Marmite Articles

Explore our collection of articles about Marmite, Britain's most divisive spread.

Showing articles tagged with: glutamate | View all articles

Post Icon

Why does Marmite taste like that? The science of the savoury hit

Why does Marmite taste like that? The science of the savoury hit

Marmite tastes the way it does because it is loaded with natural glutamates (the umami compounds), a lot of salt, and the dark, malty, slightly bitter notes from heating concentrated yeast. The intensity is the point, and it is why it divides people.

Read more »

Post Icon

Why a teaspoon of Marmite makes everything taste better: the umami multiplier

Why a teaspoon of Marmite makes everything taste better: the umami multiplier

There is a real reason a teaspoon of Marmite turns a flat stew into something with depth. It is umami synergy, discovered in 1957: glutamates and certain nucleotides multiply each other rather than add. Marmite is pure glutamate looking for a partner.

Read more »