Consistency of tomato concentrates was evaluated in a Bostwick consistometer. The concentrates were produced in a semibatch evaporator at soluble solids content from 5.3 to 24.0°Brix. The apparent viscosity, yield stress and density were measured at 20C. With respect to the gravity current analysis, the Bostwick measurement correlated well with the theoretical ratio of the apparent viscosity to density (R 2 = 0.96). For the concentrates with yield stress values in the range of 60-200 Pa, the predicted extent of flow based on the slump analysis was within 2% of the measured extent of flow in the Bostwick consistometer.
This work aimed to characterize the sensory attributes of hot air‐dried persimmon (Diospyros kaki) chips, correlate these attributes with consumer hedonic information, and, by doing so, present recommendations for cultivars that are most suitable for hot‐air drying. A trained sensory panel evaluated dried persimmon samples (representing 40 cultivars) for flavor, taste/aftertaste, and texture. In addition, in each of two tests conducted in different years, more than 100 consumers provided hedonic evaluations of 21 unique samples in a ranking task with a balanced incomplete block design. A partial least squares regression model correlating the mean hedonic ranking to the trained panel data was developed using the data from the first consumer panel. The predictions from the model were correlated with the second panel to verify the model. It was found that including taste, aftertaste, and texture data (but not specific flavor attribute data) produced a predictive model (Spearman's ρ=0.83). This indicates that flavor is likely secondary to taste and texture in dried persimmon chips. Using the validated predictive model, 6 of the 40 persimmon cultivars tested are recommended for a dried chip product; these cultivars are ‘Fuyu’, ‘Lycopersicon’, ‘Maekawa Jiro’, ‘Nishimura Wase’, ‘Tishihtzu’, and ‘Yotsumizo’.
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