Innovative approaches to develop
flavors with high sensory appeal
are critical in encouraging increased consumer preference and adoption of low sodium foods. Gas
chromatography–olfactometry, coupled with stable isotope dilution
assays and sensory experiments, led to the identification of the odorants
responsible for an enhancement in saltiness perception of chicken
broth prepared with thermally treated enzymatically hydrolyzed mushroom
protein and cysteine, then reacted under kitchen-like cooking conditions.
Comparative aroma extract dilution analysis revealed 36 odorants with
flavor dilution factors between a range of 1 and 256. Sixteen odorants
were quantitated and odor activity values (OAVs) calculated. Important
odorants included 2-furfurylthiol (coffee, OAV 610), 1-(2-furyl)ethanethiol
(meaty, OAV 78), 3-sulfanylpentan-2-one (catty, OAV 42), sotolon (maple,
OAV 20), indole (animal, OAV 8), 2-methyl-3-(methyldithio)furan (meaty,
OAV 3), and p-cresol (barnyard, OAV 1). An odor simulation
model was evaluated in two consumer sensory studies. These studies
confirmed that the addition of the aroma model increased the perceived
saltiness of low sodium chicken broth (p < 0.05).
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