because a stuffy nose decreases your ability to smell
all yucky hard
No, you need taste buds, not saliva to taste food.
Food doesn't "affect" taste, taste is a property of food.
we taste them by licking nd chewing the food so are taste buds process what we are eating.
Taste is one of the five senses, it uses sensory impressions of food or other substances on the tongue. The taste buds on the tongue help the person taste the food.
the proper way to taste food while cooking is to savor the taste and to try to understand what the taste is in your mouth, if you like or you dont like it
Although the restaurant was supposed to be superb, the food was tasteless and insipid.
Bland means lacking flavor
The word insipid comes from the latin word 'insipidus', which means 'tasteless'. It can be used in conjunction with food to describe that the food is flavorless.
fever and cold
An appropriate prefix for "taste" in the given sentence could be "fore" to convey the idea that the rise in food prices is an early indication or sign of the severe problems that are expected to come.
No its not. If you like cold food better than hot food that's fine. Its your opinion. :)
Because a cold dulls your sense of taste and smell.
No, actually it doesn't -- the reverse is true. For whatever reason, salt and other seasonings are less pronounced in cold food. So if you are seasoning food to taste when its hot or warm, and it will eventually be served cold, you need to keep in mind to add additional seasoning because it will be eaten cold.
you can taste the dirt and mud in the air, the blood and smoke, stagnant water, cold food and the alcohol to get rid of the tastes. i hope this has helped .
if you have no saliva in your mouth you can not taste anything
Cold food has a different flavor because of the reaction of the food on the tongue. If the food is heated, the reactions create a more tender food along with a smell. If the food smells nice, it will enhance the flavor automatically.
taste aversion