Fat is an important source of both pleasure and calories in the diet.
Dairy products are a major source of fat in the diet, and understanding
preferences for fat in fluid milk can potentially inform efforts to change fat
consumption patterns or optimize consumer products. Here, patterns of preference
for fat in milk were determined in the laboratory among 100 free living adults
using rejection thresholds. Participants also answered questions relating to
their health concerns, the type of fluid milk typically consumed, and their
declared preference for type of milk (in terms of fat level). When revealed
preferences in blind tasting were stratified by these measures, we observed
striking differences in the preferred level of fat in milk. These data indicate
a non-trivial number of consumers who prefer low-fat milk to full fat milk, a
pattern that would have been overshadowed by the use of a group mean. While it
is widely assumed and claimed that increasing fat content in fluid milk
universally increases palatability, present data demonstrate this is not true
for a segment of the population. These results underscore the need to go look
beyond group means to understand individual differences in food preference.
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