condiments, and sometimes   artfully
intensified flavors of  the primary foods
themselves, or  of  other   foods,  or  of  the
cooking process.
In  addition    to  their   heightened  flavor,
sauces  give    tactile pleasure    by  the way they
move    in  the mouth.  Cooks   construct   sauces  to
have    a   consistency somewhere   between the
resistant   solidity    of  animal  or  plant   tissues
and the elusive thinness    of  water.  This    is  the
consistency of  luscious    ripe    fruit   that    melts   in
the mouth   and seems   to  feed    us  willingly,  and
of  the fats    that    give    a   persistent, moist
fullness    to  animal  flesh   and to  cream   and
butter. The fluidity    of  a   sauce   allows  it  to  coat
the solid   food    evenly  and lend    it  a   pleasing
moistness,  while   the substantial,    lingering
quality helps   the sauce   cling   to  the food    and to
our tongue  and palate  as  well,   prolonging  the
experience  of  its flavor  and providing   a
sensation   of  richness.
A   last    pleasure    that    a   sauce   can provide is
                    
                      barry
                      (Barry)
                      
                    
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