Molecular structure
inositol
Cooking relevance
Inositol is a naturally occurring polyol found in trace amounts in certain foods. While not a primary flavor or aroma compound, it contributes subtle sweetness and mouthfeel in processed foods. Its presence is largely undetectable to consumers in typical culinary applications, though it functions as a minor textural component in formulated products.
- aroma
- negligible · no distinctive aroma
- culinary role
- minor textural agent · subtle sweetness contributor
- mass spectra
- 90 experimental spectra
Mass spectrum
A real measured fragmentation pattern · 1 of 90 experimental spectra
Sensory signature
How this molecule tastes and smells · gold is measured, dashed is a model estimate
Research papers
53 peer-reviewed papers reference this compound · top-cited shown
Foods containing this compound
Verified Data
Compound identity and culinary context are continuously cross-referenced across open scientific databases and maintained by Foodgeist's enrichment pipeline.
The Geist can be wrong. Some flavor, taste, and pairing values are model-predicted, not lab-measured.





























