Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5789641 | Journal of Dairy Science | 2011 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The purpose of this work was to optimize the formulation of a prebiotic dairy dessert with low fat content (<0.1Â g/100Â g) using a mixture of short- and long-chain inulin. Response surface methodology was applied to obtain the experimental design and data analysis. Nineteen formulations of dairy dessert were prepared, varying inulin concentration (3 to 9Â g/100Â g), sucrose concentration (4 to 16Â g/100Â g), and lemon flavor concentration (25 to 225Â mg/kg). Sample acceptability evaluated by 100 consumers varied mainly in terms of inulin and sucrose concentrations and, to a lesser extent, of lemon flavor content. An interaction effect among inulin and sucrose concentration was also found. According to the model obtained, the formulation with 5.5Â g/100Â g inulin, 10Â g/100Â g sucrose and 60Â mg/kg of lemon flavor was selected. Finally, this sample was compared sensorially with the regular fat content (2.8Â g/100Â g) sample previously optimized in terms of lemon flavor (146Â mg/kg) and sucrose (11.4Â g/100Â g). No significant difference in acceptability was found between them but the low-fat sample with inulin possessed stronger lemon flavor and greater thickness and creaminess.
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Authors
P.L. Arcia, E. Costell, A. Tárrega,