Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior

The aim of this work was to elaborate a tucupi-added mayonnaise and to assess the physicochemical characteristics, as well the rheological behavior at temperatures from 20°C to 70°C of the product with greater sensorial acceptance. For this purpose, three mayonnaise formulations (10%, 12.5% and 15%...

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Main Authors: Juliana Rodrigues do Carmo, Telma dos Santos Costa, Rosinelson da Silva Pena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:CyTA - Journal of Food
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19476337.2019.1607561
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spelling doaj-ccec34d86297451d8346a8f8e6001ad02020-11-25T02:15:29ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCyTA - Journal of Food1947-63371947-63452019-01-0117147948710.1080/19476337.2019.16075611607561Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behaviorJuliana Rodrigues do Carmo0Telma dos Santos Costa1Rosinelson da Silva Pena2Instituto de Tecnologia, Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPA)Universidade do Estado do Pará (UEPA)Instituto de Tecnologia, Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPA)The aim of this work was to elaborate a tucupi-added mayonnaise and to assess the physicochemical characteristics, as well the rheological behavior at temperatures from 20°C to 70°C of the product with greater sensorial acceptance. For this purpose, three mayonnaise formulations (10%, 12.5% and 15% of the concentrated tucupi) were developed and submitted to sensorial acceptance and purchase intention tests. Based on the results of acceptance test by Tukey’s test (p ≤ 0.05) and internal preference mapping by principal component analysis (PCA), the formulation with 10% of the tucupi was chosen. The purchase intention test showed that 95% of the judges would buy this product, which presented 41.52% moisture, 2.06% ashes, 43.95% lipids, 4.56% proteins, 3.12% total sugars, 1.51% starch, 1.29% chlorides, 9.40 µg/g β-carotene and energy value of 432 kcal/100 g. According to rheological analysis, the mayonnaise with 10% of the tucupi presented pseudoplastic fluid-like behavior and evidenced hysteresis (showing thixotropic characteristic) between the up-ramp and down-ramp flow curves from 60°C. The Herschel-Bulkley model was efficient in predicting product flow curve and an Arrhenius-like equation estimated activation energy value for the product (8.29 kJ/mol). Thus, the tucupi-added mayonnaise can be considered an excellent and promising alternative for the food industry.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19476337.2019.1607561cassava wastewateroil-in-water emulsionindustrial alternativeprincipal component analysisflow curve
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juliana Rodrigues do Carmo
Telma dos Santos Costa
Rosinelson da Silva Pena
spellingShingle Juliana Rodrigues do Carmo
Telma dos Santos Costa
Rosinelson da Silva Pena
Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
CyTA - Journal of Food
cassava wastewater
oil-in-water emulsion
industrial alternative
principal component analysis
flow curve
author_facet Juliana Rodrigues do Carmo
Telma dos Santos Costa
Rosinelson da Silva Pena
author_sort Juliana Rodrigues do Carmo
title Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
title_short Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
title_full Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
title_fullStr Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
title_full_unstemmed Tucupi-added mayonnaise: Characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
title_sort tucupi-added mayonnaise: characterization, sensorial evaluation, and rheological behavior
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series CyTA - Journal of Food
issn 1947-6337
1947-6345
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The aim of this work was to elaborate a tucupi-added mayonnaise and to assess the physicochemical characteristics, as well the rheological behavior at temperatures from 20°C to 70°C of the product with greater sensorial acceptance. For this purpose, three mayonnaise formulations (10%, 12.5% and 15% of the concentrated tucupi) were developed and submitted to sensorial acceptance and purchase intention tests. Based on the results of acceptance test by Tukey’s test (p ≤ 0.05) and internal preference mapping by principal component analysis (PCA), the formulation with 10% of the tucupi was chosen. The purchase intention test showed that 95% of the judges would buy this product, which presented 41.52% moisture, 2.06% ashes, 43.95% lipids, 4.56% proteins, 3.12% total sugars, 1.51% starch, 1.29% chlorides, 9.40 µg/g β-carotene and energy value of 432 kcal/100 g. According to rheological analysis, the mayonnaise with 10% of the tucupi presented pseudoplastic fluid-like behavior and evidenced hysteresis (showing thixotropic characteristic) between the up-ramp and down-ramp flow curves from 60°C. The Herschel-Bulkley model was efficient in predicting product flow curve and an Arrhenius-like equation estimated activation energy value for the product (8.29 kJ/mol). Thus, the tucupi-added mayonnaise can be considered an excellent and promising alternative for the food industry.
topic cassava wastewater
oil-in-water emulsion
industrial alternative
principal component analysis
flow curve
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19476337.2019.1607561
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AT telmadossantoscosta tucupiaddedmayonnaisecharacterizationsensorialevaluationandrheologicalbehavior
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