什么是白垩质?调查消费者对含豌豆和马铃薯淀粉饮料中细小颗粒的语言和感知

Foods Pub Date : 2024-06-13 DOI:10.3390/foods13121852
Kai Kai Ma, Gregory R. Ziegler, Helene Hopfer, John E. Hayes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管白垩感是一种不受欢迎的食物质地,但对它的研究仍然不足。白垩感大概是由食物中的细小颗粒引起的,但与其他常见的小颗粒描述词(如砂粒或沙粒)的语义重叠还不清楚。在这里,我们比较了 "白垩味 "与相关描述词的用法,并确定了颗粒大小、浓度和黄原胶含量对模型饮料中 "白垩味 "评分的影响。我们采用了 23 个因子设计,包括淀粉粒度(D90 = 33.8 和 64.6 µm)、淀粉浓度(10 和 20% w/v)和黄原胶含量(0.075 和 0.15% w/v)。此外,还对参与者的唾液流速进行了评估。进行了多次口感测试,让新消费者(n = 82;39%为男性,60%为女性;年龄范围 = 18-79岁)在连续饮用三口后的0、30和60秒内分别对白垩味、粉末味、砂粒味、沙味、口干味和残留口腔黏膜味的强度进行评分。所有属性评分都高度相关,其中白垩味、粉末味和残留口腔黏膜味的相关性比砂粒味和沙粒味更高。尽管在饮用 60 秒后仍有白垩味的报告,但反复饮用后并未发现白垩味积累的迹象。较大的尺寸和较高的浓度会增加 "白垩味 "的评分,低唾液流量组的 "白垩味 "评分高于高唾液流量组。我们的研究结果表明,消费者对小颗粒的感知是重叠的,但并非完全多余。这表明,研究人员和产品开发人员在试图了解消费者对含有细小颗粒的食品的感知时,应仔细区分这些描述指标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
What Is Chalky? Investigating Consumer Language and Perception of Fine Particles in Beverages Containing Pea and Potato Starch
Despite its importance as an undesirable food texture, the phenomenon of chalkiness remains understudied. Chalky sensations presumably arise from fine particulates found in foods, but semantic overlap with other common descriptors of small particles, like gritty or sandy, is unclear. Here, we compare the usage of Chalky with related descriptors, and determine the effect of particle size, concentration, and xanthan content on Chalky ratings in a model beverage. A 23 factorial design with starch particle size (D90 = 33.8 and 64.6 µm), starch concentrations (10 and 20% w/v), and xanthan content (0.075 and 0.15% w/v) was used. Participants’ salivary flow rate was also assessed. A multi-sip taste test was performed where naïve consumers (n = 82; 39% men, 60% women; age range = 18–79 years) rated the intensity of Chalky, Powdery, Gritty, Sandy, Mouthdrying, and Residual mouthcoating at 0, 30, and 60 s after each of three consecutive sips. All attribute ratings were highly correlated, with Chalky, Powdery, and Residual Mouthcoating being more closely correlated with each other than Gritty or Sandy. Although Chalky was still reported 60 s after consumption, no evidence of build-up was found with repeated sips. A larger size and higher concentration increased Chalky ratings, with the low-salivary-flow group reporting greater ratings for Chalky relative to the high-flow group. Our results suggest consumer percepts of small particles are overlapping but not entirely redundant. This suggests researchers and product developers should carefully distinguish between these descriptors when trying to understand consumer perception of food products containing fine particles.
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