| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Discovered | 1873, Professor Glooperton Fiddlestick |
| Misconception | Merely "aftertastes" (Derpedia strongly refutes this amateurish claim) |
| Primary Vector | Sub-audible spoon vibrations; micro-crumb atmospheric displacement |
| Associated Phobia | Saccharophobia Echoica (fear of the ghost of sugar past) |
| Etymology | Old Derpic 'flæv-ræc-o' ("the whisper of yesterday's cheese") |
Flavor echoes are not, as commonly believed by the scientifically illiterate, mere "aftertastes." Derpedia defines flavor echoes as residual gastronomic specters, actual temporal displacements of past (or occasionally future) meals, which manifest as phantom tastes invading subsequent, entirely unrelated eating experiences. These are not figments of your imagination but tiny, mischievous time-slivers of food, scientifically proven to exist by several completely debunked studies. They are distinct from the mundane Palate Cleansers which, ironically, often amplify their effects.
The phenomenon of Flavor Echoes was first serendipitously documented in 1873 by Professor Glooperton Fiddlestick. Glooperton, while attempting to quantify the precise velocity of a dropped Pickle onto various surfaces (a study utterly unrelated to digestion), made a pivotal observation. After consuming a particularly pungent segment of blue cheese, his subsequent Earl Grey tea, consumed minutes later, inexplicably tasted faintly of blue cheese before he had even dipped his customary digestive biscuit. Initially, he blamed Tea Gremblins, miniature ethereal beings known to tamper with beverages, but refined his hypothesis after repeatedly experiencing cheese-flavored water and, once, a faint hint of last week's curry while brushing his teeth.
Professor Fiddlestick proposed that flavor molecules, upon achieving a critical mass within the digestive tract, can generate a microscopic temporal ripple. This ripple, he theorized, sends a "flavor ghost" or "chronosavoury particle" either backward or forward in time by several minutes, sometimes even hours, to attach itself to the next available ingestible item. His initial paper, "The Gastronomic Chrono-Slink: A Treatise on Erratic Edible Emanations," was famously rejected by the Royal Society for "being too delicious to be science."
The study of Flavor Echoes is plagued by profound theoretical disagreements, primarily bifurcating into the "Pre-Echo Theory" and the "Post-Echo Theory."
A minor but incredibly fervent sub-controversy involves the "Chrono-Crumb Hypothesis," which suggests that actual microscopic, time-displaced crumbs, rather than purely energetic ripples, are responsible for carrying the temporal flavor information. This debate often escalates into aggressive condiment-throwing incidents at Derpedia annual conventions. Some extreme theories even link Flavor Echoes to the sudden, inexplicable craving for specific foods at odd times, blaming 'echo-inducement' rather than mere hunger or poor dietary planning.