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The phrase "assertive palate" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who has a strong and confident taste or preference in food and drink.
Example: "As a food critic, she is known for her assertive palate, always seeking bold flavors and unique combinations."
Alternatives: "confident taste" or "strong palate."
Similar(57)
Baba ghanouj, its eggplant counterpart, had a clean vegetable flavor, as did the tabbouleh, with its assertive palate-clearing combination of parsley paired with lemon.
In his basement bar in Shoreditch, nursing a glass of Born To Die ("Thirty-day shelf life; huge, huge hop aroma, way more bitter than Punk IPA; almost resinous on the tongue; it really hammers those bitter alpha acids – aggressive, assertive, palate-cleansing, refreshing"), Watt flatly accused the Portman Group of "acting like a thinly veiled cartel.
A rich, generous mid-palate with a finely balanced malty sweet note and assertive bitterness.
With creamy, assertive blue cheeses, he said, "the tannin in a red wine helps clean off the palate".
A seared cylinder of cumin-crusted tuna was buttressed by not only olives and an assertive "creamy feta vinaigrette" but also a shot glass of romaine juice, described by a waiter as a between-bites palate cleanser.
The palate reels.
She developed her palate.
Lynda trusts her palate.
No palate for puffin?
No palate, has he?
Lampard more assertive.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com