1997
DOI: 10.1007/bf02407564
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Sensory evaluation of the texture of steam-cooked table potatoes

Abstract: The texture of steam-cooked potatoes from ten cultivars was sensory evaluated after two, four and nine months storage for three consecutive years. The sensory data were analyzed using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and regression analysis. PCA revealed that the first two principal components explained 95% or more of the variance between the data. The first principal component was dominated by the descriptors meal.v (M)/crumbly (A/M) on the positive side and the descriptors waxy (A/M) on the negative side. … Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
(16 reference statements)
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“…In general, though, tuber mealiness decreases during storage (Ridley and Lindsay 1984;Shetty et al 1992; van Marle et al 1997a). Starch is broken down during storage, leading to pitted starch granules (Cottrell et al 1993).…”
Section: Effect Of Storage Environment On Flavormentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In general, though, tuber mealiness decreases during storage (Ridley and Lindsay 1984;Shetty et al 1992; van Marle et al 1997a). Starch is broken down during storage, leading to pitted starch granules (Cottrell et al 1993).…”
Section: Effect Of Storage Environment On Flavormentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Underwater weight is a measure for dry matter concentration of potato tubers and indirectly also for starch concentration; the higher the underwater weight, the higher the starch concentration of a cultivar. Starch granules create swelling pressure while being cooked and therefore can contribute to disintegration of the cooked tuber structure, which creates a looser cooking type (van Marle et al 1997). The relationship between flesh colour and cooking colour is even more predictable: the mere difference between both phenotypes is that flesh colour is evaluated on raw tubers and cooking colour on cooked tubers.…”
Section: High Heritabilities Were Obtainedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is noteworthy, that the ‘physiologic’ constitution of potatoes is very important with regard to quality and preference of consumers. The preference of consumers towards firmness varies with consumer age and depends particularly on the treatments after harvesting (Van Marle et al. , 1997).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%