Volume 62, Issue 1, Part 2, June 2015, Pages 424–430
Healthy Snacks: Recent Trends and Innovative Developments to Meet Current Needs
Prebiotic and diet/light chocolate dairy dessert: Chemical composition, sensory profiling and relationship with consumer expectation
Highlights
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- Descriptive analysis determined the descriptor terms of chocolate dairy desserts.
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- Diet and light chocolate dairy desserts were produced with sucrose replacement.
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- Desserts present functional characteristics due to the addition of prebiotics.
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- Sucralose dessert presented similar sensory profile to the traditional one.
Abstract
The
preference for healthier and convenience products has led to a growing
demand for functional and ready-to-eat foods that present a suitable
sensory acceptance. This study aimed to identify the drivers of liking
of chocolate dairy desserts. A consumer test with 120 people was
performed. The sensory profiling was carried out by 14 trained assessors
using quantitative descriptive analysis (QDA). In addition, the
principal component analysis (PCA) identified two significant principal
components that accounted for 73.49% of the variance in the sensory
attribute data, and partial least squares (PLS) regression was used to
identify the drivers of liking of chocolate dairy desserts. The results
show that the most desired sensory properties of such products are
sweetness, milk chocolate flavor, sweet aroma, and mouth fill, whereas
bitterness and bitter aftertaste were considered undesirable. In this
context, these attributes can be considered drivers of liking and
disliking of chocolate dairy desserts and they should be taken into
consideration by dairy processors at the development of new dairy
products.
Keywords
- Dairy desserts;
- Prebiotics;
- Quantitative descriptive analysis;
- Principal component analysis;
- Partial least squares regression
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