2016
DOI: 10.1111/joss.12234
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Development of a sensory lexicon for a specific subcategory of soy sauce: Seasoning soy sauce

Abstract: General lexicons have been developed to describe sensory characteristics of soy sauce. However, no study has examined a large sample set of seasoning soy sauce, a subcategory of soy sauce, and developed a lexicon to fully describe its specific sensory characteristics. In this study, a wide variety of seasoning soy sauces (n = 25) were examined by a descriptive panel composed of nine highly trained panelists and a lexicon consisting of 34 attributes was developed. Each attribute was defined and referenced. Resu… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…Many of the flavor attributes are commonly used and already had definitions and references that were used in other published lexicons (e.g., Cherdchu et al, ; Jaffe et al, ; Pujchakarn et al, ). Some references of those terms needed to be modified to better suit the Chinese panel.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Many of the flavor attributes are commonly used and already had definitions and references that were used in other published lexicons (e.g., Cherdchu et al, ; Jaffe et al, ; Pujchakarn et al, ). Some references of those terms needed to be modified to better suit the Chinese panel.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A consensus method (Chambers, ) which was used for smoked flavor (Jaffe et al, ; Wang & Chambers, ; Wang, Chambers, & Kan, ) and a number of other products (Adhikari et al, ; Chambers, Lee, Chun, & Miller, ; Cherdchu, Chambers, & Suwonsichon, ; Di Donfrancesco, Koppel, & Chambers, ; Koppel & Chambers, ; Miller, Chambers, Jenkins, Lee, & Chambers, ; Pujchakarn, Suwonsichon, & Suwonsichon, ; Talavera & Chambers, ), was used for measuring aroma and flavor intensity. The panelists evaluated the bacon samples using a 0–15 point scale with 0.5 increments where 0 meant unperceived and 15 meant extremely strong.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, lexicons play a major role in conducting precise sensory analysis and can be used across countries or cultures to describe similar products (Cherdchu, Chambers, & Suwonsichon, ). Multiple recent studies have been conducted to develop sensory lexicons, including cashew nuts (Griffin, Dean, & Drake, ), chicken stock (Kim, Lee, & Kim, ), smoky foods (Jaffe, Wang, & Chambers IV, ), pet foods (Di Donfranchesco, Koppel, & Chambers, ; Koppel & Koppel, ), goat cheeses (Talavera & Chambers, ), soy sauce (Imamura, ; Pujchakarn, Suwonsichon, & Suwonsichon, ), coffee (Chambers et al, ), and other product categories.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Publishing sensory lexicons promotes the standardization of sensory evaluations, and many studies focusing on lexicons have been conducted, as reviewed by Lawless and Civille (). After publication of this review, several product‐specific lexicons were developed, including ones for soy sauce (Imamura, ), seasoning soy sauce (Pujchakarn, Suwonsichon, & Suwonsichon, ), brewed coffee (Chambers et al, ), artisan goat cheese from the United States (Talavera & Chambers, ), plain sufu (Chen & Chung, ), and cashew nuts (Griffin, Dean, & Drake, ). However, there have only been a few reports on lexicons including various attributes of texture, such as the ones for tomato (Hongsoongnern & Chambers, ), peach (Belisle, Adhikari, Chavez, & Phan, ), and cashew nut (Griffin et al, ), because it is more difficult to establish the reference products or substances for the texture attributes than for the aroma/flavor attributes, of which chemicals can be used for references.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%