المعدراني، أحمد. (2026). نظرية التذوق الدائري: دراسة معرفية وإدراكية جديدة في فهم النكهة. IUOAMC Global Platform.
Circular Tasting Theory also affirms that the quality of this stage depends on the food’s ability to preserve its sensory presence after direct interaction has ended. Superficial foods disappear quickly, whereas deep foods possess the ability for “perceptual continuity” within awareness and memory.
In professional sensory analysis, aromatic return is an important indicator of the quality of the food’s aromatic composition and of the balance of the sensory cycle as a whole. A flavor that returns harmoniously and deeply often indicates a high level of professionalism in building the sensory and temporal layers of the dish.
Thus, the theory affirms that aromatic rebound is not merely a leftover aroma. It is an independent stage within the sensory cycle, in which flavor returns to perception in a more mature and reflective way. It proves that true tasting does not end at the limits of the tongue, but continues inside the mind, memory, and time.
Phase Six: Final Impression and Flavor Stabilization in Memory
The stage of Final Impression represents the apparent ending of the circular flavor cycle, but in reality it marks the beginning of flavor’s transformation from a temporary sensory experience into a stable trace within memory and perception. At this stage, food is no longer physically present in the mouth, yet its influence continues within awareness, and the brain begins forming the “final image” of the entire food experience.
In traditional models, the end of tasting is viewed as the moment taste disappears. Circular Tasting Theory, however, considers the final effect to be the stage in which the true value of food is determined. Some foods leave a rapidly fading trace despite their momentary strength, while others remain present in memory for a long time because of their sensory and emotional depth.
The theory uses the concept of Flavor Stabilization. This refers to the stage in which the food experience settles within perceptual awareness after all direct sensory transformations have ended. At this moment, food becomes part of the human sensory memory rather than an experience that ended with eating.
The theory also affirms that the brain does not retain all food details equally. It focuses on elements that had strong emotional impact, clear perceptual balance, distinctive aromatic return, coherent sensory rhythm, and stable flavor identity. The final effect therefore does not depend only on taste strength, but on the “quality of the sensory journey” the taster experienced throughout the complete flavor cycle.
One important characteristic of this stage is that perception becomes calmer and deeper. After direct interaction ends, the brain begins evaluating the experience more comprehensively, connecting the beginning, peak, transformations, aromatic rebound, psychological emotion, and memory. Through this connection, the “perceptual conclusion” of the food is formed.
Circular Tasting Theory holds that refined foods do not leave only a good taste. They create an “extended sensory state” that continues within awareness after the experience has ended. For this reason, some dishes are forgotten within minutes, while others remain in memory for years because of the strength of their final effect.
This is especially clear in emotional food experiences or those connected to cultural identity. Human beings do not remember taste alone; they remember the complete sensation that accompanied the experience. Here, flavor becomes part of the individual’s personal and emotional history.
The theory also affirms that the final effect represents the “true judgment” of the quality of the sensory cycle. Even if the beginning is strong or the peak is impressive, a weak or disturbed ending may reduce the full perceptual value of the food. Conversely, a deep and balanced ending may give great value to a dish that is technically simple.
In professional sensory analysis, this stage is one of the most important evaluation criteria because it reveals flavor stability, the quality of sensory construction, the strength of aromatic memory, the final harmony of the cycle, and the food’s ability to create a long-term effect.
Thus, Circular Tasting Theory affirms that true flavor does not end when food disappears. It continues within memory, emotion, and perception, where the final effect becomes the stage in which the food experience receives its full meaning and final sensory stability.
Interference Between Sensory Phases in the Circular Cycle
Although Circular Tasting Theory divides the sensory cycle into successive stages, these stages do not operate separately or rigidly. They continuously overlap within human perception. Flavor does not move like mechanical steps following one another, but like a connected sensory current in which different stages interact dynamically and simultaneously.
In the real experience of food, some elements of the peak may begin before sensory expansion is fully complete. Aromatic rebound may appear during gradual decline. Delayed aromas may influence the interpretation of the initial impression even after several moments have passed. The sensory cycle is therefore not a closed linear structure, but a moving network of reciprocal effects.
The theory uses the concept of Sensory Phase Overlap. This refers to the situation in which several stages of the cycle overlap at the same time within perception. In this case, the taster does not feel a sharp transition between stages, but lives through a flowing experience in which flavor moves organically and continuously.