期刊
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE
卷 68, 期 5, 页码 1871-1877出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2621.2003.tb12345.x
关键词
zinc salts; taste inhibition; human psychophysics; sweet; bitter
Zinc salts are added as a nutritional or functional ingredient in food and oral care products. The 1st experiment in this study investigated the taste and somatosensory effect of zinc salts (chloride, iodide, sulfate, bromide, acetate). The zinc salts had very little taste (bitter, salty, savory, sour, sweet), and the taste that was present was easily washed away with water rinses. The major oral quality of zinc was astringency, and the astringency lingered beyond expectoration. The 2nd experiment combined zinc salts with prototypical stimuli eliciting basic tastes. Zinc was a potent inhibitor of sweetness and bitterness (>70% reduction in taste) but did not affect salt, savory, or sour taste.
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