retaste

retaste

(ˌriːˈteɪst)
vb (tr)
to taste (food, drink, wine) again
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Judges are presented with a spoonful of jam, a pie, a slice of salami, or a cup of espresso, with no wrappings, jars or marks, and they taste, confer and retaste before making the decision on whether a product should be a Great Taste one, two or three star winner.
The result was curiously unappetizing, since there was nothing stellar to taste and retaste.
There's got to be some who are patriotic as well." intricacy of Bi Bim Bop I retaste your "in" in your "people in Hong Kong" Using all my power of sucking milk to stir this big black bowl made of raw steel reminds me of Chinese wok unavailable here scratchy noises you see tired army boots dragging on the ground rice grains shining soaked in egg yolk, mandarin, no, I mean-- Putonghua, your "common language"-- also says, egg yolk?
He emphasizes the collaborative nature of the Chronicle panels (judges discuss their scores and sometimes go back and retaste) and the diversity of experience built into panel composition--with representatives from the wine trade, the food world, media and winemakers.
One leading Bordelais producer made him retaste his wines, but not before setting his dog on him first.
If "that people" = Jews and only Jews, if she - "not a Jew" - responds to this cry, then she would retaste exile and desolation.