Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages 465-471Publisher
BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2621.2000.00399.x
Keywords
acceptability; descriptive analysis
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Sensory tests on bread made from a 50% sorghum-based composite flour were made by six trained panellists. A descriptive test was used to identify the characteristics of aroma, crumb flavour, top crust flavour and texture of the bread by comparison with a commercial rye bread. Hay-like, an attribute that the panellists associated with sorghum, was noted in the analysis of aroma. Slight sourness and astringency were experienced in the crumb and top crust flavours. Textural differences existed between the two breads because of differences in formulation and between the rye and sorghum flours. The sorghum composite bread's acceptability with 37 consumers resulted in an overall acceptability mean score of 6.9 on a nine-point hedonic scale.
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