Ability Of Adults To Identify Pure Taste Modalities Is Roller-Coastering
: M. Sandell, O. Laaksonen, A. Knaapila, H. Terho, S. Mattila, H. Aisala, P. Ojansivu, U. Hoppu
Publisher: Oxford Abstracts
: 2014
Taste is an important quality factor in food perception. It may contribute strongly to liking and
choice process. Although the role of food taste is in general accepted, it may not stand to
reason that people understand what they actually taste. Our objective in this study was to
investigate the ability of adults to recognise and identify pure taste modalitilies in water
solutions.
Data were collected in public exposition settings available for various untrained and volunteer
Finnish consumers (n = 127, age 18-81, 76 % females, 24 % males). All the taste samples were
prepared to active-carbon filtered water and stored before serving in sensory laboratory
(University of Turku) following good laboratory practices and high hygienic protocol. Sample for
sweetness was 2 % sucrose, and for saltiness 0.2 % NaCl, for sourness 0.07 % citric acid, for
bitterness 0.07 % caffeine, for umami 0.1 % monosodium glutamate, respectively. All the
participants were asked to spin a sample around the mouth for ten seconds before identifying
the taste modality and writing the response. All the five samples were evaluated one by one by
an individual.
Portion of totally correct answers (all five taste modalities identified) was 38 % in females and
23 % in males. Only 2 % of females and 7 % of males failed a taste test completely. Sweetness
was easiest to identify (96 % and 87 %). Salty taste in a test concentration was able to identify
for 75 % of females and 63 % of males. Sourness (70 % females and 43 % males answered
correctly), bitterness (60 % and 40 %) and umami (51 % and 43 %) were significantly more
challenging than salty and sweet taste. This study shows that even pure taste modalities are not
easy findings for an ordinary man. There is an order for taste education of adults.