The instrumental texture profile analysis revisited

被引:132
作者
Peleg, Micha [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Food Sci, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
关键词
compression; mechanical properties; sensory terminology; testing machines; TPA; uniaxial deformation; PARAMETERS;
D O I
10.1111/jtxs.12392
中图分类号
TS2 [食品工业];
学科分类号
0832 ;
摘要
Although innovative at the time of their inception, all the historic and extant instrumental texture profile analysis (TPA) versions have serious methodological flaws. Their measured and calculated parameters, for example, "hardness," "brittleness," and "cohesiveness," bear only a remote relationship to the same properties as understood in material science and other disciplines. The TPA parameters are supposedly objective measures of the tested food's textural attributes. But because they are all specimen size-dependent, they cannot be considered intensive material properties. Also, because the arbitrary test conditions, notably the specimen and probe's geometries and the set deformation level significantly affect the TPA parameters' magnitudes, assigning them textural term leads to logical inconsistencies, making their relationship to the food's actual properties even more difficult to establish. It is doubtful that the instrumental TPA parameters indeed describe the same properties in different foods and sometimes even within the same food, as in ripening juicy fruits and certain soft cheeses. It is proposed that the TPA parameters currently in use be replaced by a list of mechanical and other physical properties determined by testing methods recognized by material scientists, such as "yield stress," "strain at failure," "stiffness," and "toughness," perhaps supplemented by a quantitative measure of "juiciness" and/or the acoustic signature's features, especially developed for the particular food. It is also proposed that instead of correlating such intensive material properties with sensory evaluations described by a predetermined sensory vocabulary, they should be used to study the distribution or spectrum of humans' verbal responses, expressed in their own chosen terms.
引用
收藏
页码:362 / 368
页数:7
相关论文
共 14 条
[1]   Influence of deformation rate and degree of compression on textural parameters of potato and apple tissues in texture profile analysis [J].
Alvarez, MD ;
Canet, W ;
López, ME .
EUROPEAN FOOD RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY, 2002, 215 (01) :13-20
[2]   TEXTURE PROFILE OF RIPENING PEARS [J].
BOURNE, MC .
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, 1968, 33 (02) :223-&
[3]   Food oral processing - A review [J].
Chen, Jianshe .
FOOD HYDROCOLLOIDS, 2009, 23 (01) :1-25
[4]  
CHU CF, 1986, J TEXTURE STUD, V16, P451, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-4603.1985.tb00707.x
[5]  
Kramer A., 1973, Texture Measurements of Foods Psychophysical Fundamentals: Sensory, Mechanical, and Chemical Procedures, and their Interrelationships
[6]   Measurement of biting velocities, and predetermined and individual crosshead speed instrumental imitative tests for predicting cheese hardness [J].
Meullenet, JF ;
Finney, ML ;
Gaud, M .
JOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, 2002, 33 (01) :45-58
[7]   On fundamental issues in texture evaluation and texturization - A view [J].
Peleg, M .
FOOD HYDROCOLLOIDS, 2006, 20 (04) :405-414
[8]   COMPRESSIVE FAILURE PATTERNS OF SOME JUICY FRUITS [J].
PELEG, M ;
BRITO, LG ;
MALEVSKI, Y .
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, 1976, 41 (06) :1320-1324
[9]   TEXTURE PROFILE ANALYSIS PARAMETERS OBTAINED BY AN INSTRON UNIVERSAL TESTING MACHINE [J].
PELEG, M .
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, 1976, 41 (03) :721-722
[10]  
PELEG M, 1983, FOOD TECHNOL-CHICAGO, V37, P54