Pairing coffee with basic tastes and real foods changes perceived sensory characteristics and consumer liking

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Coffee has, like wine and beer, a wide aroma spectrum, yet coffee-food pairings have not found their way into the menu of fine restaurants and the scientific literature. It is still unknown why certain beverage-food pairings are a match. The aim of this study is twofold: first, we characterize four coffees by sensory descriptive analysis (DA) where assessors evaluated samples before and after tasting aqueous solutions representing five basic tastes (BT); secondly, we investigate consumers’ liking of the same four coffees, both in isolation and when paired with a sweet or savory food. The DA results showed that exposure to all BT influenced the subsequent perceived attribute intensity of coffee; however, the direction of the effect was dependent on the BT, the coffee, and the specific sensory attribute. Most sensory attribute intensities decreased after exposure to the BT, only exposure to the BT bitter increased the intensity of more attributes than it decreased. The consumer test showed that preference for the coffee were mostly related to intrinsic characteristics of the samples as over half of the data variance in consumer liking (56%) related to the difference between samples described by fruity, floral and berry attributes, and samples described by chocolate, nutty and sweet attributes. Pairing coffee with either sweet or savory food accounted for an additional 20% of the variance in liking. Drivers of liking were sample-specific, with one common denominator: when consumers perceive the coffee as sour, they liked it significantly less. Overall, with respect to coffee-food pairing, coffee characterized as having chocolate, nutty, sweet notes are more suitable to be paired with food than coffees characterized as fruity, floral, berry.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer100591
TidsskriftInternational Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science
Vol/bind30
Antal sider11
ISSN1878-450X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We would like to direct a special thanks to Nora Alroumi, founder of VOL.1 in Kuwait, for requesting the research group to perform work on food pairing with coffee, and for subsequently roasting the coffee and partially funding this project. Authors CJBR and FJAPC were affiliated with the University of Copenhagen (UCPH) when this work was initiated. Thanks to Belinda Lange and Charlotte Dandanell for the great help with the sensory descriptive analysis. Also, a great thanks to the coffee experts Ida Kofoed from Kontra Coffee, Copenhagen and Ida Steen from CoffeeMind, Copenhagen.

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© 2022 The Authors

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