Abstract

The addition of food particles to food matrices is a convenient approach that allows to steer oral behavior, sensory perception and satiation. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of physical-chemical properties of heterogenous foods on oral processing behavior, bolus properties and dynamic sensory perception. Bell pepper gel pieces varying in fracture stress and concentration were added to processed cream cheese matrices differing in texture. Addition of bell pepper gel pieces to processed cheeses increased consumption time, decreased eating rate and led to harder and less adhesive bolus with more saliva incorporated. Addition of bell pepper gel pieces to processed cheeses decreased dominance rate and duration of creaminess, smoothness, melting and dairy flavor and increased graininess and bell pepper flavor. Increasing fracture stress of bell pepper gel pieces from 100 to 300 kPa resulted in longer consumption time and lower eating rate. For hard/non-adhesive processed cheese matrices increasing gel pieces fracture stress lead to a boli with larger particles and more saliva. These changes were accompanied by decreased dominance perception of creaminess and bell pepper flavor and increased dominance of graininess. Increasing the concentration of bell pepper gel pieces from 15 to 30% did not affect oral behavior but led to the formation of harder and less adhesive bolus with larger particles and less saliva that were perceived with reduced dominance of creaminess, meltiness and dairy flavor while dominance of graininess and bell pepper flavor increased. Changing the texture of the cheese matrix from soft/adhesive to hard/non-adhesive decreased consumption time, increased eating rate, did not influence bolus properties and decreased dominance rate of creaminess, smoothness and melting sensations. Number of chews and total consumption time were positively correlated with saliva content of the bolus, number of bolus particles, bolus hardness, dominance of firmness, chewiness and graininess. We conclude that the modification of physical-chemical properties of processed cheeses and embedded bell pepper gel pieces can be a strategy to steer oral behavior and bolus properties which consequently determine dynamic sensory perception.

Highlights

  • Throughout oral processing the bolus structure changes continuously as a result of food comminution, hydration and agglomeration (Witt & Stokes, 2015)

  • The aim of this study was to determine the influence of physical–chemical proper­ ties of processed cream cheeses with bell pepper gel pieces on oral processing behavior, bolus properties and dynamic sensory perception

  • The impact of addition of bell pepper gel pieces to processed cream cheeses on oral behavior was smaller than the impact previously reported for addition of peach gel pieces to yogurt, since mechanical contrast between food matrix and embedded particles was smaller

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Summary

Introduction

Throughout oral processing the bolus structure changes continuously as a result of food comminution, hydration and agglomeration (Witt & Stokes, 2015). These changes in bolus structure during oral processing cause dynamic changes in sensory perception and determine food liking (Koç, Vinyard, Essick, & Foegeding, 2013). It is important to understand how oral pro­ cessing behavior, bolus properties and sensory perception change depending on structural and physical–chemical properties of foods. Based on this understanding foods with specific properties might be designed with enhanced eating experiences.

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