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Taste. Or Not.

Alla Davies challenges the lazy claim that “everyone has their own taste,” drawing sharp lines between mere preference and true taste—the physical, instinctive capacity to feel measure, restraint, and when something still holds air instead of collapsing under its own ambition.

In this episode of The Bottle by Alla Davies, Alla dives into what real taste actually is, beyond simple preference or liking. Short voice notes on style and image (knowing when one more detail kills the whole thing), taste as refusal and editing rather than accumulation, irritation at rooms that suffocate or perfumes too pleased with themselves, a touch of wry humour in the difference between appetite and restraint, and the maturing realisation that taste is less about what you add and more about what you leave out.

Listen to the full episode

These reflections are also available as intimate voice notes on The Bottle by Alla Davies.

Or search for The Bottle by Alla Davies in your favourite podcast app.

Prefer to read? The full written transcript continues below ↓

Does taste exist?

I keep asking myself that because people throw around that line — everyone has different taste — as if it solves everything. It doesn’t. It just ends the conversation quickly, which is probably why people like it.

Of course people like different things. That part is obvious. One person wants clean lines and empty walls. Someone else wants velvet, mirrors, gold, and enough atmosphere to redecorate a minor collapse. Fine. People differ. That’s not the interesting part.

The interesting part is this: preference is not the same as taste.

Liking something doesn’t prove very much. You can like something because it’s familiar. Because it flatters you. Because it cost too much and now you need to believe it was worth it. Because your whole feed has been teaching you to call it beautiful. None of that means taste is present.

Taste begins later than that.

It begins when a person can feel when something has tipped over. When the room is too packed. When the perfume is too pleased with itself. When the outfit is no longer sharp, just busy. When something expensive starts reading as cheap because it’s trying too hard. That shift matters.

And the opposite matters too. You feel when something holds. When it has air. When it knows where to stop. When it doesn’t need to shout.

That, to me, is taste.

I’m not very interested in dividing the world into good taste and bad taste. That language gets stiff very quickly. It turns into a school report or a social performance. I’m interested in something simpler: is taste there, or not?

Because taste is not the object itself. It’s not the lamp, the chair, the coat, the painting, the perfume, the hotel, the book on the table. People love turning taste into props. They collect the right signals and hope the signals will do the work for them.

They don’t.

You can have all the correct objects and still have no taste at all.

What matters is how things are held together. What gets left out. Where someone stops. Whether they know when one more detail will kill the whole thing. That’s where taste starts to show itself.

Which is why I think taste has a lot to do with refusal.

Not what you add. What you don’t add. What you don’t wear. What you don’t say. What you don’t explain again. What you don’t push just to make sure people noticed.

That’s uncomfortable for people, because restraint is never as popular as freedom. Freedom sounds glamorous. Restraint sounds annoying. But without some sense of measure, taste just turns into appetite.

And appetite is a different thing.

Appetite grabs. Taste edits.

Appetite wants more — more shine, more impact, more signal, more sex, more meaning, more proof. Taste is the thing that knows when enough is enough. Not because it’s timid. Not because it’s boring. Because it can feel the line.

That line is real.

Not universal in some dead, moral way. Not fixed for all people in all times. But real enough that your body usually knows it before your theory does.

That’s another thing people don’t admit enough: taste is physical.

You walk into a room and know. Something in you clocks it immediately. Too much. Too cold. Too eager. Too decorated. Or the opposite: this works. There’s air in here. Same with perfume. Same with clothes. Same with people. Your head starts explaining later. The body gets there first.

That’s why I don’t trust the lazy version of taste is subjective.

It’s true only up to a point.

Yes, taste is shaped. Obviously. Background matters. Money matters. Exposure matters. What you grow up around matters. What you’ve spent years looking at matters. All true.

But shaped doesn’t mean imaginary.

And personal doesn’t mean random.

That distinction matters.

Otherwise we end up pretending everything is equal the moment someone says they like it. I don’t believe that. I think people say subjective a bit too quickly when they don’t want to admit that some things are tighter and some are sloppier, some things hold and some collapse, some things are alive and some are just extremely well managed.

You can feel the difference.

And yes, I know the danger here. Taste can become snobbery very fast. It can turn into social cruelty. It can become a nasty little theatre of superiority. The second it becomes a weapon, something in it rots.

But throwing the whole idea away doesn’t help either.

Because then you lose the ability to talk about measure at all. You lose the ability to say this room is suffocating, this perfume is dead, this outfit is overworked, this brand has no pulse, this thing has style, that thing only has effort.

And those differences are real.

I don’t want to pretend that a room with air and a room suffocating under its own ambition are the same. I don’t want to pretend that a perfume with movement and one that just smells expensive are the same. I don’t want to pretend that style and control are the same, or that boldness and noise are the same.

They aren’t.

Taste is what helps me feel those distinctions without turning them into morality.

That’s why I still think it exists.

Not as status. Not as a badge. Not as a list of approved purchases. Not as some sad little club for people with the right references.

As a capacity.

A way of sensing when something is alive, when it’s exact, when it’s gone too far, when it’s false, when it still has breath in it, and when it’s just performing intelligence and hoping no one looks too closely.

That’s all I mean.

So the real question, for me, isn’t do I like it?

That’s too easy.

The better question is whether there’s any life in it at all. Whether it has air. Whether it has measure. Whether it holds. Or whether it’s simply trying very hard to impress me.

That’s where taste begins.

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Among People. Not Available.

Stepping into the polished world of Mayfair’s perfume boutiques, Alla Davies craves something deceptively simple: to smell exquisite scents, feel the texture of cream and glass bottles, and simply be left alone. In this reflective debut, she captures the quiet tension of wanting beauty and atmosphere while fiercely protecting her personal space from intrusive sales pressure and emotional demands.

In this episode of The Bottle by Alla Davies, Alla explores what it feels like to be among people without being available to them. Short voice notes on style and image (the calm of unhurried perfume exploration), taste (checking whether you’re still awake inside), irritation (hovering staff and guided moisturiser journeys), dry humour (the irony that space makes you stay longer), and the age-old art of saving energy while still chasing the voltage of the city without handing yourself over.

Listen to the full episode

These reflections are also available as intimate voice notes on The Bottle by Alla Davies.

Or search for The Bottle by Alla Davies in your favourite podcast app.

Prefer to read? The full written transcript continues below ↓

I came into London today and all I really wanted was to smell perfume and be left alone.

That was the plan.

A simple one.

Not healing. Not shopping. Not “treating myself.”

Nothing so embarrassing.

Just London.

A few beautiful places.

Perfume.

Cream.

Glass bottles.

A bit of texture.

And nobody standing too close to me with a smile that means sales target.

I love those little beauty boutiques.

The ones in Mayfair.

All that skincare, perfume, polished glass, expensive cream, artificial calm.

I can spend ages in places like that.

Not buying.

Checking.

That’s the real point.

Sometimes I don’t go in because I need something.

I go in to check whether taste is still working.

Whether I’m still awake in there.

Perfume is good for that.

Very efficient.

One second and you know whether you’re alive — or just nicely arranged.

The problem is not people.

The problem is pressure in a nice jacket.

The second you walk into some of those little boutiques, someone is on you.

Too close.

Too quick.

Too ready.

And I know, yes, they’re doing their job.

But sometimes I do not want a guided emotional journey through moisturiser.

Sometimes I want to smell perfume and be left the hell alone.

And then today something slightly different happened.

I stopped at Amouage.

And I stayed there for about half an hour.

Partly because the perfumes were good.

Partly because I wanted to smell everything.

Partly because I was in the mood to study, not shop.

But mostly because the man there didn’t suffocate me.

Arab.

White teeth.

Maybe around fifty.

Calm.

Present, but not hovering.

He had the rarest retail skill on earth: he didn’t crawl into my nervous system.

He let me smell.

He let me think.

He let me take my time.

And because of that, I stayed.

That’s the irony.

If someone gives me space, I stay longer.

I get interested.

I actually want to explore.

If they come at me too fast, I’m gone.

Mentally first. Physically a minute later.

That’s why I usually prefer department stores.

More people. More air. Less pressure.

Nobody acts as if your presence is a legal commitment.

I remember walking into a perfume shop once just to look around quietly, and the man would not leave me alone.

One bottle.

Then another.

Then another.

As if “no” was just decorative language.

Eventually I looked at him and said, very clearly:

I want to be alone. Please leave me alone.

He hated that.

His whole face tightened, like I’d insulted the family business.

Then he went over to his colleague, said something, and the two of them stood there staring at me as if wanting silence was a social crime.

I wanted to walk over and give them a short lecture on boundaries, overstimulation, and why not every woman entering a perfume shop is there to be professionally handled.

But I didn’t.

I saved my energy.

That, actually, may be the theme of this period of my life.

Saving energy without becoming dead.

I still want the city.

I still want beauty.

I still want perfume, texture, people, style, atmosphere.

I just don’t want to be emotionally grabbed every five minutes like a handbag with legs.

And today I noticed something else.

I’m not rushing.

Usually there’s some cultural sprint involved.

An exhibition.

A gallery.

A reason.

A little intellectual alibi so the day can justify itself.

Today I just walked.

I looked at people.

I looked at buildings.

I stopped.

I made notes.

I looked at an old building with a spa inside and thought: I’d love to go in there.

And then immediately thought: absolutely not.

Because they’ll descend on me, explain things to me, offer me packages, ask me questions, and dry me out like furniture polish.

The building itself was enough.

I’m starting to understand something, I think.

Sometimes I don’t want the experience.

I just want the edge of it.

The smell.

The atmosphere.

The voltage.

The possibility.

Sometimes I don’t want to go in.

I just want to know it’s there.

And I’ve noticed something else too: I’m done with impulse decisions.

Now I look.

I wait.

I check the energy first.

I ask myself a rude question:

Do I want the thing?

Or do I just want the brief chemical flirtation of almost wanting it?

Those are not the same thing.

Maybe that’s where I am now.

Learning how to move through beautiful places without immediately handing myself over to them.

How to want beauty without becoming available to it.

How to be among people — and still belong to myself