CORRELATION OF OBJECTIVE AND SUBJECTIVE MEASUREMENTS OF PECAN KERNEL QUALITY
W. R. FORBUS, S. D. Senter, B.G. LYON, H. P. Dupuy
Journal of Food Science
Abstract
ABSTRACT Stuart pecan kernels were stored at 21°C 65% RH, and subjective evaluation and objective measurements of selected quality parameters were made at 3‐wk intervals for 12 wk. The subjective evaluations for aroma and flavor were made by a trained taste panel. Objectively determined data included peroxide values, free fatty acid values, carbonyl factors, Hunter color values, and results of direct GLC analyses of volatile compounds. GLC analyses were made for total volatiles and for hexanal, dodecane, tridecane, and tetradecane. Correlations between sensory scores and the objective measurements for all quality parameters that varied significantly with storage time were determined. Of the parameters evaluated in this study, content of volatiles determined by direct GLC appeared to best indicate pecan kernel quality. The simple linear regressions of flavor score with the logarithm of total volatiles and tridecane content gave correlation coefficients of ‐0.95 and ‐0.93, respectively.
Extracted Claims
3 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
pecan kernel quality correlates with volatile content
“Of the parameters evaluated in this study, content of volatiles determined by direct GLC appeared to best indicate pecan kernel quality.”
flavor score correlates with tridecane content
“The simple linear regressions of flavor score with the logarithm of total volatiles and tridecane content gave correlation coefficients of ‐0.95 and ‐0.93, respectively.”
flavor score correlates with logarithm of total volatiles
“The simple linear regressions of flavor score with the logarithm of total volatiles and tridecane content gave correlation coefficients of ‐0.95 and ‐0.93, respectively.”