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Talent and Skill Entry: Enhanced Taste Buds

Published: January 31, 2015 by ANGELA ACKERMAN

Choosing a talent or skill that fits with your character’s personality, lifestyle, and values can go a long way to helping them break free of the common stereotypes seen so often in fiction. This thesaurus will help you find the perfect quality or two that will show readers your character’s uniqueness while also acting as an asset when it comes to goal achievement.

When choosing a talent or skill, think about the personality of your character, his range of experiences and who his role models might have been. Some talents might be genetically imparted while others are created through exposure (such as a character talented at fixing watches from growing up in his father’s watch shop) or grow out of interest (archery, wakeboarding, or magic). Don’t be afraid to be creative and make sure the skill or talent is something that works with the scope of the story. 

Enhanced Taste Buds

Description: the ability to taste even the most subtle of flavors, and distinctly tell the difference between bitter, sweet, salty, sour and umami.

Beneficial Strengths or Abilities: Enhanced taste buds have a genetic component, but anyone can learn to improve their range of taste. Having a love of food, a keen interest in nutrition…

Character Traits Suited for this Skill or Talent: focused, curious, attentive, unbiased, patient…

Required Resources and Training: People with a heightened sense of taste need to protect their taste buds through healthy choices. As smell affects taste, avoiding environments that have lots of scents and not wearing body sprays, perfume or aftershave will help keep one’s palette neutral. Avoiding bad habits like smoking, and foods that are…

Associated Stereotypes and Perceptions:

  • that people with sensitive taste buds are picky eaters
  • that people with this talent avoid processed food, fast food and do not eat junk food because they are “snooty” about what they eat

Scenarios Where this Skill Might be Useful:

  • excelling in the culinary industry (chef)
  • the ability to pick up on flavors that should not be present (drugs, poison, etc.)
  • being able to blend flavors and re-imagine food, inventing something new and earning fame

TIP: Choose a talent or skill that makes your character memorable and helps them achieve their goals.

If this is something you’d like to learn more about, you might find these resources helpful. You can also see the full collection of talent and skill entries in their entirety at One Stop For Writers, where all our thesauruses are cross-referenced and linked for easy navigation. If you’re interested in seeing a free sampling of the Talent and Skill Thesaurus and our other descriptive collections, head on over and register at One Stop!

ANGELA ACKERMAN
ANGELA ACKERMAN

Angela is a writing coach, international speaker, and bestselling author who loves to travel, teach, empower writers, and pay-it-forward. She also is a founder of One Stop For Writers, a portal to powerful, innovative tools to help writers elevate their storytelling.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Carleen M. Tjader says

    February 2, 2015 at 4:13 pm

    Thanks for the very interesting post!

  2. :Donna Marie says

    January 31, 2015 at 1:20 pm

    I can tell you one thing, I’m all for the “not wearing fragrance” part, for sure. I’m chemically sensitive and fragrances ruin me in VERY big ways. They can shut down my day and certainly my brain.

    As far as the taste buds aspect, the better restaurants don’t allow their staff to wear fragrance because, just as explained here, it affects the flavor of the food. This goes for patrons, too, but a lot of patrons don’t care or don’t think of it.

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