Sweetness and texture perception in mixed pectin gels with 30% sugar and a designed rheology
Journal article, 2009

Pure low-methoxyl (LM) pectin and mixtures of LM and high-methoxyl (HM) pectin in different ratios were used to produce gels with control over the theological parameter storage modulus (G'). The gels either had similar pectin concentrations and different G' values, or different pectin concentrations and similar G' values. All gels were prepared with 30 g/100 g sugar, in the presence of 0.1 g/100 g CaCl2, at pH 3.5; these are conditions that favour gel formation of both LM and HM pectin. The gels were compared for their sensory characteristics; specifically sweetness, sourness, thickness, and glueyness. Sweetness was found to increase with increasing storage modulus (G') in pectin gets of similar pectin concentration, but different G' values. Gels with higher proportions of LM pectin were perceived as sweeter than those with low LM pectin ratios. These gels also had increasing loss modulus (G ''), and increasing differences between G' and G '', which indicates that diffusion has a bearing on the perception of sweetness in pectin gels. Thickness and glueyness were mostly determined by total pectin concentration. Thickness also increased with increasing LM pectin concentration while glueyness increased with increasing HM pectin concentration.

Sweetness

taste interrelationships

Gels

hydrocolloids

Texture

mixtures

sourness

behavior

sodium chloride

sucrose

citric-acid

solutions

Rheology

perceived sweetness

Pectin

viscosity

Author

Karin Holm

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Life Sciences

K. Wendin

SIK – the Swedish Institute for Food and Biotechnology

Anne-Marie Hermansson

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Life Sciences

SuMo Biomaterials

LWT - Food Science and Technology

0023-6438 (ISSN) 1096-1127 (eISSN)

Vol. 42 3 788-795

Subject Categories

Food Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.lwt.2008.08.014

More information

Latest update

8/18/2020