The relationships between threshold sensitivity, supra-threshold intensity of NaCl, KCl, sucrose, aspartame, acetic acid, citric acid, caffeine, quinine HCl, monosodium glutamate (MSG) and inosine 5′-monophosphate (IMP), and the pleasantness of these stimuli in products, were studied in 21 young subjects (19–33 yr) and 21 older subjects (60–75 yr). For the young, threshold sensitivity was unrelated to supra-threshold intensity for all tastants and in all experimental conditions. For the elderly, in a few cases a relationship was found between threshold sensitivity and suprathreshold intensity, but only when subjects wore a nose clip. The optimally preferred concentration did not differ between the elderly and the young when the products were tasted without a nose clip, except for both sweet tastants, where elderly men showed a higher optimally preferred concentration than did the young. The optimally preferred concentration did not depend on the pleasantness of the foods and was unrelated to threshold sensitivity, but did show a negative correlation with the supra-threshold intensity of sucrose, aspartame and citric acid for the elderly and of NaCl, sucrose and caffeine for the young. This study does not support the assumption that age-related loss of taste sensitivity will inevitably lead to a preference for taste-enhanced foods.