Abstract

Food choice is strongly driven by the sensory characteristics of foods with sweet, salty and fatty mouthfeel considered highly palatable and rewarding. Attempts to improve diet quality have not addressed sensory characteristics of diets before. This report describes a data modelling exercise that could underpin a dietary strategy to help support consumption of higher quality diets without compromising sensory preferences. This study used the Australian National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey data (in 9341 adults) and the CSIRO sensory-diet database. A method was developed to find core food swaps which had a similar sensory profile as discretionary foods. This study investigated the impact of such swaps on energy and nutrient intake and the impact of the swaps on servings of food groups. The modelling resulted in a similar sensory profile of core foods to that of discretionary foods with hardness, sweetness and fatty mouthfeel all within 1–3% but the saltiness approached a 4% change. There was a small (3.6%) increase in energy intake. This swap strategy decreased the intake of risk nutrients such as saturated fat and added sugars, but not sodium, while increasing the intake of beneficial nutrients like calcium, zinc and vitamin C. Results also show that there was an increase in the intake of servings of core food groups such as fruits, grains, and dairy products but little change in vegetables. In conclusion, similar sensory swaps are possible and could underpin a diet strategy, that could be further refined through food appropriateness, to improve quality.

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