The relationship of
five primary senses with different attributes of dairy products is shown in Fig. below.
Relationship of the Five Primary Senses with Sensory Attributes of a Food Product |
a) Sight: The
characteristics of a diary product that can be evaluated by sense of sight are:
style, neatness and cleanliness of package exterior, attractiveness of product
finish, package closures, colour consistency, body and texture and overall appearance.
The labeling of the packaging has also to be examined. Colour and appearance
aspects of dairy products should not be overlooked because these features may
render the product acceptable/ unacceptable.
b) Smell (Aroma): This sense plays
paramount role in evaluation of quality of dairy products. The role of
olfactory perception is greater in overall flavour than the taste. Milk and
dairy products are smelled for aroma perception immediately after the opening
of closure/ package and earlier than the taste.
c) Taste: It is a companion sense
with aroma in establishing the overall flavour of diary products. In some of
the products, particularly frozen dairy product where volatile compounds are
not perceived by sense of smell at very low temperature, the sense of taste
plays deciding role for evaluating the flavour.
d) Touch: Tactual and mouth feel
play an important role in examining the body and texture characteristics. The
tongue and palate evaluate feeling of meatiness and grittiness in butter and
sandy defect in ice cream and sweetened condensed milk. The pressure between
the teeth and jaws determine the hardness, chewiness and gumminess. The
fingertips and ball of the thump help in determining other textural attributes,
notably stickiness, elasticity/ sponginess and brittleness.
e) Sound:
The evaluator can detect the presence of ice crystals while
drawing a ice cream sample with spoon. The relative size and distribution of
holes in Swiss cheese can be felt by the gentle tapping of the outside of the
cheese.
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