Abstract

The sensory perception of o/w emulsions is determined by their structure and physicochemical properties. The aims of this study were (a) to determine the influence of oil droplet clustering in o/w emulsions on sensory perception and (b) to link their sensory attributes to rheological, tribological and structural properties. Clustered emulsions were prepared by combining o/w emulsions stabilised by different sets of emulsifiers: (a) positively-charged gelatine and negatively-charged whey protein (WPI), and (b) positively-charged gelatine and negatively-charged diacetyl tartaric acid ester of mono- and diglycerides (DATEM). Oil droplet clusters ranging in diameter from 1 to 50 μm were obtained. The difference in charge density between gelatine- and DATEM-stabilised oil droplets was higher than that between gelatine- and WPI-stabilised droplets. This difference allowed to alter the interaction strength within oil droplet clusters. The sensory perception of clustered emulsions was quantified using the Rate-All-That-Apply (RATA) methodology with untrained subjects (n = 83). Participants assessed o/w emulsions varying in cluster size (1 μm–50 μm), cluster strength (tuned by changing the emulsifier-pairs), and single droplet emulsions with and without adjusted viscosity, as well as a reference emulsion with large single droplets (comparable in size to emulsions with large clusters). Creaminess and thickness intensities were significantly higher for clustered o/w emulsions compared to that of single droplet o/w emulsions with the same oil content and similar oil droplet/cluster size. With increasing cluster size, creaminess and thickness intensities increased significantly for hetero-aggregated clusters with weak interactions (gelatine-whey protein). When cluster interactions were stronger (gelatine-DATEM), creaminess intensity increased to a lesser extent and grittiness intensity increased considerably. Thickness and creaminess were strongly correlated to the rheological (e.g. consistency) and tribological properties (e.g. fiction coefficient at 10 mm/s) of o/w emulsions with clustered oil droplets. Grittiness and fattiness were strongly correlated to the tribological properties (slope of mixed regime) of o/w emulsions and their interactions with saliva. We conclude that clustering of oil droplets in o/w emulsions by hetero-aggregation allows to enhance the sensory perception of fat-related attributes by tuning rheological and tribological properties, and provides an effective method to structure liquid foods to obtain specific sensory properties.

Highlights

  • Reduction of fat content in foods while maintaining desired sensory properties, such as creaminess, remains a challenge

  • Cluster size was controlled by the mixing ratio of oppositely charged single o/w emulsions

  • The largest cluster size was obtained by mixing equal amounts of oppositely charged single emulsions (GD55 and GW55)

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Summary

Introduction

Reduction of fat content in foods while maintaining desired sensory properties, such as creaminess, remains a challenge. The sensory perception of o/w emulsions is largely determined by the rheological and tribological properties, which are influenced by oil volume fraction and oil droplet size. With increasing oil volume fraction, the viscosity of o/ w emulsions increases and the perception of fat-related sensory attributes is enhanced (Chojnicka, Sala, de Kruif, & van de Velde, 2009; Lett, Norton, & Yeomans, 2016). The oil volume fraction, and the oil droplet size determines the sensory properties of emulsions. Decreasing the oil droplet size at constant oil volume fraction has been shown to increase creaminess (Lett et al, 2016), possibly as a consequence of an increase in viscosity (Pal, 2011). The sensory perception of o/w emulsions is related to several other physical characteristics such as flow behaviour and lubrication properties

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