Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective. / Girard, Francois; Boumail, Afia; Tanaka, Katherine ; Frøst, Michael Bom; Turgeon, Sylvie; Perreault, Veronique.

2021. Poster session presented at 14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium
, Vancouver, Canada.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Girard, F, Boumail, A, Tanaka, K, Frøst, MB, Turgeon, S & Perreault, V 2021, 'Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective', 14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium
, Vancouver, Canada, 10/08/2020 - 12/08/2021.

APA

Girard, F., Boumail, A., Tanaka, K., Frøst, M. B., Turgeon, S., & Perreault, V. (2021). Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective. Poster session presented at 14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium
, Vancouver, Canada.

Vancouver

Girard F, Boumail A, Tanaka K, Frøst MB, Turgeon S, Perreault V. Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective. 2021. Poster session presented at 14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium
, Vancouver, Canada.

Author

Girard, Francois ; Boumail, Afia ; Tanaka, Katherine ; Frøst, Michael Bom ; Turgeon, Sylvie ; Perreault, Veronique. / Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective. Poster session presented at 14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium
, Vancouver, Canada.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{8a190e658a8846dfbc5f71e6bcd34c00,
title = "Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective",
abstract = "Wild foods have increased in popularity among Quebec{\textquoteright}s chefs and the general public. Tree products, such as conifer needles and buds, are abundant resources that are very characteristic of Quebec{\textquoteright}s forests. They are underutilized in culinary applications despite their great flavour potential.The purpose of this study was to characterize the sensory properties of conifer-based extracts for culinary purposes. The extracts{\textquoteright} sensory properties were characterized by chefs and student chefs. In addition, suggestions for their culinary value were collected in order to further encourage the use of conifer products in cooking.Needles and buds from three conifer species (Balsam fir, White spruce, Black spruce) were prepared following three methods: aqueous (maceration [4°C-48h], decoction [100°C-1min]) or lipid (sous-vide [55°C-90min]) extraction methods. Projective mapping combined with ultra-flash profiling was performed. Respondents specifically focused on odours and aromas. Culinary arts teachers and advanced students (n=21) evaluated 14 samples. Standard projective mapping data analysis methods (lemmatizing, semantic clustering) were applied, using R-packages (SensoMineR, FactoMineR and Factoshiny) for statistical procedures.The descriptors were grouped based on categories from existing sensory vocabularies, and systematic differences between samples as a function of extraction method, tree part and tree species were seen (See figure). Lipid extracts were described with roasted, milky, fresh herbs notes and saltiness, while aqueous extracts were woodsy, resinous, earthy, bitter and astringent. Needles extracts were sweet, acidic with fruity and confectionery/pastry notes, whereas buds extracts were herbaceous (aromatic herbs, dry herbs, leaves).Black spruce buds maceration and Balsam fir needles maceration were the most frequently identified to have good culinary potential, with 57 and 47% of participants, respectively. Varied proposals for culinary uses were collected, ranging from incorporation in an emulsion or a sauce to accompany halibut or duck, to use in a sorbet or a cranberry cocktail.",
author = "Francois Girard and Afia Boumail and Katherine Tanaka and Fr{\o}st, {Michael Bom} and Sylvie Turgeon and Veronique Perreault",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "10",
language = "English",
note = "14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium<br/> : Sustainable Sensory Science ; Conference date: 10-08-2020 Through 12-08-2021",
url = "http://www.pangbornsymposium.com/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Sensory characterization of conifer-based extracts in a culinary use perspective

AU - Girard, Francois

AU - Boumail, Afia

AU - Tanaka, Katherine

AU - Frøst, Michael Bom

AU - Turgeon, Sylvie

AU - Perreault, Veronique

N1 - Conference code: 14

PY - 2021/8/10

Y1 - 2021/8/10

N2 - Wild foods have increased in popularity among Quebec’s chefs and the general public. Tree products, such as conifer needles and buds, are abundant resources that are very characteristic of Quebec’s forests. They are underutilized in culinary applications despite their great flavour potential.The purpose of this study was to characterize the sensory properties of conifer-based extracts for culinary purposes. The extracts’ sensory properties were characterized by chefs and student chefs. In addition, suggestions for their culinary value were collected in order to further encourage the use of conifer products in cooking.Needles and buds from three conifer species (Balsam fir, White spruce, Black spruce) were prepared following three methods: aqueous (maceration [4°C-48h], decoction [100°C-1min]) or lipid (sous-vide [55°C-90min]) extraction methods. Projective mapping combined with ultra-flash profiling was performed. Respondents specifically focused on odours and aromas. Culinary arts teachers and advanced students (n=21) evaluated 14 samples. Standard projective mapping data analysis methods (lemmatizing, semantic clustering) were applied, using R-packages (SensoMineR, FactoMineR and Factoshiny) for statistical procedures.The descriptors were grouped based on categories from existing sensory vocabularies, and systematic differences between samples as a function of extraction method, tree part and tree species were seen (See figure). Lipid extracts were described with roasted, milky, fresh herbs notes and saltiness, while aqueous extracts were woodsy, resinous, earthy, bitter and astringent. Needles extracts were sweet, acidic with fruity and confectionery/pastry notes, whereas buds extracts were herbaceous (aromatic herbs, dry herbs, leaves).Black spruce buds maceration and Balsam fir needles maceration were the most frequently identified to have good culinary potential, with 57 and 47% of participants, respectively. Varied proposals for culinary uses were collected, ranging from incorporation in an emulsion or a sauce to accompany halibut or duck, to use in a sorbet or a cranberry cocktail.

AB - Wild foods have increased in popularity among Quebec’s chefs and the general public. Tree products, such as conifer needles and buds, are abundant resources that are very characteristic of Quebec’s forests. They are underutilized in culinary applications despite their great flavour potential.The purpose of this study was to characterize the sensory properties of conifer-based extracts for culinary purposes. The extracts’ sensory properties were characterized by chefs and student chefs. In addition, suggestions for their culinary value were collected in order to further encourage the use of conifer products in cooking.Needles and buds from three conifer species (Balsam fir, White spruce, Black spruce) were prepared following three methods: aqueous (maceration [4°C-48h], decoction [100°C-1min]) or lipid (sous-vide [55°C-90min]) extraction methods. Projective mapping combined with ultra-flash profiling was performed. Respondents specifically focused on odours and aromas. Culinary arts teachers and advanced students (n=21) evaluated 14 samples. Standard projective mapping data analysis methods (lemmatizing, semantic clustering) were applied, using R-packages (SensoMineR, FactoMineR and Factoshiny) for statistical procedures.The descriptors were grouped based on categories from existing sensory vocabularies, and systematic differences between samples as a function of extraction method, tree part and tree species were seen (See figure). Lipid extracts were described with roasted, milky, fresh herbs notes and saltiness, while aqueous extracts were woodsy, resinous, earthy, bitter and astringent. Needles extracts were sweet, acidic with fruity and confectionery/pastry notes, whereas buds extracts were herbaceous (aromatic herbs, dry herbs, leaves).Black spruce buds maceration and Balsam fir needles maceration were the most frequently identified to have good culinary potential, with 57 and 47% of participants, respectively. Varied proposals for culinary uses were collected, ranging from incorporation in an emulsion or a sauce to accompany halibut or duck, to use in a sorbet or a cranberry cocktail.

M3 - Poster

T2 - 14th Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium<br/>

Y2 - 10 August 2020 through 12 August 2021

ER -

ID: 279826373