4.7 Article

Relationships among Consumer Liking, Lipid and Volatile Compounds from New Zealand Commercial Lamb Loins

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10051143

Keywords

eating quality; fatty acids; flavor; meat; volatile compounds

Funding

  1. AgResearch Strategic Science Investment Fund

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Consumer liking of different types of lamb meat varies based on tenderness, juiciness, flavor liking, and overall liking. The study identified two consumer clusters with distinct preferences, where one group favored lamb with lower total lipid content, specific fatty acids, and volatile compounds, while the other group showed less influence from fatty acids and volatiles except for certain specific acids. This suggests that fatty acid profile and volatile compounds play a significant role in driving consumer liking for lamb for some consumers more than others.
Loin sections (m. Longissimus lumborum) were collected at slaughter from forty-eight lamb carcasses to evaluate consumer-liking scores of six types of typical New Zealand commercial lamb and to understand the possible underlying reasons for those ratings. A consumer panel (n = 160) evaluated tenderness, juiciness, flavor liking, and overall liking of the different types of lamb loins. Consumer scores differed among the types of lamb meat for all the evaluated attributes (p < 0.05). Further segmentation based on overall liking scores showed two consumer clusters with distinct ratings. Correlation and external preference map analyses indicated that one consumer cluster (n = 75) liked lamb types that had lower total lipid content, a lower proportion of branched-chain fatty acids, oleic and heptadecanoic acids; and a higher proportion of polyunsaturated fatty acids and volatile compounds (green and fruity descriptors). Consumer liking of the other segment (n = 85) was less influenced by fatty acids and volatiles, except hexanoic, heptanoic and octanoic acids (rancid, fatty, and sweaty descriptors). Thus, the fatty acid profile and the volatile compounds derived from their oxidation upon cooking seem to be a stronger driver of consumer liking of lamb for some consumers than others.

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