The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that the roasting conditions used for hazelnuts, such as the air temperature, air velocity and roasting time (independent variables), could be optimized by using Response Surface Methodology. Effects of independent variables on sensory and physical characteristics were determined. A consumer test was used to determine the acceptable samples. Very dark and very light roasted samples, corresponding to 165 °C, 3 m/s, 25 min and 125 °C, 1 m/s, 15 min process conditions, respectively, were unacceptable. Superimposed contour plots were used to determine the values of independent variables and these showed the process conditions where all product characteristics were acceptable to consumers. At low velocity (0.3 m/s), acceptable products were produced at about 165–179 °C for 20–25 min. When air velocity increased, air temperature shifted to lower temperatures. Samples roasted at 145 °C, 2 m/s, 28 min, 165 °C, 1 m/s, 25 min and 145 °C, 3.7 m/s, 20 min produced the most acceptable products. The sample roasted at 165 °C, 1 m/s, 25 min required the least air velocity and was the most economical in terms of energy consumed among the samples rated most acceptable by consumers.
The optimal brewing conditions for Turkish green tea were determined on the basis of extracted catechins and sensory attributes. Green tea infusions were prepared at 75, 85 and 95°C with brewing times of 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 20, 30 and 45 min. The amounts of epistructured catechins (EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC), non-epistructured catechins (C, GC, GCG) and caffeine in brewed tea samples were analysed. Sensory analyses were performed by nine trained panelists for infusion colour, taste, aroma and overall acceptability. Brewing at 85°C for 3 min was found to be the optimal condition, where the EGCG content was at a maximum of 50.69 mg/100 ml with the highest sensory scores. It was observed that the yield of epistructured catechins increased rapidly for the first 3-5 min of brewing at 85°C, and increased brewing time resulted in a decrease in the yield of epistructured catechins. The amount of nonepistructured catechins continued to increase with longer extraction times. Sensory scores for infusion colour, taste, aroma and overall acceptability were highest at 3 and 5 min brewing times at all temperatures. Sensory scores were very low for 30 and 45 min brewing at 85 and 95°C due to the bitter taste and dark colour.
Crispness and crunchiness of 15 samples of roasted hazelnuts were investigated. Force deformation curves from compression cell testing were analyzed and mechanical response variables were determined for roasted hazelnuts. Regression equations based on roasting air temperature, air velocity, and roasting time explained (R 2 5 0.9 -0.98, p < 0.001) the mechanical response variables. Samples were also evaluated by a quantitative descriptive panel. Among the mechanical response variables, the first fracture point (F 1 ) observed on the force deformation curve and the slope (S 2 ) for the line between the first and second fracture points strongly correlated (inverse) with sensory crispness (R 5 -0.96) and crunchiness (R 5 -0.92), respectively.
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