this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2024
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Haircut Practice by Adam Koford for September 16, 2024.

FAQ: Haircut Practice is a comic strip inspired by, and is a tribute to, Charles Schulz's Peanuts, but with all new art and jokes.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Sometimes I like to dip the underside of the spoon and just lick that. Works well for any kind of soup that's been made with an immersion blender, probably works in this case too. (Although, I initially started doing it because the soup was too hot. That's likely not gonna happen here.)

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago

Put spoon in mouth over tongue without touching it, then turn it over.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago

Except a lot of the taste comes from receptors in the nose. They get the most info with the food on the top. The tongue has only very basic information about the food and is there to determine if we should spit it out because it is poison or get as much as we can because it is high caloric stuff.

Fun fact, the way the tongue works is very different from how many people think. Each little taste bud can detect one or two aspects depending on its specialization. They can detect sweet, savoriness (umami) , bitter and sour. Salt is detected in a different way. Sweet and umami are detected by the same bud, where bitter and sour each have their own specialized buds. Most of the little pink buds on the tongue aren't taste buds, but there are still a lot of taste buds all over the tongue.

With the taste buds the brain takes a "picture" of the food. It receives a signal from each taste bud in regards to the level of taste they receive. The brain learns to interpret these pictures in what the food tastes like, supplemented by the nose and the salt levels. Since each tongue is different and each brain is different, tastes are very personal and can be different for different people. Tastes evolve over time, so it can even differ for the same person as they get older.

When first drinking something like coffee or beer, the brain gets very confused. These are complex tastes and the brain has a hard time of figuring out what it's tasting. Since it can be very bitter with coffee for example, the brain thinks it might be poisonous, so revulsion is often a first response. However when sticking with it the brain learns to make sense of the jumble and might like the complexity. These are so called acquired tastes.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

I was born with a deviated septum and, despite at least two surgeries attempting to repair this, have never recovered. I have almost no sense of smell.

For any food which has toppings durable enough to endure, I eat it upside down. Pizza and cake are prime examples. Why would you ever want the actual flavor hidden behind a thick layer of, in various forms, bread? The bread is the transportation medium, not the food. Don't get me wrong, I love bread and carbs, but they're not the appeal of most dishes.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago

Why not spin the spoon in food so it costs the entire spoon and then just eat it as normal