Just curious: the taste or aroma that takes you far back in time but to a completely specific time/place/situation.
[*] Prepared horseradish: puts me in my grandmother's Bronx apartment anticipating the imminent arrival at the table of her homemade gefilte fish
[*] Twinings English Breakfast and Earl Grey teabags: my undergrad dorm room circa 1976-'78. (Yes, I was a wild man.) We roughed it then. A few had tiny microwaves and rented mini-fridges. But most of us just stuffed desk drawers with shelf-stable things stolen from the cafeteria (saltines, individual portion cereal boxes, etc.) and we heated water in tiny hotpots or, in my case, with a coil that you plugged directly into the wall and then submersed in your mug. Must have been a total fire hazard.
[*] Overripe apples: Also my dorm room. Living in NY we had a many varieties of very local apples unavailable here, which always meant autumn to us. My mother would send a box of these from the local stand. Sometimes like 10 or 12 pounds of them. And I could never get through them all before they started to shrivel. My single room was minuscule, so it quickly took on a heavy, sweetish perfume, like the soap and candle shop that time forgot.
[*] Indian restaurant aroma: London 1979; The Ganges Restaurant near Paddington. I had never had Indian food until I was 20, and I was introduced to its wonders all at once on a year abroad. Papadam, rogan josh, do piaza, vindaloo...that door opened at that spot.
[*] Chestnuts: Growing up in a NY suburb in the 70s, our 'special occasion' place was a chef-owned, northern Italian place called Ciro's about 30 min. away. It seemed particularly magical because it was always dusk when we set out, and the place was just to the side of the road off a winding, narrow 2-lane highway with dark woods on both sides of the road. So the restaurant with warm light glowing from the inside would just suddenly appear to one's left---you'd shoot right by it if you weren't ready for it. Ciro always came out during the meal in his whites and joked and flirted. I first encountered mussels in white wine there and loved all the scalopped veal dishes that were the height of sophistication for that time and place: Saltimbocca, veal marsala, veal francese. And beautiful, light potato croquettes. My dad terrified and thrilled us by ordering octopus. But Ciro's specialty as far as I was concerned was the coup au marrons for dessert. For some reason I was completely entranced by the flavor and texture of chestnuts in ice cream. I only later encountered them plain roasted on the city streets.
[*] Mingled basil and garlic: As an undergrad I was mentored in literature, food, and wine by a teacher, and now decades-long friend. On one of the very first occasions when he invited me to his apartment (his actual apartment! a grown up professor!), to dine with other faculty---that I didn't even know! Just like a another grown up!---he had me help with prep for dinner. I don't remember what we were making ---- possibly just a caprese salad---but it involved tearing basil and chopping garlic. (Back home, despite having Craig Claiborne on the shelf, we did not use fresh garlic (honest, swarthy, hard-working laborers did, and we did not begrudge them their unrefined pleasures, but we did not indulge in them ourselves. Sometimes just a pinch of garlic powder, in a stew, if we were feeling really saucy.) So there I was, among the grown up intellectuals (who were gossiping and making rude personal jokes about other professors!), chopping garlic and tearing basil, a glass of white cotes du Rhone nearby (Jacques Millar, about $6 back then and possibly the first wine I learned the name of), and I picked up the wine glass, my hand stained with basil and smeared with garlic, brought it to my mouth, and a life-changing sensory event occurred. The fresh, minerally, grassy, acidic wine hit my tongue as the basil and garlic hit my nose and nothing was ever the same again.
"Strange how potent cheap music is."