Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts: A proof-of-concept study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts : A proof-of-concept study. / Chow, Ching Yue; Rodríguez, Raquel M.; Riantiningtyas, Reisya R.; Munk, Merete B.; Ahrné, Lilia; Bredie, Wender L.P.

In: Food Research International, Vol. 170, 112955, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Chow, CY, Rodríguez, RM, Riantiningtyas, RR, Munk, MB, Ahrné, L & Bredie, WLP 2023, 'Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts: A proof-of-concept study', Food Research International, vol. 170, 112955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112955

APA

Chow, C. Y., Rodríguez, R. M., Riantiningtyas, R. R., Munk, M. B., Ahrné, L., & Bredie, W. L. P. (2023). Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts: A proof-of-concept study. Food Research International, 170, [112955]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112955

Vancouver

Chow CY, Rodríguez RM, Riantiningtyas RR, Munk MB, Ahrné L, Bredie WLP. Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts: A proof-of-concept study. Food Research International. 2023;170. 112955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112955

Author

Chow, Ching Yue ; Rodríguez, Raquel M. ; Riantiningtyas, Reisya R. ; Munk, Merete B. ; Ahrné, Lilia ; Bredie, Wender L.P. / Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts : A proof-of-concept study. In: Food Research International. 2023 ; Vol. 170.

Bibtex

@article{6f2b722fee1a47e6a94ece8277940f8b,
title = "Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts: A proof-of-concept study",
abstract = "Creating layers in foods is a culinary technique commonly used to diversify sensory experiences, but it has not been reported scientifically on its effect on hedonic and appetitive responses. This study aimed to investigate the use of dynamic sensory contrasts in layered foods to stimulate liking and appetite, using lemon mousse as a model. A sensory panel evaluated the perceived sour taste intensity of lemon mousses acidified by various amounts of citric acid. Bilayer lemon mousses with unequal distribution of citric acid across the layers to deliver higher levels of intraoral sensory contrast were developed and evaluated. A consumer panel evaluated the liking and desire to eat lemon mousses (n = 66), and a selection of samples was further investigated in an ad libitum food intake setting (n = 30). In the consumer study, bilayer lemon mousses with a layer of low acidity (0.35% citric acid w/w) on top and higher acidity (1.58 or 2.8% citric acid w/w) at the bottom showed consistently higher liking and desire scores than their corresponding counterparts with identical acid levels equally distributed in a monolayer. In the ad libitum setting, the bilayer mousse (top: 0.35; bottom: 1.58% citric acid w/w) had a significant 13% increase in intake compared to its monolayer counterpart. Modulating sensory properties across food layers with different configurations and layer compositions can be further explored as a tool to design appetizing foods for consumers at risk of undernutrition.",
keywords = "Appetite, Desire to eat, Food intake, Layered food design, Sensory contrast",
author = "Chow, {Ching Yue} and Rodr{\'i}guez, {Raquel M.} and Riantiningtyas, {Reisya R.} and Munk, {Merete B.} and Lilia Ahrn{\'e} and Bredie, {Wender L.P.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Author(s)",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112955",
language = "English",
volume = "170",
journal = "Food Research International",
issn = "0963-9969",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Layered food designs to create appetizing desserts

T2 - A proof-of-concept study

AU - Chow, Ching Yue

AU - Rodríguez, Raquel M.

AU - Riantiningtyas, Reisya R.

AU - Munk, Merete B.

AU - Ahrné, Lilia

AU - Bredie, Wender L.P.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Creating layers in foods is a culinary technique commonly used to diversify sensory experiences, but it has not been reported scientifically on its effect on hedonic and appetitive responses. This study aimed to investigate the use of dynamic sensory contrasts in layered foods to stimulate liking and appetite, using lemon mousse as a model. A sensory panel evaluated the perceived sour taste intensity of lemon mousses acidified by various amounts of citric acid. Bilayer lemon mousses with unequal distribution of citric acid across the layers to deliver higher levels of intraoral sensory contrast were developed and evaluated. A consumer panel evaluated the liking and desire to eat lemon mousses (n = 66), and a selection of samples was further investigated in an ad libitum food intake setting (n = 30). In the consumer study, bilayer lemon mousses with a layer of low acidity (0.35% citric acid w/w) on top and higher acidity (1.58 or 2.8% citric acid w/w) at the bottom showed consistently higher liking and desire scores than their corresponding counterparts with identical acid levels equally distributed in a monolayer. In the ad libitum setting, the bilayer mousse (top: 0.35; bottom: 1.58% citric acid w/w) had a significant 13% increase in intake compared to its monolayer counterpart. Modulating sensory properties across food layers with different configurations and layer compositions can be further explored as a tool to design appetizing foods for consumers at risk of undernutrition.

AB - Creating layers in foods is a culinary technique commonly used to diversify sensory experiences, but it has not been reported scientifically on its effect on hedonic and appetitive responses. This study aimed to investigate the use of dynamic sensory contrasts in layered foods to stimulate liking and appetite, using lemon mousse as a model. A sensory panel evaluated the perceived sour taste intensity of lemon mousses acidified by various amounts of citric acid. Bilayer lemon mousses with unequal distribution of citric acid across the layers to deliver higher levels of intraoral sensory contrast were developed and evaluated. A consumer panel evaluated the liking and desire to eat lemon mousses (n = 66), and a selection of samples was further investigated in an ad libitum food intake setting (n = 30). In the consumer study, bilayer lemon mousses with a layer of low acidity (0.35% citric acid w/w) on top and higher acidity (1.58 or 2.8% citric acid w/w) at the bottom showed consistently higher liking and desire scores than their corresponding counterparts with identical acid levels equally distributed in a monolayer. In the ad libitum setting, the bilayer mousse (top: 0.35; bottom: 1.58% citric acid w/w) had a significant 13% increase in intake compared to its monolayer counterpart. Modulating sensory properties across food layers with different configurations and layer compositions can be further explored as a tool to design appetizing foods for consumers at risk of undernutrition.

KW - Appetite

KW - Desire to eat

KW - Food intake

KW - Layered food design

KW - Sensory contrast

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112955

DO - 10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112955

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37316047

AN - SCOPUS:85159361980

VL - 170

JO - Food Research International

JF - Food Research International

SN - 0963-9969

M1 - 112955

ER -

ID: 357051019