>umami
Who started this shit word trend?
Meat
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Japanese did, a couple of thousand years ago
It's a japanese word, so who do you think?
japs
weeaboos
remember when umami was called "savoury", nothing against using umamithough, it's better desu, more specific
The kino guy.
>i hate loan words because im a retarded unilingual burger
the taste buds on your tongue surface
but you wouldn't know since you obviously have no sense of taste
>the tastebuds on your tongue surface
As opposed to the tastebuds on the roof of your mouth?
Forget it Jake, its Flavortown.
Japanese as a language hasn't existed for that long, loser.
What a jejune post.
>remember when umami was called "savoury"
Umami was never called savoury.
Savoury is a flavour, umami is a basic taste.
We use umami instead of shoehorning savoury to mean something it never was in recognition of the scientific efforts made by Japan to prove that it is a basic taste when centuries of European cuisine dismissed it as a flavour.
>he doesn't have tastebuds on the roof of his mouth
Enjoy not being able to taste anything properly.
Erina from Shokugeki no Souma.
>using foreign words
cuck
>cuckold
>from Old French cucuault
You played yourself
In English we say savoury. Weebs and pretentious twats need stabbed.
en.wikipedia.org
>This neologism was coined in 1908
I thought it was just a pretentious way for people to feel artistic by saying umami and savory but I guess it is a distinct taste. Poached chicken will taste savory but chicken that's been browned has a different kind of savoriness that you can also find in mushrooms, soy sauce, etc.
>by saying umami and savory
instead of savory*