4.7 Article

Reduced fat and sugar vanilla ice creams: Sensory profiling and external preference mapping

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 95, Issue 9, Pages 4842-4850

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2012-5526

Keywords

sensory profiling; ice cream; partial least squares; sweetener

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The aims of this study were (1) to map sensory attributes of vanilla ice cream with reduced fat and sugar, and (2) to determine drivers of liking by applying external preference mapping and reveal the relationship between descriptive attributes and hedonic judgments using the partial least squares method. Descriptive sensory profiles (n = 11) and consumer test (n = 117) of 6 samples of vanilla ice cream (3 traditional and 3 with reduced fat and sugar) were determined. The attributes brightness and sweet aftertaste for sample and creaminess (appearance and texture) and sweet aroma contributed positively to the acceptance of ice cream samples. The attributes aeration, powdered milk aroma and flavor, and white chocolate aroma and flavor contributed positively to the acceptance of the ice creams. The attributes hydrogenated fat aroma and flavor were responsible for the lower acceptance of samples. The reduction in fat and sugar did not necessarily cause a decrease in acceptance. The most important factors were selection of the appropriate sweetener system and the use of good quality raw material.

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