Perceptual interactions among food odors: Major influences on odor intensity evidenced with a set of 222 binary mixtures of key odorants

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TitrePerceptual interactions among food odors: Major influences on odor intensity evidenced with a set of 222 binary mixtures of key odorants
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursMa Y, Tang K, Xu Y, Thomas-Danguin T
JournalFOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume353
Pagination129483
Date PublishedSEP 30
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0308-8146
Mots-clésdominance, Masking, Odor interaction, Partial addition, Pleasantness, Synergy
Résumé

This study explored the impact of perceptual interactions on the odor intensity of 222 binary mixtures designed from 72 odorants found in food products. Odor intensity was rated by 30 trained subjects. The results showed that in most cases, the components' odor was perceived within the mixture and their intensity remained the same as in the unmixed situation in 54.3% of cases. Masking was the second major effect (44.8%) and occurred more frequently when components' pleasantness was significantly different. Synergy occurred in a small number of cases (0.9%) and only for four compounds. The overall odor intensity of the mixture was determined to be equal to the strongest component in most cases (73.9%), while partial addition was observed as the second most frequent effect (21.7%), especially when the components had equal intensity. Overall, this work provides general rules about the outcome to expect when mixing key components of food aromas.

DOI10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129483