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Newguest Posted 9 years ago
Vocabulary

You don't taste ...

The secret (of making Chocolate Mayo Cake) is the mayonnaise and the coffee. The coffee heightens the chocolate flavor and in my opinion, something can never taste too chocolatey. You don't taste the coffee in the finished cake.

--- Does it mean you don't feel the taste of coffee in the finished cake?

  

Top answer

Newguest feel the taste That is not English. to try or test the flavor or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth: to taste food.

  • Newguest feel the taste That is not English.
  • to try or test the flavor or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth: to taste food.
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3 Answers
0
Newguest feel the taste

That is not English.

'Taste'—

verb (used with object)
1.to try or test the flavor or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth:
to taste food.

0

How about "notice"?

You don't taste the coffee in the finished cake = You don't notice the taste of coffee in the finished cake.

Is the meaning the same?

0

Your sentence is now a good one, but the meanings are a bit different. The first one suggests that there is no coffee flavour; the second one suggests that there is a slight coffee flavour.

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