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Application of the Olfactoscan method to study the ability of saturated aldehydes in masking the odor of methional.
J Agric Food Chem. 2009 Oct 14; 57(19):9086-90.JA

Abstract

A novel technology (Olfactoscan screening) was applied to screen for volatiles including saturated aldehydes that mask the perception of methional, an off-flavor commonly found in orange juice. For the screening experiment, methional odor pulses were generated by an olfactometer and, one by one, mixed with alternating odor compounds that were separated by gas chromatography from a model solution. Trained panelists evaluated the odor mixtures so formed for methional intensity. Methional perception was significantly suppressed if it was mixed with octanal (p < 0.05). Similar interactions were not observed between methional and other volatiles including hexanal. This observation suggests highly specific interaction between methional and octanal. Octanal-methional interactions were then tested in orange juice (quantitative descriptive analysis with expert panel, n = 10). At certain levels, octanal significantly suppressed methional-associated off-notes such as "musty", "decayed orange", and "potato" (p < 0.01). The overall flavor quality of the orange juice was significantly improved (p < 0.01). As it occurs naturally in orange juice, an enrichment of octanal during juice production is suggested to prevent a methional-induced loss of orange flavor quality.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Flavor Department, NIZO Food Research BV, Ede, The Netherlands. kerstin.burseg@NIZO.nlNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19761241

Citation

Burseg, Kerstin, and Catrienus de Jong. "Application of the Olfactoscan Method to Study the Ability of Saturated Aldehydes in Masking the Odor of Methional." Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, vol. 57, no. 19, 2009, pp. 9086-90.
Burseg K, de Jong C. Application of the Olfactoscan method to study the ability of saturated aldehydes in masking the odor of methional. J Agric Food Chem. 2009;57(19):9086-90.
Burseg, K., & de Jong, C. (2009). Application of the Olfactoscan method to study the ability of saturated aldehydes in masking the odor of methional. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 57(19), 9086-90. https://doi.org/10.1021/jf9016866
Burseg K, de Jong C. Application of the Olfactoscan Method to Study the Ability of Saturated Aldehydes in Masking the Odor of Methional. J Agric Food Chem. 2009 Oct 14;57(19):9086-90. PubMed PMID: 19761241.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Application of the Olfactoscan method to study the ability of saturated aldehydes in masking the odor of methional. AU - Burseg,Kerstin, AU - de Jong,Catrienus, PY - 2009/9/19/entrez PY - 2009/9/19/pubmed PY - 2010/1/29/medline SP - 9086 EP - 90 JF - Journal of agricultural and food chemistry JO - J Agric Food Chem VL - 57 IS - 19 N2 - A novel technology (Olfactoscan screening) was applied to screen for volatiles including saturated aldehydes that mask the perception of methional, an off-flavor commonly found in orange juice. For the screening experiment, methional odor pulses were generated by an olfactometer and, one by one, mixed with alternating odor compounds that were separated by gas chromatography from a model solution. Trained panelists evaluated the odor mixtures so formed for methional intensity. Methional perception was significantly suppressed if it was mixed with octanal (p < 0.05). Similar interactions were not observed between methional and other volatiles including hexanal. This observation suggests highly specific interaction between methional and octanal. Octanal-methional interactions were then tested in orange juice (quantitative descriptive analysis with expert panel, n = 10). At certain levels, octanal significantly suppressed methional-associated off-notes such as "musty", "decayed orange", and "potato" (p < 0.01). The overall flavor quality of the orange juice was significantly improved (p < 0.01). As it occurs naturally in orange juice, an enrichment of octanal during juice production is suggested to prevent a methional-induced loss of orange flavor quality. SN - 1520-5118 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19761241/Application_of_the_Olfactoscan_method_to_study_the_ability_of_saturated_aldehydes_in_masking_the_odor_of_methional_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1021/jf9016866 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -