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Influence of Chewing Rate and Food Composition on Aroma Release and Perception of Composite Foods. | LitMetric

This study investigated the effects of chewing rate and food composition on aroma release and perception of composite foods. Bread or sponge cake paired with varying sugar content and viscosity strawberry jams, spiked with citral and limonene, were examined. In-nose release was characterized using Proton-Transfer-Reaction-Time-of-Flight-Mass-Spectrometry (PTR-ToF-MS). Simultaneously, Time-Intensity (TI) profiling assessed citrus aroma perception ( = 8, triplicate) while fast and slow chewing protocols were applied (fast: 1.33 chews/s; slow 0.66 chews/s; each for 25 s). Chewing rate did not significantly impact the area under the curve and maximum intensity of citral and limonene release and citrus aroma perception. Faster chewing rates significantly decreased the time to reach maximum intensity of aroma release ( < 0.05) and citrus aroma perception ( < 0.001). Faster chewing rates probably accelerated structural breakdown, inducing an earlier aroma release and perception without affecting aroma intensity. Adding carriers to jams significantly ( < 0.05) increased aroma release, while perceived citrus aroma intensity significantly ( < 0.05) decreased regardless of chewing rate. In conclusion, chewing rate affects the temporality of aroma release and perception without affecting its intensity, and carrier addition increases aroma release while diminishing aroma perception.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10979429PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.3c09346DOI Listing

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