A Guide to Developing Flavor (2024)

One of the most important aspects of developing your own dishes is understanding how to layer elements of flavor. It's no secret that I love flavorful food -- after all, my old Instagram handle was Tang and Spice.

But when I was younger, I always thought food had to be heavily spiced to be tasty. These days, I'm more about spice in moderation, and thinking about what type of flavors will complement a set of ingredients. We’re not covering up the ingredient, we’re enhancing it.

When I first started cooking, I followed recipe after recipe with limited understanding of the common elements in a dish. Slowly, I began to pick up on some of those patterns. Through a combination of repetitive cooking and Top Chef (!), I learned that salt and acid are critical in flavoring. Often, dishes fall flat without them.

Table of ContentsHide

  • The Key Elements
  • Examples
  • Building a Dish on the Fly
  • Exercise #1: Process of elimination to build a dish on the fly
  • Potential dishes:
  • Tips
  • Putting it all together
  • ADD-ONS:
  • 2. A guide to layering flavors
  • 3. References

Additionally, many of you are likely aware of Samin Nosrat's Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat (and by the way, you should purchase a copy!). Having watched her show a couple years back, I finally bought the book recently for research purposes in writing this guide and was astonished at her ability to concisely explain these key building blocks.

A Guide to Developing Flavor (1)

A set of key flavor elements can transform your cooking from one-note meals into something delicious and stained in your memory forever

The Key Elements

These elements: salt, fat, acid, and heat all add a unique layer of flavor to a dish.

  • Salt not only makes foods taste saltier, which we humans enjoy because it's essential to our diet, but also enhances the flavors of other elements in a dish (i.e., adding salt to cookie dough enriches the overall cookie).

  • Fat adds richness, seasoning, and/or a smooth textural finish.

  • Acid brightens -- think grilled fish with lemon.

  • Heat brings new possibilities; a sear, bake, or confit all find different ways to alter an ingredient chemically.

On top of these, there are three optional layers that I like to think through when developing a dish: sweetness, crunch, and spice (obviously!).

Examples

Think about some of the most popular dishes -- most are balanced with many of these different elements.

Caprese salad uses tomatoes (acid + sugar), mozzarella (fat), olive oil (fat), and salt (salt). Broccoli sautéed (heat) with garlic and lemon (acid) is made with butter (fat) or olive oil (fat) and salted (salt). Chaat can be made of potatoes, samosa, or fried bits (crunch), chutneys (acid, sugar), chaat masala (spice), and yogurt (fat). Southern Vietnamese pho often contains meat, broth (fat), lime (acid), chili peppers (spice), bean sprouts (crunch).

A Guide to Developing Flavor (2)

As you start to develop your own dishes, or even alter existing recipes, think through these different elements. All that’s left is understanding how to pair complementary ingredients -- this comes naturally to some, but for others it will take practice and that’s okay! Experimentation and practice and tasting constantly while building a dish will get you there.

And by the way, you don’t need ALL of these layers. You can use them, but many delicious dishes are missing one or a few elements. Toast with avocado, lemon, and salt doesn’t have added sugar. Mac and cheese isn’t really acidic.

Raw dishes don’t use heat.It is just as important to ensure that every element has a purpose as it is to build additional layers. A younger me would have ensured that every element was incorporated in every dish — but sometimes that complexity can muddle the flavors, as opposed to enhance it.

Building a Dish on the Fly

Use this framework to build a dish on the fly. Look in your fridge. Maybe you have a protein, like steak, chicken or fish. You’ll salt (salt) the protein and grill it (heat) in a bit of oil (fat) or butter (fat).

What about the other elements? You could serve the meat with a lemony (acid) side salad -- maybe the salad has fried shallots or croutons (crunch). Fish can easily be finished with some citrus (acid).

Or instead, make a gremolata, made of lemon zest (acid), herbs, and garlic, for some brightness. Marinate the chicken in a spicy yogurt (spice, fat) before grilling.

It’s okay not to have all the answers immediately. You can start by choosing your main ingredient, then assessing what salty, acidic, or spiced ingredients you have in your fridge or pantry.

Exercise #1: Process of elimination to build a dish on the fly

Say I have some cooked chickpeas in the fridge and I’d like to make a salad using it. I have the following ingredients to work with:

Other produce/herbs: Cilantro, tomato, green beans, cucumber, fennel

Salt: Capers, kosher salt

Fat: Butter, olive oil, bacon

Acid: Lemons, oranges, balsamic vinegar, tamarind chutney

Heat: I’m making a raw salad, so there won’t be any heat involved unless I choose to heat some of the complementary ingredients

Sugar: Sugar, honey, balsamic vinegar, tamarind chutney

Crunch: Croutons, fried garlic

Spice: Chaat masala, garlic powder, chili powder, za’atar, black pepper

Take a minute and brainstorm what possible combinations of elements could work well with the chickpeas, then see below for what I’ve come up with. Don’t worry about landing on a final dish yet, we’re simply thinking of a few different ideas.

Potential dishes:

The first thing I do when I’m trying to narrow down on a set of flavor profiles is to see what patterns exist. What types of cuisines typically use chickpeas? This is not to say that you can only great a dish in the confines of what’s traditionally made, but it’s an easier approach to start off with before experimenting across cuisines.

  1. I know chickpeas are used often in Indian cuisine. What other ingredients are typically found in this culture? I see cilantro, tomato, cucumber, salt, lemons, tamarind chutney, chaat masala, chili powder, and black pepper. One option could be to make a chickpea salad with those ingredients -- i.e. a base of chickpeas, diced tomato and cucumber tossed with minced cilantro and a dressing of salt, lemon, chaat masala, chili powder, and black pepper. I could drizzle some tamarind chutney on top or mix into the dressing. Fried garlic isn’t something that’s typically in an Indian dish, but garlic is, so maybe I garnish with that for some additional crunch.

  2. I also see some Mediterranean ingredients. Maybe I choose a chickpea salad with tomato, cucumber, capers, olive oil, lemon, and za’atar.

There are many right answers here. You may see something I don’t, based on how you grew up eating or a dish you ate at your favorite restaurant. That’s totally okay! The most important thing is that you’re open and eager to try new ideas and work with what you have.

The more you can apply this process, the less you’ll have to venture out to the grocery store or follow a recipe exactly.

Tips

  1. To ensure a balanced dish, add a bit of the flavoring at a time (salt, fat, acid, sugar, and spice) and keep tasting and adjusting until it's hit the right ratio for your taste palette. Don't serve food without having tasted it, and season early and often.

  2. Don't smother your main ingredient in other flavors, we're trying to enhance the flavor, not drown it out.

  3. Have fun with this! It’s all about experimentation. There’s no hard and fast “rules”. You can use multiple fats, omit certain layers, etc.

A Guide to Developing Flavor (3)

Putting it all together

Here’s the process laid out more clearly:

Start with your MAIN INGREDIENT LAYER: protein, vegetable, etc.

+ choose your SALT LAYER:

Salt takes time to diffuse into different ingredients. Sprinkling salt onto a whole chicken for a dry brine the day before ensures the meat will be nicely marinated on the inside as well as the outside. Larger pieces of meat will take longer. Cook’s Illustrated swears by brining fish. Salting a tomato a few minutes before serving will allow it to diffuse. You can also salt ingredients just before serving with some flaky salt -- this achieves a different taste profile. You’ll get bites of saltiness as opposed to a salted ingredient throughout.

ADD-ONS:

+ FAT LAYER: You can cook in fat, dress a salad in fat (ex: olive oil), garnish (bacon), or dollop (yogurt or cheese)

+ ACID LAYER: Acids can be used to marinate an ingredient (note: if marinated too long, it may make it mushy!), added to a dressing, or squeezed on top. Each of these different methods will yield different results. For example, a grilled chicken that’s been marinated for 30 minutes in lemon juice will yield a much more subtle acidic flavor than squeezing a lemon on top of that chicken.

+ COMPLEMENTARY INGREDIENTS LAYER: Think through what additional ingredients might go well with your dish. Cucumbers complement tomatoes, potatoes complement steak, etc.

+ HEAT LAYER: There are so many ways to cook an ingredient -- from sauteing to poaching to searing, etc. It can be helpful to have an idea of what type of end result you want for your ingredient first and work backwards. For a steak, you’ll likely want a nice, browned crust so poaching doesn’t make sense. Searing and finishing it in the oven is likely the move. For a fish, there are tons of different options -- do you want soft, moist fish? Maybe try steaming. Are you looking for crispy fish? Try deep frying.

+ SUGAR LAYER: You don’t always need to add sugar, but it can help to cut a particularly acidic, spicy, or salty dish.

+ CRUNCH LAYER: This is also optional, but can add a nice textural element to finish your dish.

+ SPICE LAYER: As a final, optional element, sometimes this can completely transform your dish from one cuisine to another. Sprinkling roasted carrots with garam masala evokes a different feeling compared to simple salt and pepper.

Once you’ve got the flavor profile down, you can pair with or mix into carbs if desired for a pasta, sandwich, noodle bowl, etc.

2. A guide to layering flavors

Using the above process, I’ve put together a list of ingredients in each element category to help you brainstorm.

Ingredient Flavor Guide

3. References

  1. Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: https://www.saltfatacidheat.com/

  2. Cook’s Illustrated

  3. Spruce Eats

A Guide to Developing Flavor (2024)

FAQs

How do you develop flavour? ›

Use acidic ingredients to add that little "something missing" in the dish. Acids make nearly any vegetable or meat dish much perkier, with a brighter flavor that tastes deeper than it would without the acid. Sometimes when you cook there's something off and you just can't put your finger on it.

What are the 5 flavour profiles? ›

Human taste can be distilled down to the basic 5 taste qualities of sweet, sour, bitter, salty and umami or savory. Although the sense of taste has been viewed as a nutritional quality control mechanism, the human experience of ingesting food is the interaction of all 5 senses.

What is flavour in sensory evaluation? ›

"flavor, n—(1) perception resulting from stimulating a combination of the taste buds, the olfactory organs, and chemesthetic receptors within the oral cavity; (2) the combined effect of taste sensations, aromatics, and chemical feeling factors evoked by a substance in the oral cavity.”

What points to consider when developing flavors in food? ›

The most important factors to consider when creating a new flavor are the physico-chemical properties of the flavor and carrier materials. The most important factors to consider when creating a new flavor are the sense of smell, taste, touch, and avoiding unwanted bitterness.

How do we develop taste? ›

Taste buds grow from a class of cells called basal cells, Diako explained. The cells go through a process in which they divide and enter the taste buds. They then develop into one of at least five different taste cell types that help us detect sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami.

How do you create new flavors? ›

These elements: salt, fat, acid, and heat all add a unique layer of flavor to a dish. Salt not only makes foods taste saltier, which we humans enjoy because it's essential to our diet, but also enhances the flavors of other elements in a dish (i.e., adding salt to cookie dough enriches the overall cookie).

What are the 5 pillars of flavour? ›

Sweet, salty, sour, bitter and umami are five taste elements that build our overall perception of flavour. When each element is perfectly balanced - not only on the plate, but across an entire meal - the dining experience is lifted above and beyond.

What are the 7 types of flavours? ›

I'm here to help. There are 7 elements of taste that impact how we enjoy food: salt, sweet, sour, bitter, umami, fat, and spicy.

What are the 4 basic flavours? ›

The basic tastes are:
  • Sweet. When something tastes sweet, it's usually because of sugar and or derivatives such as fructose or lactose. ...
  • Sour. Most things that taste sour are acidic solutions like lemon juice or organic acids. ...
  • Salty. ...
  • Bitter. ...
  • Savory. ...
  • Hot or spicy is not a taste.
Jan 24, 2023

What factors contribute to creating flavor? ›

A flavor is a combination of the tastes, aromas and other sensations caused by the presence of a foreign substance in the mouth. Tastes are the sensations we detect when a substance comes in contact with the taste buds on the tongue (sweet, sour, salt, bitter and umami.)

How to evaluate flavors? ›

Flavor perception can be divided easily into three stages. The odor assessment, sniffing the food before it enters your mouth. The flavor in the mouth assessment, when the food is in the mouth. Also, the aftertaste assessment, which is the sensations perceived after a sample has been swallowed.

What are the three components of flavor? ›

“Flavor comprises combined elements of olfactory (i.e., retronasal odor), somatosensory (e.g., texture and temperature), and gustatory sensations that attend ingestion.

What is the flavor rule? ›

The Flavor Rule

Finally, the “Flavor Rule” permits a dog food name to include any specific meat… fish, lamb, chicken, and so on… even if there isn't a speck of that meat in the product… as long as the word “flavor” is used with it.

What five factors affect flavor? ›

The tongue recognizes five basic tastes: sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami—a savory aspect associated with meat and mushrooms. But the taste you actually experience isn't that simple.

What affects perception of flavor? ›

Many factors alter taste perception, such as lesions of the oral mucosa, cigarette smoking, radiation, chemotherapy, renal disease, hepatitis, leprosy, hormones, nutrition, use of dentures, medications, and aging. Gum or ice chewing may temporarily help loss of taste.

How is flavor created? ›

How are natural flavors created? Natural flavors are developed by isolating specific chemical ingredients from natural sources, such as an essential oil from a specific fruit. A flavorist will then use chemical ingredients from a single or many natural sources to develop the flavor profile for a specific product.

How do we get flavor? ›

Flavors come from all around us. They come from fruits, vegetables, spices, leaves, and trees. Over many years, scientists have been able to identify flavoring substances from nature and from their own creations, and they have figured out which of these works together to create a familiar and great flavor sensation.

How do they make flavour? ›

Flavourings are prepared from essential oils, such as almond and lemon; from vanilla; from fresh fruits by expression; from ginger by extraction; from mixtures of essential oils and synthetic organic chemicals; or entirely from synthetic chemicals, with alcohol, glycerol, propylene glycol, alone or in combination, as ...

How do you get flavour into food? ›

Acidic ingredients help lift and balance flavor. Use small amounts of ingredients with bold flavors such as pomegranate seeds, chipotle pepper or cilantro. Give a flavor burst with condiments such as horseradish, flavored mustard, chutney, wasabi, bean purees, tapenade and salsas of all kinds.

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