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Can instrumental characterization help predicting sour taste perception of wheat sourdough bread?

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

Can instrumental characterization help predicting sour taste perception of wheat sourdough bread?

Interesting looking paper. I haven't yet been able to get the full content via my university library.

Can instrumental characterization help predicting sour taste perception of wheat sourdough bread?

Highlights

• Breads with differences in acidity, FQ and density had similar sour taste profiles.

• Bread pH explained up to 97% of sour taste variations.

• Trained panellists were sensitive to pH-variations as low as 0.13 pH-unity.

• Bread-making process had at least as much impact on final product than sourdough.

• QDA and progressive profiling gave matching and complementary results.

Abstract

Sourdough bread is known to have a characteristic sour taste. To guarantee consumer acceptability, sour taste should be monitored to assure constant bread quality. However, little is known about bread sour taste perception, especially how it evolves during tasting, neither if some simple measurements could help predict it. The aims of this study were to characterize the evolution of sour taste perception during bread tasting and to determine which bread instrumental variables can be correlated to it. For that purpose, eight types of bread were made with different sourdoughs and baking processes to obtain wide ranges of acidity, density and Fermentation Quotient. Bread were characterized by instrumental methods (i.e. pH, Total Titratable Acidity, organic acid content and density measurements) and their sour taste was determined by Quantitative Descriptive Analysis and a dynamic method called Progressive Profiling. As a result, it appeared that breads were perceived as significantly different throughout tasting. The “sour taste profile” was globally similar among breads with the highest intensity reached at the swallowing point. Progressive Profiling seemed then an efficient and simple method to evaluate the intensity of food organoleptic properties as well as the persistence after swallowing. Surprisingly, bread acetic acid content and Fermentation Quotient showed no effect on sour taste perception. Conversely, from all the physicochemical characteristics monitored, bread pH correlated with sour taste the most, explaining up to 97% of sour taste variations. Measuring bread pH could therefore constitute a quick and easy way to predict bread sour taste perception in research and industry. Graphical abstract Dow

mwilson's picture
mwilson

Hi Gary,

I have access to this paper through my institution. Send me a PM and I can provide a link.


Michael

barryvabeach's picture
barryvabeach

Gary,  let us know what you find out.  From the summary it seems to suggest ph is the determining factor. 

GaryBishop's picture
GaryBishop

The highlights posted above tell you most of what you (I) want to know. Here is a bit more that I found interesting.

Acidity actually constitutes the only requirement for a bread to be sold under the denomination “Pain au levain” (sourdough bread) in France, i.e. bread must have a pH below 4.3 and an endogenic acetic acid content superior to 0.9 g/kg.

For this study, four different sourdoughs were used for breadmaking. They were traditional sourdoughs, selected for their diversity in terms of microbial composition, acidity and FQ (data not shown), coming from four different bakeries of the area

Bread-making characteristics

I was surprised at the amounts of "sourdough" (I assume starter) they used. 

The recipe for bread dough varied according to sourdough DY as shown in Table 1. Doughs were prepared by mixing firstly flour and water for 4 min at 80 rpm and 1 min at 120 rpm with a Diosna spiral mixer (Dierks & Söhne GmbH, Germany). After 30 min of resting, sourdough, salt and potentially yeast (B4) were added to the dough and mixed for 8 min at 80 rpm and 4 min at 120 rpm. After a rest of 60 min at 20 °C and Relative Humidity (RH) of 80%, the dough was divided into 500 g loaves and moulded manually. The duration of second proofing at 20 °C, RH 80%, varied from one formulation to the other as shown in Table 1. The loaves for B5 bread were degassed manually before baking by flattening them with the palm of the hand to artificially increase its density. All loaves were partially baked at 220 °C for 20 min, left to cool for 3 h, packaged in protective atmosphere and stored at 4 °C. Prior to analysis, loaves of pre-baked bread were fullybaked at 230 °C for 20 min and left 2 h to cool.

Bread acidity was determined by measurements of pH, Total Titratable Acidity (TTA) and organic acid quantitation. Ten grams of bread crumb were homogenised with 90 mL of distilled water in a Stomacher for 2 min. Then, 25 mL of the mixture was used for pH and TTA determination with an automatic titrator

The sour taste of breads obtained as described previously was evaluated by two types of sensory analysis: Progressive Profiling (PP) and Quantitative Descriptive Analysis (QDA). A panel of 15 healthy volunteers (10 women and 5 men, aged between 23 and 62) was recruited based on their motivation and discrimination abilities

Measurements of the breads

Sourness vs. pH

Sourness vs. time

 Surprisingly, acetic acid content of breads related to the Fermentation Quotient showed no effect on sour taste perception neither statically (QDA), nor dynamically (PP).

Finally, from all the physicochemical characteristics monitored, bread pH was the best correlated to sour taste, explaining up to 97% of sour taste variations evaluated by QDA. Measuring bread pH could therefore constitute a quick and easy way to predict bread sour taste perception.

Seems like a carefully done study. The "Progressive Profiling" was new to me; I'm amazed you could get people to report that finely on their perceptions.

Seems like the French rule makers knew what they were doing.