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What is the name of the flavor of wasabi, horseradish, mustard, capers, and jalapeño?

Unfortunately, I'm not fond of the taste of the above ingredients. To me, they taste similar. I don't mind the heat. I love a home-grown scotch bonnet or the occasional Carolina Reaper, but the taste of the above ingredients have a certain taste that are very similar and don't taste good for me. Does that taste have a name? What is it?

Disclaimer: While looking for related questions, I found out that I have not tried real wasabi. But I chose to include wasabi because 'fake wasabi' is based on horseradish, which I assume means that they taste similar.

Related questions that ask for substitutes:

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    I'm not understanding why capers are in that list. I can go along with the 'differences in hot' that come with capsaicin [peppers] & sinigrin [mustards] but I cannot see how capers fit.
    – Tetsujin
    May 1, 2020 at 14:35
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    Very vaguely related: cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/64382/other-hot-spices
    – Stephie
    May 1, 2020 at 14:55
  • @Tetsujin I don't think Little Helper is intending to discuss the differences in heat-- instead seem to be asking about the taste of the substances (minus heat) and asserting that capers have a similar taste to the other ingredients, and looking for a category that would encompass these ingredients. Seems like a very opinion-based question, to me, since I imagine many people would see these flavors differently than OP.
    – Onyz
    May 1, 2020 at 15:28
  • @Onyz - I can think of no category the others could belong to that capers could be included in, unless we're right out as far as 'vegetable'. if you can think of one, please let me know. You can group the others all as 'hot' or you could separate to 'pepper vs mustard' but I'm not seeing capers in that venn diagram anywhere.
    – Tetsujin
    May 1, 2020 at 16:09

3 Answers 3

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Mustard, horseradish and a few others are sometimes grouped together as "pungent", which can also include aliums, ginger, and other strong flavors.

But it's a pretty fuzzy category. Some people might not include hot peppers (but still include other types of "pepper"). Some might include other objectionable flavors that can overwhelm a dish if not used sparingly (so for me, cilantro, for you, capers).

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That is probably the ally isothiocyanate. Other veggies that have isothiocyanates include cabbage, bok choy, and kale. It doesn't stand up to heat in powdered flavors very well, usually degrades at the temperatures I've spray dried (roughly 200 C) at and becomes more of a fermented note than a spicy note.

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There has been some doubt about the grouping of the given ingredients. Some comments and answers have inspired me to look into different plant families and chemical compounds, which has been an interesting discovery. Unfortunately, I didn't find the answers to be sufficiently self-contained so I felt a need to compile my findings in an answer. But I would like to thank everyone who helped me understand this grouping: Thank you!


Glucosinolates

Now, I want to start with making it clear that I was asking for the flavor and not the heat.

Stephie linked to an answer for another question that asked for heat and not flavor but the category for mustard and horseradish led to glucosinolates:

Mustard and horseradish (and to a lesser extent radishes, cress and other plants) contain glucosinolates, which we percieve as pungent, sharp or hot. An extreme example for glucosinolate-hotness is wasabi.

-- Stephie [highlights mine]

Looking into glucosinolates, we see that the flavor of it is caused by mustard oils, which contain allyl isothiocyanate as mentioned by Eugene Welker.

Now, this explains the compound that groups mustard, horseradish, and wasabi, but not yet for capers and jalapeños.


Capers

Capers are in the family capparaceae and are in the order brassicales:

The Capparaceae (or Capparidaceae), commonly known as the caper family, are a family of plants in the order Brassicales.

-- Wiki (capparaceae)

Capers are in the same family as mustard and contain glucosinolate.

The Capparaceae have long been considered closely related to and have often been included in the Brassicaceae, the mustard family (APG, 1998), in part because both groups produce glucosinolate (mustard oil) compounds.

-- Wiki (capparaceae) [highlights mine]

Caper family


Jalapeños

I can't find any sources that says that jalapeños contains glucosinolate (isothiocyanate). Maybe I'm wrong on this? It's just peculiar because I found the taste to be specific to jalapeños and no other chilis.


Pungency

Addressing Joe's answer, the group being pungent is maybe incorrect but definitely too vague because it covers other things like curry. I'm writing maybe because pungency is mostly associated with having heat but different definitions are a bit contradictory.

However, I found the terminology section to be an interesting read: terminology on pungency.

Checking the definition of pungency by Merriam Webster, we get

  • 1: sharply painful
  • 4b: having an intense flavor or odor, example: a pungent chili

but capers don't have an intense flavor to be compared with sharply painful or a chili.

Definition of pungency by Merriam Webster

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