Abstract

Commercial mineral waters packed in polyethylene-lined aluminium/cardboard packages were incubated at 40°C and sensorially evaluated for intensities of the descriptors: synthetic, musty, sickly, metallic, astringent and dry. Tasting of these samples with the use of nose clips diminishes the intensities of the descriptors significantly, except for dry. Volatile compounds of this mineral water were analysed by sniffing the effluent of a gas chromatographic column, which provided similar descriptors as above. The components detected by sniffing were tentatively identified by combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry as being mainly aromatic hydrocarbons and carbonyls. Semiquantitative analysis showed that the concentrations of the compounds which migrated into the mineral water ranged between 10 and 15 ppb. Storage at elevated temperatures seems to involve flavour deterioration, because no taint was observed in mineral water samples, which were incubated at 20°C.

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