A category of taste in food (besides sweet, sour, salt, and bitter), corresponding to the flavor of glutamates, especially monosodium glutamate.

What is umami described as? ›

Umami, which is also known as monosodium glutamate is one of the basic five tastes including sweet, sour, salty, and bitter. Umami means “delicious savory taste” in Japanese, and its taste is often described as the meaty, savory deliciousness that deepens flavor.

What does umami detect? ›

Umami helps you recognize amino acids and proteins. Since protein is vital to your health, this is an important taste. Umami comes from three compounds that are naturally found in plants and meat: glutamate, inosinate, and guanylate. Glutamate is an amino acid found in vegetables and meat.

Is umami real science? ›

In 1985, the term umami was recognized as the scientific term to describe the taste of glutamates and nucleotides at the first Umami International Symposium in Hawaii. Umami represents the taste of the amino acid L-glutamate and 5'-ribonucleotides such as guanosine monophosphate (GMP) and inosine monophosphate (IMP).

What are 3 examples of umami? ›

Some foods that are high in umami compounds are seafood, meats, aged cheeses, seaweeds, soy foods, mushrooms, tomatoes, kimchi, green tea, and many others. Try adding a few umami-rich foods to your diet to reap their flavor and health benefits.

What is the taste of umami quizlet? ›

Umami, also called savoury, is a rich, 'mouth-filling' taste in protein-based foods due to the presence of glutamate.

Why is umami so hard to describe? ›

Umami also isn't capable of reaching the level of perceptive intensity of the other four tastes. “It reaches a maximum height that is lower than the others, so it's less noticeable,” Breslin says, comparing its subtlety to tasting, say, starch or calcium.

Is umami good for you? ›

On the positive side, umami taste can improve food flavor and consumption, improve nutrition intake of the elderly and patients, protect against duodenal cancer, reduce ingestion of sodium chloride, decrease consumption of fat, and improve oral functions.

How to use umami in a sentence? ›

The pizza margherita is thin and crisp and suitably umami, whatever that is. Tomatoes are a high natural source of umami too, especially if you roast them. The chicken livers were compelling, with a moreish, umami savoury flavour. The basic tastes are salt, sour, sweet, bitter and umami.

What does umami do to the brain? ›

The results of this study show that the taste of umami activates generally similar brain regions to another and prototypical tastant, glucose, including the putative human primary taste cortex in the anterior insular/opercular region, and the putative secondary taste cortex in the orbitofrontal cortex.

What is umami triggered by? ›

Taste Receptors

Diverse compounds evoke sweet taste, including some sugars, D-amino acids and proteins, as well as numerous artificial sweeteners. By contrast, umami taste is evoked by a small number of l-amino acids and 5′-ribonucleotides found in meats and other foods.

What triggers umami? ›

In the case of umami, there are several compounds which trigger the umami taste receptors. These include glutamate, a salt of glutamic acid, specific ribonucleotides, and glutamate salts including monosodium glutamate (MSG), potassium glutamate, and calcium glutamate among others.

Does sperm taste umami? ›

The taste of sem*n varies from person to person. Most people describe the flavor as some combination of: bitter or salty because it is alkaline. sweet because of the sugar content.

What is the purest form of umami? ›

A popular seasoning and flavor enhancer, MSG, or monosodium glutamate, is the purest form of umami, the fifth taste. MSG (monosodium glutamate) is widely used to intensify and enhance umami flavors in sauces, broths, soups and many more foods.

Do humans have umami taste? ›

Recent studies have revealed the presence of umami receptors not only on the tongue, but also in the stomach. When food enters the stomach, and receptors in the stomach detect an umami substance (glutamate), the umami information is conveyed to the brain via the vagus nerve.

What does umami mean in food? ›

Umami is one of the five basic tastes, along with sweet, sour, salty and bitter taste sensations. It's most commonly defined as “savoury”, but the characteristics of Umami can also be described as “meaty”, “complex” or even just “deliciousness”.

What substance is umami taste? ›

Abstract. Monosodium l-glutamate (MSG) elicits a unique taste sensation termed umami and is widely used as a flavor enhancer in various cuisines. In addition, recent studies have suggested the existence of receptors for l-glutamate (Glu) and transduction molecules in the gut mucosa as well as in the oral cavity.

What else is umami? ›

Umami (pronounced “oo-MAH-me”) is a Japanese word that means the essence of deliciousness, delicious taste, or savoriness, depending on the translation. The term is used in English (and many other languages) to describe a rich, savory, lingering taste sensation that comes from certain foods.

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