0000000000229713
AUTHOR
F. Sauvageot
Sensory and physico-chemical approaches to flavour release from salad dressing in relation to the structure
International audience
The study of a matching task as a tool to validate descriptive profiling
National audience
Comparative training procedures to learn odor descriptors: effects on profiling performance
Three groups of ten naive assessors were recruited to perform an odor profiling of 10 orange juices using 8 odor descriptors, These panels differed on the way they learned each descriptor. Group 1R learned to match one descriptor with one external standard; group 3R learned to associate one descriptor with 3 external standards; group 0R defined by itself the 8 descriptors from a set of orange juices. Results showed that the use of one standard per descriptor seemed to be only efficient when the standard was typical of the odor perception in the orange juices. Learning one odor concept with 3 standards led to redundant use of discriminant descriptors and failed on the agreement among assesso…
Interactions texture-flaveur dans le cas de trois legumes cuits : choux-fleurs, carottes, petits-pois
National audience
Effects of Cooking Method upon Flavor of Carrots and Peas
Two modalities of pressure (atmospheric pressure and high-pressure of 5.5.104 Pa) and two modalities of immersion (boiling and cooking in steam) were combined factorially to produce four ways of cooking. These different cooking methods were studied on two vegetables: carrots and peas. Sensory attributes of samples were assessed on an unstructured scale. Steam-cooked vegetables have higher sensory attributes (odor and flavor intensities, typical odor and flavor notes, sweetness). Larger losses of soluble solids and volatiles are believed to account for these differences between vegetables cooked in water and cooked in steam.