Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation

A conceptual model was developed to relate oral processing parameters and aroma release of cooked white rice. The conceptual model indicates that aroma release is dependent on the increase of particle surface area, the dilution effect of saliva and the diffusion of aroma from food residues that can...

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Main Authors: How, Muhammad Syahmeer, Jones, Jim R., Morgenstern, Marco P., Gray-Stuart, Eli, Bronlund, John E., Saint-Eve, Anne, Trelea, Ioan Cristian, Souchon, Isabelle
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2021
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/94229/
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0023643821000712
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spelling my.upm.eprints.942292023-05-09T01:41:57Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/94229/ Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation How, Muhammad Syahmeer Jones, Jim R. Morgenstern, Marco P. Gray-Stuart, Eli Bronlund, John E. Saint-Eve, Anne Trelea, Ioan Cristian Souchon, Isabelle A conceptual model was developed to relate oral processing parameters and aroma release of cooked white rice. The conceptual model indicates that aroma release is dependent on the increase of particle surface area, the dilution effect of saliva and the diffusion of aroma from food residues that can be trapped in the buccal-pouches in the mouth. The model was validated against in vivo retro-nasal aroma release data during the consumption of rice flavoured with two aroma compounds (2-nonanone and ethyl propanoate) by five panellists. The oral processing behaviour of each subject was characterised at four different stages during oral processing by measuring bolus particle size, saliva content and the amount of residue particles that could be washed from the mouth after bolus expectoration. The results showed that aroma release for all subjects were dependent on the particle breakdown pathways used in oral processing. Subjects who reduced the rice to smaller particle sizes, higher pasted fraction and higher bolus residues had higher aroma release as expected from the conceptual model. Accounting for the physiological variables of subjects, the physicochemical parameters of aroma compounds and using a larger number of subjects in future studies will improve the model reliability. Elsevier 2021-04 Article PeerReviewed How, Muhammad Syahmeer and Jones, Jim R. and Morgenstern, Marco P. and Gray-Stuart, Eli and Bronlund, John E. and Saint-Eve, Anne and Trelea, Ioan Cristian and Souchon, Isabelle (2021) Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation. LWT - Food Science and Technology, 141. art. no. 110918. pp. 1-8. ISSN 0023-6438 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0023643821000712 10.1016/j.lwt.2021.110918
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description A conceptual model was developed to relate oral processing parameters and aroma release of cooked white rice. The conceptual model indicates that aroma release is dependent on the increase of particle surface area, the dilution effect of saliva and the diffusion of aroma from food residues that can be trapped in the buccal-pouches in the mouth. The model was validated against in vivo retro-nasal aroma release data during the consumption of rice flavoured with two aroma compounds (2-nonanone and ethyl propanoate) by five panellists. The oral processing behaviour of each subject was characterised at four different stages during oral processing by measuring bolus particle size, saliva content and the amount of residue particles that could be washed from the mouth after bolus expectoration. The results showed that aroma release for all subjects were dependent on the particle breakdown pathways used in oral processing. Subjects who reduced the rice to smaller particle sizes, higher pasted fraction and higher bolus residues had higher aroma release as expected from the conceptual model. Accounting for the physiological variables of subjects, the physicochemical parameters of aroma compounds and using a larger number of subjects in future studies will improve the model reliability.
format Article
author How, Muhammad Syahmeer
Jones, Jim R.
Morgenstern, Marco P.
Gray-Stuart, Eli
Bronlund, John E.
Saint-Eve, Anne
Trelea, Ioan Cristian
Souchon, Isabelle
spellingShingle How, Muhammad Syahmeer
Jones, Jim R.
Morgenstern, Marco P.
Gray-Stuart, Eli
Bronlund, John E.
Saint-Eve, Anne
Trelea, Ioan Cristian
Souchon, Isabelle
Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
author_facet How, Muhammad Syahmeer
Jones, Jim R.
Morgenstern, Marco P.
Gray-Stuart, Eli
Bronlund, John E.
Saint-Eve, Anne
Trelea, Ioan Cristian
Souchon, Isabelle
author_sort How, Muhammad Syahmeer
title Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
title_short Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
title_full Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
title_fullStr Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
title_full_unstemmed Modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
title_sort modelling the role of oral processing on in vivo aroma release of white rice: conceptual model and experimental validation
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2021
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/94229/
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0023643821000712
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score 13.214268