It can manifest as taste-colour and/or taste-shape
This is one of the types of synesthesia that can be called "visualised sensations" or "coloured sensations"
Gustatory-visual is not a particularly common type of synesthesia (it is reported by just under 6% of synesthetes, according to Sean Day's study on prevalence), but it is definitely one of the most interesting. It has two main concurrents, colour and shape, and a synesthete may experience either just one of these or both of them together. (Find out more information on each specific type on the pages about taste-colour and taste-shape). Some people actually see the shapes or colours physically in front of them on tasting a food or drink (projector synesthetes, clearly a minority), while the majority, called associator synesthetes, only see them in the mind’s eye.

However, in gustatory-visual synesthesia the visual aspect isn’t everything.
The people who have it usually report that it also has a strong proprioceptive or
tactile component: the shapes are felt in a particular part of their mouth or
in other parts of the body (hands, arms, chest etc.), or in a spatial location
close to the body. To find out more about tastes producing tactile sensations, see the page on gustatory-tactile synesthesia. It is also common for them to have movement: the shape or
colour might turn, shake, rotate, replicate or travel in a certain direction (upwards,
backwards, diagonally, etc.). It can clearly have a relative position (high, low, on the left or right). Another common aspect of gustatory-visual
synesthesia is that it has a major emotional component: not only are the synesthetic photisms very memorable and emotional experiences in themselves, but also if the taste in itself produces a powerful emotion (surprise, novelty, delight, repulsion or any other), the synesthetic experience tends to be much stronger and even overwhelming.
For some
people the flavours triggering photisms are reduced to all-encompassing
categories such as sweet, savoury or bitter, while for others each nuance of every specific taste evokes its
own corresponding colour, shape or movement, which then combine. In this case
there are always commonalities between groups of similar flavours, but the
photism associated with each taste is unique. The shapes and colours may be
simple or they may be highly complex.
It appears
that many synesthetes who have visual concurrents triggered by tastes also have
them triggered by smells (olfactory-visual synesthesia).
Gustatory-visual synesthesia gives rise to abstract visualisations, not pictorial images. When a taste (or a smell) strongly brings to mind a past experience or place we have visited or lived in and seems to make us "relive" the experience for a few seconds, this isn't synesthesia but something called the Proust effect - see this page of the Tree for more information. However, the last of the descriptions below is an interesting case where some more unusual tastes elicit an almost overwhelming impression of scenes or objects, very memorable and specific and non-autobiographical in nature, manifesting in much the same way as a gustatory-visual synesthete would experience them, so it could be "food for thought" for researchers looking to perhaps extend the definition of this type of synesthesia in future.
Here are
some descriptions written by people with this type of synesthesia:
“Flavors for me take on certain colors and shapes, but not necessarily “traditional shapes”. Like, almost more of a line that curves, spikes, dips, and flattens based on the flavor profile? And then different areas under and around it are shaded different with more than one color.”
(Source: This comment on Reddit/Synesthesia. 2019.)
“Artichokes with ham. That’s a typical tapa here in Spain. When the artichokes are just right (they have to be at the exact temperature, otherwise I get nothing) they’re a series of airy cylinders turning, just to my left, on a level with my face and at just a short distance from me. It’s fantastic, it makes me happy. And then the serrano ham zaps across the same space with thin red diagonal lines.
I know why beer and strawberries go so well together: they have a really similar shape, but the movement of the beer is upwards and the movement of the strawberries is downwards. They complement each other perfectly!
Sushi and sushi maki send me out on a flight upwards and backwards on a big flat black rectangle behind me, very light and weightless. It’s like the ecstasy of flying. I can’t speak or listen when I eat a piece of sushi, I flap my hands like I’m flying and no one understands me. At first I thought everyone experienced the same thing but just didn’t express it as enthusiastically as me. Turned out I was wrong.”
(Source:
Pau 365, my own experience.)
“Sweet tastes are rounded. (…) Sour tastes are white, and the sourer the flavour the sharper and thinner the forms are (more pronounced spikes). (…) The taste of an orange, as you can see in the picture, is very similar to the colour of a real orange, and that makes it more appetising to me (the same goes for apples!).
Another food I love (…) is lemon, and as you know some lemons are sourer than others. In this picture I’ve shown the different nuances its taste can have.”
(Source: the blog Expresión Mínima, 2009. Original in Spanish.)
As an example, I once tried to get creative with my smoothies and tossed together blueberry, lime, and cinnamon (0/10 btw do not recommend). I tried it and immediately was overwhelmed with the thought that it tasted like businessmen. (…) I remember taking a sip and my mind filling with the image of a few faceless men in black and white suits, briefcases in hand, I think one was looking at his wrist watch. The emotion of it was very... suffocating? It was like boredom, stress, impatience, maybe even a little bit of dread. (...)
Some orange jello I had once tasted like a pair of worn out white converse sneakers with the laces untied. Almost exactly like this. Except the shoes were facing towards the right, not the left, and they were sitting on the floor (a cement floor I think). (...)
I had some
tea once that tasted like a playground slide. Tonight I'm drinking a new brand
of tea and it tastes like a storage warehouse. A zesty storage warehouse. When
my friend asked me what a zesty storage warehouse tasted like, I said dusty
cardboard, OSHA violations, a hint of bergamot, and something unidentifiable at
the end that I can only describe as corporate sadness lmao."
(Source: online conversations with V.S. from Canada. 2022.)
Ratatouille
Although
he’s only a fictional character, Rémy the rat, who stars in the animated film
Ratatouille (2006), has gustatory-visual synesthesia. The animation of his
reactions to the taste of cheese and strawberries was commissioned to the
synesthetic artist and musician Michel Gagné, who doesn’t have this particular
type of synesthesia but understood very well what was needed, and the result is
perfectly recognisable as taste-to-colour/shape synesthesia. Michel Gagné has
done other animation videos representing his own music-based synesthesia and
he’s also depicted the shapes and colours he sees with his silent migraines
(painless migraines that produce a strong visual experience, not a type of
synesthesia but similar to it in some aspects).
More about Michel Gagné, synesthesia and Ratatouille here and here.
A Feast for The Eyes: Visualising Flavour-to-Vision Synesthesia
This is the title of an excellent study by Meijia Wu and Oliver Gingrich (Bournemouth University, 2020) describing a design project where 3D printed sculptures were created following the descriptions of three gustatory-visual synesthetes. The aim was to creatively conceptualise this abstract phenomenon and make it visible and accessible to the general public in an exhibition.
More information and examples of gustatory-visual synesthesia on the pages about taste-colour and taste-shape:
Other gustatory synesthesias:
Gustatory-tactile synesthesia (taste-touch sensations)
Gustatory-auditory synesthesia (taste-sound)
Other pages of interest on the Tree:
Olfactory-visual synesthesia (smell-vision)
Taste, smell, memory and Proust's madeleine (not considered synesthesia)
This page last updated: 24 March 2025


Hey, tastes have brightness - but not colour. Water (no matter if warm OR cold) is very bright. My skin is dark. Coffee is a liiiitle bit bright. Mayo? definetly bright... Dumplings? Yeah, bright Khinkali (Georgian dumplings, whilst not something I enjoy, I literally ate one yesterday) are dark.
ReplyDeleteIf this is a synesthesia, do you think it would fit more with Gustatory-Brightness (Well, visual), or the "Duality" one or whatever its called
Hi! Sorry about the delay in answering!
DeleteYes, I think you can consider that your perceptions are synesthesia, if they arise naturally and automatically on tasting the food or drink in question, if they’re in the same place on the brightness scale each time and not just a random choice, and you don’t have to think first “if this had a brightness, what brightness would it have?” and then decide (in that case rather than synesthesia it would be more of a cross-modal correspondence, something most people could do if asked but don’t normally perceive on a day-to-day basis).
Between gustatory-visual or duality/dichotomy synesthesia I would personally say it’s more akin to gustatory-visual or taste-colour, even though the colours aren’t really developed and only take the form of darker or lighter. If it was the other type then you would be more likely to classify many things into two categories, bright and dark, and this sounds like it’s specific to tastes and only happens when you are actually tasting something. If you perceived the two categories not so much on actually tasting the items but rather on thinking of the concept of them, then there could be a case for duality/dichotomy synesthesia. That might fit in with what you say about water, for example, as you could be referring to the concept of water rather than the actual taste, which is different if the water is cold or warm. But in general it sounds more like a gustatory-visual thing to me.
Just came here because I was calling a friend and trying Malta Goya for the first time. She hadn't had it before either, so I tried to describe what it tasted like, but all I could put in words was that it was "reddish-brownish, positioned downwards relatively, with a very saturated/pigmented color (the malt gives a bit of a beige tint)" and she was very confused lol. This made me think about how I've had similar experiences (usually more prominent when tasting certain things for the first time, but still there a little faintly in subsequent tastings) where certain tastes will evoke a color, or, more commonly for me, a placement/positioning. I knew about synesthesia, but was hesitant to consider the possibility of me having it because it wasn't something that happened extremely often per se, but it happened just enough that it was on my mind every once in a while. Also the most prominent multisensory experience I could think of was the bright flash of light that emerged from sudden loud noises, but it turns out that isn't a synesthesia thing so I suppose that wouldn't be a sign for or against anything after all.
ReplyDeleteAlso I tend to not really notice that I'm experiencing these associations until I'm actually trying to describe them, and that's when I actually attune myself and contemplate what I'm experiencing (as opposed to just ignoring my internal sensations because of my ADHD), so basically I'm kinda on the fence about whether or not this counts as synesthesia. Idk if anyone has any insight into my situation, but if anyone does that'd be really helpful! Thanks!
Hi, Tree author Pau here. I was delighted to read your comment because of how similar your experiences are to mine! Yes, that is gustatory-visual synesthesia, no doubt about it.
DeleteThe sensations can be naturally stronger or more invasive in some synesthetes, and for many the tastes also have shape and a tactile sensation, not just colour and positioning, but what you describe is definitely it. For some synesthetes they might not be very noticeable always, but when you start focusing on them they are likely to get stronger. And even if you’re not overwhelmed by your colour experiences, if you can describe the exact colour of a flavour and say where it is in space, and if (as it seems from what you say) each taste has its own specific colour and position and they’re not just random ideas, then that is indeed how it works.
The first-time experience being the strongest, that’s something that I really notice too. I have shape and tactile sensations for tastes as well as colour/position/direction/movement, but new tastes are practically guaranteed to produce something very interesting so I'm always keen to try new things, exotic foods, even just something from the supermarket I haven’t tried before, just for the experience. And as you say, that perception then happens again the next time, but it’s likely to be fainter on subsequent tastings. I also find that things like the temperature of the food or drink or different brands, etc., can change the shape and colour dramatically, I wonder if that’s the case for you too. Anyway, I’d encourage you to start focusing on all interesting tastes because your sensations will become stronger as you do that more.
And if you wanted to comment more, I'd be delighted to continue the conversation via these comments (or by email, the address is on the sidebar) and exchange experiences.
(If you haven’t already read it, there’s more about synesthesia similar to yours on the Taste-colour page of the Tree, and the Taste-shape page might also have aspects that interest you too.)