“…The terms used were: watery, orange color, fruit, natural, consistent, cooked flavor (Lee, Findlay, & Meullenet, ), bitter, artificial, citric smell, sweet (Pineli et al, ), for kids, cheap, expensive, breakfast (Cardinal, Zamora, Chambers, Carbonell Barrachina, & Hough, ). In addition, we used scientific criteria attributed to orange juice, such as nutritious, healthy, vitamin C (O'neil, Nicklas, Rampersaud, & Fulgoni, ), durable (Mastello, Janzantti, Bisconsin‐Júnior, & Monteiro, ), easy to prepare (Van loco, Vandevijvere, Cimenci, Vinkx, & Goscinny, ), tasty (Kim, Lee, Kwak, & Kang, ), sugar (MacGregor & Hashem, ; Shefferly, Scharf, & Deboer, ), nectar (Pineli et al, ), high calories (Van grieken, Renders, Van De Gaar, Hirasing, & Raat, ), preservative (Zengin, Yüzbaşioĝlu, Ünal, Yilmaz, & Aksoy, ), unhealthy (De Christopher, Uribarri, & Tucker, ; Shefferly et al, ), chemical (Linke et al, ; Zhang & Ma, ), sustainable, and waste reduction (Aschemann‐Witzel, ). In order to balance CATA terms and stimuli, for each block of 100 answers, we closed the questionnaires momentarily and rearranged the pages of stimuli (each stimulus was placed in one separated page) and we also randomized the CATA terms of each stimulus.…”