Yes, cows do have a sense of taste. They also have different types of taste buds.
The same way you or I or any other human/animal do: to see what things taste good and what do not.
They can, yes.
With their tongue
Taste really has nothing to do with what gender the beef came from. It's more to do with what the animal was raised on and how long the animal's carcass was hung for. Meat from a cow or bull can taste just as good or bad as the other.
They're both of the same species, just opposite sexes. They have the same of everything, except the bull has male reproductive organs and the cow has female reproductive organs, and the bull has more muscle mass on him than a cow does.
There's a 50% chance that a cow will give birth to a bull calf. Same with heifers. Therefore the ratio is 1:1 that a cow will be mother to a bull (bull calf) or a future cow (heifer calf)
There is no such thing as a "female cow" nor a "male cow." "Cow" refers to the female of any species including the domestic bovine, and is not a name of a specific animal. The male of a domestic bovine is called a bull, and the female (mature) a cow. To answer your question, it is the bull that is the larger of the two in most cases, such as within breeds and when the bull and the cow are the same age. But, if you compare between breeds, such as if the bull is a Dexter and the cow a Holstein, or if the bull is much younger than the cow, then the opposite may be true.
A Friesian bull has the very same colouration as a Friesian cow: black and white.
Same as a cow...between 5 and 20 mph.
There is no such thing as a male cow. A cow is a mature female bovine that had had a calf, and a bull is an intact male bovine. So the young offspring of a bull and cow is a calf.
Same way all bovines do: Bull mounts cow and inserts his penis into the cow, ejaculates then dismounts.
No. When you take the hide off, they all look and taste the same.
They don't. That has never happened before, and likely never will. When you cross a White Shorthorn cow with a Black Angus bull you will get a grey calf (this is how the Murray Grey breed came about, by the way). The same thing occurs if you put a Black Angus bull on a Charolais cow.
Bulls are male cowsWhen a bull and a cow (all cows are female)'mate' if the cow has a 'male' cow its called a 'bull'
Yes. Both sexes are of the same species, just different genders.