Sensory Characterization of Cookies With Sugar Replacement by Sweeteners Using the Check‐All‐That‐Apply (CATA) Method
Igor Henrique Oliveira de Lima, Nathália Letícia Hernandez Brito, Flávia Aparecida Reitz Cardoso, Renata Hernandez Barros Fuchs

TL;DR
This study explores how replacing sugar with sweeteners affects cookie taste and texture, finding that balanced blends produce better results.
Contribution
The study introduces a method for balancing sweeteners to achieve optimal sensory properties in cookies.
Findings
Cookies with balanced sweetener blends (like F16) had desirable attributes like softness and flavor.
Unbalanced sweetener ratios led to undesirable traits like crumbly texture and pale appearance.
PCA identified three sensory cookie archetypes: underdeveloped, balanced, and overbrowned.
Abstract
This study investigated the sensory effects of replacing sucrose with blends of xylitol, monk fruit extract (Siraitia grosvenorii, rich in mogrosides), and thaumatin in 16 prototype cookie formulations. A consumer‐based check‐all‐that‐apply (CATA) test (n = 62 regular cookie consumers) was conducted, followed by Cochran's Q test, principal component analysis (PCA), and heatmap visualization of attribute citation frequencies. Balanced sweetener systems were defined as formulations that combined an adequate bulk contribution (xylitol) with high‐intensity sweeteners (monk fruit and thaumatin) at levels that ensured sweetness equivalence while minimizing off‐flavors and structural defects, whereas unbalanced systems lacked this functional complementarity. Twenty‐one sensory attributes were evaluated to characterize differences in appearance, texture, and flavor. Significant differences…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBiochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques · Sensory Analysis and Statistical Methods · Diet, Metabolism, and Disease
