Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Relating creamy perception of whey protein enriched yogurt systems to instrumental data by means of multivariate data analysis.
J Food Sci. 2013 Feb; 78(2):S314-9.JF

Abstract

Yogurts differing in fat content, protein content, and casein to whey protein ratio were produced, and structurally as well as sensorially examined. The objective of the current research was to evaluate the predictive value of rheological and particle size measurements concerning sensory appearance and texture attributes in 13 differently composed stirred yogurt systems, with a focus on graininess, viscosity, and creaminess. Structural and sensory analyses showed large differences in texture properties between the tested yogurt systems. Both data sets were correlated by means of multivariate statistical methods. Sensory graininess was highly correlated with particle size-related parameters, sensory viscosity was highly correlated with destructive rheological parameters, and creamy perception was highly correlated with particle size-related parameters and destructive rheological parameters but was not as well described by any oscillatory parameter. Best predictive ability (r(2) > 0.89) was found for creaminess combining particle size related- and destructive rheological parameters tested within this study.

PRACTICAL APPLICATION

Knowing the instrumental parameters describing sensory textural attributes provides important information for having a better understanding of the underlying processes during consumer's perception. Knowledge about the sensory behavior of a product and its oral processing imparts an opportunity to fasten the product development process. By means of yogurt systems instrumental parameters derived from particle size analysis and rheological measurements were correlated with sensory attributes in order to determine the main factors leading to the mouthfeel sensations grainy, viscous, and creamy of semisolid milk products.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Dept. of Dairy Science and Technology, Inst. of Food Science and Biotechnology, Univ. of Hohenheim, Garbenstraβe 21, 70599, Stuttgart, Germany. alina.krzeminski@uni-hohenheim.deNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

23311463

Citation

Krzeminski, Alina, et al. "Relating Creamy Perception of Whey Protein Enriched Yogurt Systems to Instrumental Data By Means of Multivariate Data Analysis." Journal of Food Science, vol. 78, no. 2, 2013, pp. S314-9.
Krzeminski A, Tomaschunas M, Köhn E, et al. Relating creamy perception of whey protein enriched yogurt systems to instrumental data by means of multivariate data analysis. J Food Sci. 2013;78(2):S314-9.
Krzeminski, A., Tomaschunas, M., Köhn, E., Busch-Stockfisch, M., Weiss, J., & Hinrichs, J. (2013). Relating creamy perception of whey protein enriched yogurt systems to instrumental data by means of multivariate data analysis. Journal of Food Science, 78(2), S314-9. https://doi.org/10.1111/1750-3841.12013
Krzeminski A, et al. Relating Creamy Perception of Whey Protein Enriched Yogurt Systems to Instrumental Data By Means of Multivariate Data Analysis. J Food Sci. 2013;78(2):S314-9. PubMed PMID: 23311463.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Relating creamy perception of whey protein enriched yogurt systems to instrumental data by means of multivariate data analysis. AU - Krzeminski,Alina, AU - Tomaschunas,Maja, AU - Köhn,Ehrhard, AU - Busch-Stockfisch,Mechthild, AU - Weiss,Jochen, AU - Hinrichs,Jörg, Y1 - 2013/01/11/ PY - 2012/6/22/received PY - 2012/11/5/accepted PY - 2013/1/15/entrez PY - 2013/1/15/pubmed PY - 2013/8/10/medline SP - S314 EP - 9 JF - Journal of food science JO - J Food Sci VL - 78 IS - 2 N2 - UNLABELLED: Yogurts differing in fat content, protein content, and casein to whey protein ratio were produced, and structurally as well as sensorially examined. The objective of the current research was to evaluate the predictive value of rheological and particle size measurements concerning sensory appearance and texture attributes in 13 differently composed stirred yogurt systems, with a focus on graininess, viscosity, and creaminess. Structural and sensory analyses showed large differences in texture properties between the tested yogurt systems. Both data sets were correlated by means of multivariate statistical methods. Sensory graininess was highly correlated with particle size-related parameters, sensory viscosity was highly correlated with destructive rheological parameters, and creamy perception was highly correlated with particle size-related parameters and destructive rheological parameters but was not as well described by any oscillatory parameter. Best predictive ability (r(2) > 0.89) was found for creaminess combining particle size related- and destructive rheological parameters tested within this study. PRACTICAL APPLICATION: Knowing the instrumental parameters describing sensory textural attributes provides important information for having a better understanding of the underlying processes during consumer's perception. Knowledge about the sensory behavior of a product and its oral processing imparts an opportunity to fasten the product development process. By means of yogurt systems instrumental parameters derived from particle size analysis and rheological measurements were correlated with sensory attributes in order to determine the main factors leading to the mouthfeel sensations grainy, viscous, and creamy of semisolid milk products. SN - 1750-3841 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/23311463/Relating_creamy_perception_of_whey_protein_enriched_yogurt_systems_to_instrumental_data_by_means_of_multivariate_data_analysis_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -