Posts Tagged ‘sensory’

Establishing the Taste for Nutrition

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012

Before their second birthday, many children have begun to develop preferences for processed carbohydrates, in the form of added sugars and sugar-sweetened beverages, and sodium. As a consequence, scientific evidence shows that susceptibility for hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and obesity are rooted early in life. Several factors conspire to predispose children to consume diets that may lead to obesity, but namely, children’s taste preferences are innate and driven by evolution and environment. During the session “Flavor Perception, Satiety, and Nutrition: Implications Throughout the Life Cycle” on Thursday afternoon, June 28, speakers explained the science behind taste perception, flavor preferences, satiety, and nutrition.

Neural pathways were originally designed for seeking sweet tastes—it is human’s oldest reward system. It is thus not surprising that within hours of birth, infants exhibit a strong preference for sweet tastes. The taste for salt develops around the time infants reach 4 months of age. The intensity of sweet taste is elevated throughout childhood and early adolescence; that is, children have a preference for sweeter substances than adults do. Sweets even have an analgesic effect on infants, halting crying and inducing calm. And the liking of salt presumably evolved to attract children (and adults) to needed minerals.

According to speaker Maria Veldhuizen, Yale University, affective responses to taste are not learned; they are intrinsic. But affective responses to flavors are learned; the responses are dependent on consistency of exposure, and people learn to like what is available. This may explain why the use of nonnutritive sweeteners in food and beverages may cut calories, but it still strengthens children’s predilection for sweets.

Most food industry professionals know that overconsumption of salty and sweet foods is linked to hypertension, cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and obesity. In the interest of giving children a better chance at a healthy life, speaker Julie Mennella, Monell Chemical Senses Center, suggested that the food industry not prey on children’s taste and flavor vulnerabilities. A healthy dietary intervention must begin early, she said.

Ingredients for Healthy Ethnic Foods

Monday, June 25th, 2012

Consumers want adventurous and authentic flavors along with health. Speakers from the culinary and food industries will discuss popular healthy ethnic ingredients and flavors and their sensory experiences. Trendy ingredients in fine dining are filtering into consumer retail products. Employing techniques based upon traditional sensory and consumer testing but linking to uniqueness, flavor impact, or unaided acceptance can help to define what is in scope for a variety of ethnic populations. Spices and herbs have a wide spectrum of both health and flavor characteristics. Food processing (baking, microwaving, retorting, roasting) can affect the antioxidant capacity of spices and herbs. Formulary examples of improved product positioning will cover the reduction of salt and sugar and discuss trends and cleaner labels.

Session 020 Healthy Ethnic Foods and Ingredients: Sensory and Product Development Perspectives will take place on Tuesday morning from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in Room N119.

Heracles II Electronic Nose

Sunday, June 12th, 2011

Heracles II Electronic NoseALPHA M.O.S.’ (booth 4108) Heracles II Electronic Nose uses fast gas chromotography with two columns of different polarities mounted in parallel and connected to two detectors. It has high repeatability (RSD < 0.3% on retention times and RSD <3% on peak areas) allowing headspace or liquid injection modes. The integrated solid adsorbent trap thermo-regulated by Peltier cooler (0-260°C) achieves pre-concentration of light volatiles. Fast column heating rates (up to 600°C/min) make typical analysis cycle time around 5 min.

The PC interface monitors parameters settings, programs, FID ignition, etc. Besides classical chromatography, it provides powerful tools such as sample fingerprint analysis & comparison, qualitative and quantitative models, quality control cards. The database integrates info on sensory features linked to the chromatograms peaks. Compounds and sensory info are classified by application area. This integrated database (Kovats indices) also facilitates peak identification; it can be enriched with user data.