ORAL PERCEPTION OF GRITTINESS: EFFECT OF PARTICLE SIZE AND CONCENTRATION OF THE DISPERSED PARTICLES AND THE DISPERSION MEDIUM
Autor: | E. Imai, K. Hatae, A. Shimada |
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Rok vydání: | 1995 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Journal of Texture Studies. 26:561-576 |
ISSN: | 1745-4603 0022-4901 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1745-4603.1995.tb00804.x |
Popis: | The perceptibility of grittiness and the threshold value of grittiness were examined in five disperse model systems: aqueous suspensions, low and high viscous suspensions, and soft and hard gels. Fourteen types of microcrystalline cellulose were used having different particle sizes (between 6-79 μm) and physical properties (shape, degree of polymerization, and state at the material stage). In each system, the proportion of people who perceived grittiness increased with increasing particle size and decreased with increasing particle concentration demonstrating that perception of grittiness depended on both particle size and concentration. The proportion of people who perceived grittiness was found by multiple regression analysis to have a high correlation with the logarithm of (partide size X concentration). Each system gave an approximate regression equation representing this relation. The value of particle size X concentration at the grittiness threshold was defined as the point where 50% of people perceived grittiness. These values were calculated to be 6.0 (aqueous suspension). 19. 7 (low viscosity), 26. 7 (high viscosity suspension), 30.7 (soft), and 42.1 (hard gel). The factor contributing most to grittiness was concentration, followed by dispersion medium and particle size. The proportion of people who perceived grittiness was also expressed by a multiple regression equation which included these three factors. The obtained results suggest the possibility of predicting and controlling grittiness in foods. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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