Issue 2, 2018

A comparison of the sensory and rheological properties of different cellulosic fibres for food

Abstract

The impact of different cellulosic microstructures formed by highly entangled fibre networks was studied for food applications as dietary fibre. This paper reports the impact of the microstructure on the rheological and sensory behaviour of the aqueous suspensions of particulate and fibrillated forms of softwood cellulosic fibres, and was compared with citrus fibres. An aqueous suspension of cellulosic fibres shows stable viscoelastic gel-like behaviour as a function of frequency. The particulate form of cellulosic fibres showed the lowest shear viscosity as compared with the entangled network system at comparable concentrations. To provide further insight into the relationship between the structure of cellulosic fibre and taste (salt) perception, an aqueous suspension with matched shear viscosities were studied. A hypothesis to explain why softwood cellulosic fibre (CTE) with an entangled network structure prolongs the taste perception is presented.

Graphical abstract: A comparison of the sensory and rheological properties of different cellulosic fibres for food

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Sep 2017
Accepted
23 Dec 2017
First published
29 Dec 2017

Food Funct., 2018,9, 1144-1151

A comparison of the sensory and rheological properties of different cellulosic fibres for food

D. Agarwal, L. Hewson and T. J. Foster, Food Funct., 2018, 9, 1144 DOI: 10.1039/C7FO01495C

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