Yogurt is widely consumed by people under‐controlled dietary regimes. The addition of hypocaloric sweeteners to the yogurt is typically used to make them more palatable, but this may affect the fermentation phase and/or its physical and sensory characteristics. The aim of this work was to test the possible application of an emerging sweetener, MNEI, a variant of a sweet protein, monellin. In particular, its sweetness profile was compared with that of other natural sweeteners, sucrose, xylitol, and sorbitol, in yogurt. First, determinations of iso‐sweet concentration of MNEI and of those sweeteners were performed, both for set and stirred yogurts. Then, the sweetness temporal profiles of all the sweeteners were evaluated as the mean of time–intensity data (t–I). In set yogurt, the iso‐sweet concentrations of xylitol and sorbitol, but not of MNEI, were found, whereas, in stirred yogurts, the concentrations were determined for all the sweeteners. t–I results showed that sweeteners had similar behaviors, except for the end time of sweetness perception: in particular, in stirred yogurt, MNEI resulted in a more lingering sweet aftertaste. These results suggest new applications of the sweet protein MNEI in food preparations, although the combination with other natural sweeteners could be explored.
Practical applications
Yogurts are ideal products to develop potential applications of MNEI, a protein that has been demonstrated stable to acidic environments, and to our knowledge, this is the first report of the use of a sweet protein to sweeten viscous food preparations. Preliminary experimental results suggest new possible applications of sweet protein MNEI in food samples. In particular, it could be used to sweeten‐stirred yogurt.