4.7 Article

Elucidating the flavour of cooked white asparagus by combining metabolomics and taste panel analysis

Journal

LWT-FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lwt.2023.115049

Keywords

White asparagus; GC-O-MS; Metabolomics; Flavour; Random forest

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A study found that the chemical composition of asparagus changes during cooking, with some substances increasing while others decreasing. Profiles of asparagus metabolites were analyzed using GC-MS and LC-MS, and the flavor attributes were evaluated by a taste panel. The study revealed the key biochemical pathways and chemical transformations relevant to asparagus flavor.
A typical feature of cooked white spears of Asparagus officinalis is their specific flavour. This has been the focus of several recent instrumental and panel studies. Few of these report on the comparison of raw and cooked ma-terials which may lead to a deeper understanding of the flavour chemistry and compositional shifts occurring during food preparation. Here, solid-phase microextraction GC-MS and LC-MS analyses of raw and cooked spears were performed to profile asparagus metabolites. A taste panel evaluated flavour attributes of the same materials. Unsupervised and supervised statistical approaches were applied to investigate the profiles and link metab-olomics and sensory results. Flavonoids, saponins and medium-chain volatile carbonyls were more abundant in the raw spears while sulphur-containing volatile compounds, oxidized fatty acids and phenolic acids were more abundant in the cooked spears. GC-Olfactometry-MS was also performed and revealed 35 odour-active volatile flavour compounds. We have proposed and discussed the key biochemical pathways and chemical trans-formations relevant to asparagus 'flavour'.

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