Yasushi Komata
Ajinomoto
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Featured researches published by Yasushi Komata.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1987
Shizuko Yamaguchi; Yasushi Komata
Umami is defined as the taste elicited by monosodium glutamate (MSG) or 5‘ribonucleotides such as IMP and GNP. In this paper, several lines of evidence indicate that umami is independent and “basic” as long as the so-called four basic tastes are regarded as basic. In the first experiment, the similarities among the four tastes (sucrose, NaC1, tartaric acid, and quinine sulfate) and umami (MSG) in single and mixture solutions were examined. A multidimensional scaling yielded a spatial configuration reflecting the similarities among the stimuli. All the stimuli were located within a four-dimensional regular polyhedron that has five vertices. The tastes composed of the four basic tastes were located within a three-dimensional tetrahedron, which was a subcomplex of the four-dimensional polyhedron with the four basic tastes located at four vertices. Umami was located at the other vertex, indicating that it constructs another dimension independent of the four basic tastes. Another multidimensional scaling showed the dominance of umami in the tastes of natural foods. The tastes of broths made from meats (beef, pork, etc.) and fish fell outside the tetrahedron of the four basic tastes and were located close to umami. Those made from vegetables widely distributed around the five taste areas. However, when a small amount of IMP was added, the tastes approached umami due to the remarkable synergistic effect between IMP and glutamic acid contained naturally in the vegetable stocks. Thus the stocks examined were regarded to have dominant or potential umami, which is actualized or developed by a small amount of umami substances. Umami did not enhance the four basic tastes, and vice versa, at threshold and at suprathreshold levels. The hedonic properties of umami were examined in comparison with the four basic tastes. As far as simple aqueous systems were concerned, umami did not cause a pleasant sensation. In the selected flavored solutions or actual foods, umami clearly enhanced the hedonic tone. Umami increased the pleasantness of foods only within a certain range of concentration, and an excess of umami caused a rather unpleasant sensation by which the intake concentration became self-limited. These hedonic properties were similar to other basic tastes except for sweetness.
Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi | 1957
Takajiro Mori; Yoshiro Hashimoto; Yasushi Komata; Sadanari Eguchi
“Katsuwo-no-shiokara” is a marine food-stuff, made by ripening the skipjack viscera after the addition of a considerable amount of salt, and has a good taste together with salty and slight bitter tastes. During ripening the enzymes in viscera and some bacteria to some extent react on protein and free amino acids are gradually produced. Free amino acids which have been reported to be responsible for the good taste, but not thoroughly studied sofar, were analyzed by a microbiological method on three kinds of extracts prepared with hot water, trichloroacetic acid and tungustic acid solutions, respectively. Among three extractants used, tungustic acid was found to be most suitable for obtaining the extracts less in proteins or peptides (Table 2). Free amino acids determined, however, showed no significant difference according to the extraction method and fairly coincided in their values with those given by BLOCK et al. on the proteins in animal entrails including fish viscera (Table 3). This may suggest that the free amino acids accumulated in “Katsuwo-no-shiokara” represent the pattern of amino acids in proteins of the starting material, skipjack viscera.
Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi | 1962
Yasushi Komata; Akira Mukai; Yuzo Okada
Archive | 1971
Hideo Shimazaki; Shuji Tsukamoto; Tadaomi Saito; Sadanari Eguchi; Yasushi Komata
Archive | 1966
Akihiro Yamazaki; Izumi Kumashiro; Masaharu Yoshikawa; Shingo Ikeda; Shizuko Yamaguchi; Tado Takenishi; Takaomi Saito; Takashi Meguro; Tetsuya Kato; Tsunehiko Ninomiya; Yasushi Komata
Archive | 1971
Hideo Shimazaki; Nagayoshi Kitada; Yasushi Komata; Shinji Okumura
Archive | 1971
Hideo Shimazaki; Shuji Tsukamoto; Yasushi Komata
Archive | 1968
Akihiro Yamazaki; Izumi Kumashiro; Tetsuya Kato; Takashi Meguro; Tadao Takenishi; Masaharu Yoshikawa; Tsunehiko Ninomiya; Shizuko Yamaguchi; Yasushi Komata; Tadaomi Saito; Shnigo Ikeda
Archive | 1968
Hideo Shimazaki; Shuji Tsukamoto; Tadaomi Saito; Kanagawa Yokohama; Sadanari Eguchi; Yasushi Komata
Archive | 1968
Hideo Shimazaki; Shuji Tsukamoto; Tadaomi Saito; Kanagawa Yokohama; Sadanari Eguchi; Yasushi Komata