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I've noticed that when we roast potatoes in the oven, they will often have a very sharp tangy aftertaste to me, and often that taste will linger in the back of my mouth for a while after I've finished eating. The weird part is that my husband can't taste this at all, so it may just be something that my palate is particularly sensitive too.

Within one batch I'll get the flavor from some potatoes but not others, and I've noticed it even when just baking the potato with no oil or seasoning, so it seems to be coming from the potato itself. Most recently when eating a whole baked potato, it seemed like this flavor was coming most from the skin, and not from the starchy center.

What could be causing this sourness? Is it an indication of something harmful (going bad, chemicals)? Is there a good way to prevent or mask this flavor in the future?

David K
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    When you cut into the ones with the flavor, was there a bit of green just under the skin? If so, it might be that you can taste solanine. (which is a sign that the potato was left in sunlight ... and can cause food poisoning in large doses) – Joe Mar 18 '19 at 17:48
  • @Joe I don't believe so, but I also wasn't the one who prepared them this time. If the potatoes were left in the sun, it was before they got to the grocery store. We bought them the day before we cooked them, and our kitchen doesn't get any direct sunlight. I'll certainly keep an eye out for it next time though. – David K Mar 18 '19 at 18:06
  • @Joe solanine is bitter, not sour. – rumtscho Mar 18 '19 at 18:09
  • Sour or a metallic astringent? I occasionally felt something similar with potatoes, especially if not hot warm. – Alchimista Mar 19 '19 at 09:12
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    @Alchimista I'm not sure, it could be. It didn't have the metallic taste of iron, but the sourness I'm perceiving could be astringent, particularly since it lasts a while. I could probably compare it to the taste of licking a battery (which is a bizarre comparison, I know!) – David K Mar 19 '19 at 12:10
  • Right what I meant – Alchimista Mar 19 '19 at 12:13
  • Any metals in your fillings? I do have at least one old style. – Alchimista Mar 19 '19 at 12:56
  • @Alchimista Nope, no fillings at all. – David K Mar 19 '19 at 12:59
  • I really envy you – Alchimista Mar 19 '19 at 13:00
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    https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.reddit.com/r/Cooking/comments/19b3s3/i_notice_a_sharp_metallic_flavoring_in_potatoes/ we are not alone – Alchimista Mar 19 '19 at 16:26
  • @davidk I’m literally experiencing the same thing right now as what you said. I roasted potatoes and I can taste a lingering sour aftertaste in the back of my throat, but my husband can not. I wanted to ask what oil you used to roast them? – Nina Morris Dec 07 '21 at 18:12
  • I usually just use olive oil. FYI, this should probably have been posted as a comment under the main post, not a separate answer. – David K Dec 07 '21 at 18:54
  • Interesting that your husband can't taste the bitterness. I have learned that a common male genetic disposition is the lack of the ability to taste bitterness. This just like color blindness which is also unique to men. I was in a mycology club and when on a trip into the woods to find and identify mushrooms, one of the tests was to taste a small part of the mushroom for bitterness. It was pointed out and observed that day the some men cannot sense the bitter taste of a very bitter raw mushroom. – Mike H Mar 12 '23 at 21:51

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Remember that the potato is a member of the nightshade plant and you can use a potato as a battery. Better even if cooked. What you are tasting is basically the solanine (which often has a battery taste...I believe there is a correlation there somewhere but it could help people remember not to eat bitter potatoes). I've tasted it too but not everyone has the same taste buds as we do.

Also, the battery (essentially the life of a plant) that I'm referring to starts when the sun comes into through the leaves (Solanum tu-berosum) and producing the starch, "which is transferred through the plant to its underground stems, known as stolons. Starch collects at the end of the stolons, forming swollen sections called tubers. These are the potatoes." Just like any living plant, the tuber stores energy for the plant. "The complex process of turning sunlight into food energy is called photosynthesis. ... The potato plant can live for six months without the energy of the sun, because it survives on its stored chemical energy in the form of starch in tubes, or small sacks called tubers."...(http://www.simpsonstreetfreepress.org/science/plants-and-photosynthesis)

When your potatoes sprout during storage, they’re using available light and stored starch". During harvest and storage, "When exposed to light, potatoes manufacture increasing amounts of chlorophyll as well as two bitter-tasting alkaloid compounds, solanine and chaconine" especially prolonged exposure to light with improper handling and storage. "In high concentrations, these can not only make potatoes taste bitter but also can cause headaches and stomachaches" (among other things). "A 4-ounce (114 gram) potato naturally contains 5 to 6 milligrams of solanine and chaconine, which is considered harmless. But when a potato looks green from an increase in chlorophyll, it indicates that it will also have higher levels of these alkaloids- as much as 20 times in potatoes that have turned completely green." I have read here that you can "deeply cut away any green parts" (...https://www.finecooking.com/article/the-science-of-cooking-potatoes-2);but I have also read conflicting information asking to avoid them altogether. I already do not eat potatoes when dining out including fries but I also avoid eating potatoes within a couple of days from each other. According to the Smithsonian... (https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/horrific-tales-of-potatoes-that-caused-mass-sickness-and-even-death-3162870/); "A general rule for avoiding illnesses like the ones described above? Green and sprouted? Throw it out." On the site, the Smithsonian will give you many links that I've found interesting. Where I live, the potatoes are mostly green and I plan cooking potatoes when I see good ones on the shelf. We have a small offshoot grocery from a big named chain so we get all of the bad stuff here. I makes me sick every time I see them selling otherwise discarded produce to uneducated victoms.

I'm glad you are ok now.

..."A 4-ounce (114 gram) potato naturally contains 5 to 6 milligrams of solanine and chaconine, which is considered harmless. But when a potato looks green from an increase in chlorophyll, it indicates that it will also have higher levels of these alkaloids- as much as 20 times in potatoes"...

Here is a link with more information: https://www.finecooking.com/article/the-science-of-cooking-potatoes-2 and check out an unbiased article on Mother Earth News at https://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/green-potato-myths-and-safe-potato-eating-zbcz1509

Here is a very scary place to research. It may make you never want to eat potatoes nor any nightshade ever again. https://sciencebasedmedicine.org/killer-tomatoes-and-poisonous-potatoes/

As we know, our diets are lacking and research is all over the charts but until our governments step in and investigate the money hungry monopolizing industries; it is to each his own so research and research again but it is always a good idea to not rely on only one source of information.

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    Might be solanine but reference to battery is meaningless here. I would have to taste a trace of solanine to confirm your answer, which is likely the correct one. But remove" battery " because it has nothing to do here, or better, with solanine. – Alchimista Mar 19 '19 at 16:23
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    I am very skeptical of the explanation "solanine". Your own citation states that it is a bitter compound, not a sour one. I know that many people have the knowledge "sometimes potatoes can have solanine" and when seeing a description of a potato that seems funky in some way, the mind jumps to the conclusion "that must be one of those funky solanine potatoes", but this is just availability bias at work. Until I see an authorative source (written by somebody specializing in food chemistry) that solanine leads to a sour taste, I will downvote answers which insist that it must be the solanine. – rumtscho Mar 21 '19 at 08:29