Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing

The aim of this study was to identify which attributes impacted the dynamic liking of cheese and wine individually, as well as when consumed together. Three wines (one white, Pouilly Loché; and two red, Maranges and Beaujolais) and three cheeses (Comté, Époisses, Chaource) were individually evaluate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mara V. Galmarini, Lucie Dufau, Anne-Laure Loiseau, Michel Visalli, Pascal Schlich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-02-01
Series:Beverages
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2306-5710/4/1/13
id doaj-2949da8fd3fb48fc806a514752e080b7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2949da8fd3fb48fc806a514752e080b72020-11-24T23:43:38ZengMDPI AGBeverages2306-57102018-02-01411310.3390/beverages4010013beverages4010013Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese PairingMara V. Galmarini0Lucie Dufau1Anne-Laure Loiseau2Michel Visalli3Pascal Schlich4Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l’Alimentation, CNRS, INRA, Université deBourgogne Franche-Comté, F-21000 Dijon, FranceCentre des Sciences du Goût et de l’Alimentation, CNRS, INRA, Université deBourgogne Franche-Comté, F-21000 Dijon, FranceCentre des Sciences du Goût et de l’Alimentation, CNRS, INRA, Université deBourgogne Franche-Comté, F-21000 Dijon, FranceCentre des Sciences du Goût et de l’Alimentation, CNRS, INRA, Université deBourgogne Franche-Comté, F-21000 Dijon, FranceCentre des Sciences du Goût et de l’Alimentation, CNRS, INRA, Université deBourgogne Franche-Comté, F-21000 Dijon, FranceThe aim of this study was to identify which attributes impacted the dynamic liking of cheese and wine individually, as well as when consumed together. Three wines (one white, Pouilly Loché; and two red, Maranges and Beaujolais) and three cheeses (Comté, Époisses, Chaource) were individually evaluated by a group of 60 consumers using mono-intake Temporal Dominance of Sensations (TDS) with simultaneous hedonic ratings. The same data acquisition screen was used for all products showing a unique list of 14 descriptors (covering cheese and wine perception) and a hedonic scale for dynamical rating of liking. The dynamic hedonic data were associated with the TDS profiles obtaining Temporal Drivers of Liking (TDL). Furthermore, the nine associations that resulted from combining each wine with each cheese were evaluated by multi-bite and multi-sip TDS. Individually, Chaource had practically no TDL; for Comté, mushroom flavor was a positive TDL, and in Époisses, salty was a negative TDL. As for wines, negative TDL were only found in the red wines: bitter, sour and astringent. Positive TDL for wines were: fruity, spicy and woody. Changes in the dynamic perception had a bigger impact on liking of wine compared to cheese. For the associations, the negative TDL were only three and mostly wine related: sour (for seven out of nine combinations), bitter (six out of nine) and astringent (five out of nine). Positive TDL were more varied (a total of 10 descriptors) and were related either to wine or cheese. As opposed to what was found in cheese alone, salty was a positive TDL in two of the combinations. It was observed that the dynamic sensory perception had a more important impact on liking in wine-cheese combinations than when consumed separately. TDS and TDL have a big potential in the study of food pairing, which should be further exploited.http://www.mdpi.com/2306-5710/4/1/13temporal dominance of sensationsdynamic likingconsumerswine-cheese pairingsensory evaluation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mara V. Galmarini
Lucie Dufau
Anne-Laure Loiseau
Michel Visalli
Pascal Schlich
spellingShingle Mara V. Galmarini
Lucie Dufau
Anne-Laure Loiseau
Michel Visalli
Pascal Schlich
Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing
Beverages
temporal dominance of sensations
dynamic liking
consumers
wine-cheese pairing
sensory evaluation
author_facet Mara V. Galmarini
Lucie Dufau
Anne-Laure Loiseau
Michel Visalli
Pascal Schlich
author_sort Mara V. Galmarini
title Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing
title_short Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing
title_full Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing
title_fullStr Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing
title_full_unstemmed Wine and Cheese: Two Products or One Association? A New Method for Assessing Wine-Cheese Pairing
title_sort wine and cheese: two products or one association? a new method for assessing wine-cheese pairing
publisher MDPI AG
series Beverages
issn 2306-5710
publishDate 2018-02-01
description The aim of this study was to identify which attributes impacted the dynamic liking of cheese and wine individually, as well as when consumed together. Three wines (one white, Pouilly Loché; and two red, Maranges and Beaujolais) and three cheeses (Comté, Époisses, Chaource) were individually evaluated by a group of 60 consumers using mono-intake Temporal Dominance of Sensations (TDS) with simultaneous hedonic ratings. The same data acquisition screen was used for all products showing a unique list of 14 descriptors (covering cheese and wine perception) and a hedonic scale for dynamical rating of liking. The dynamic hedonic data were associated with the TDS profiles obtaining Temporal Drivers of Liking (TDL). Furthermore, the nine associations that resulted from combining each wine with each cheese were evaluated by multi-bite and multi-sip TDS. Individually, Chaource had practically no TDL; for Comté, mushroom flavor was a positive TDL, and in Époisses, salty was a negative TDL. As for wines, negative TDL were only found in the red wines: bitter, sour and astringent. Positive TDL for wines were: fruity, spicy and woody. Changes in the dynamic perception had a bigger impact on liking of wine compared to cheese. For the associations, the negative TDL were only three and mostly wine related: sour (for seven out of nine combinations), bitter (six out of nine) and astringent (five out of nine). Positive TDL were more varied (a total of 10 descriptors) and were related either to wine or cheese. As opposed to what was found in cheese alone, salty was a positive TDL in two of the combinations. It was observed that the dynamic sensory perception had a more important impact on liking in wine-cheese combinations than when consumed separately. TDS and TDL have a big potential in the study of food pairing, which should be further exploited.
topic temporal dominance of sensations
dynamic liking
consumers
wine-cheese pairing
sensory evaluation
url http://www.mdpi.com/2306-5710/4/1/13
work_keys_str_mv AT maravgalmarini wineandcheesetwoproductsoroneassociationanewmethodforassessingwinecheesepairing
AT luciedufau wineandcheesetwoproductsoroneassociationanewmethodforassessingwinecheesepairing
AT annelaureloiseau wineandcheesetwoproductsoroneassociationanewmethodforassessingwinecheesepairing
AT michelvisalli wineandcheesetwoproductsoroneassociationanewmethodforassessingwinecheesepairing
AT pascalschlich wineandcheesetwoproductsoroneassociationanewmethodforassessingwinecheesepairing
_version_ 1725500701166010368