Consumer Acceptability of Muffins with Flaxseed (Linum usitatissimum) |
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Authors: | Anisa Ramcharitar Neela Badrie Mildred Mattfeldt-Beman Hisako Matsuo Charlotte Ridley |
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Affiliation: | Authors Ramcharitar, Mattfeldt-Beman, Matsuo, and Ridley are with Dept. of Nutrition, St. Louis Univ., St. Louis, Mo. Author Badrie is with Dept. of Food Production, Faculty of Science and Agriculture, Univ. of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, West Indies. Direct inquiries to author Ramcharitar (E-mail: ) |
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Abstract: | Flaxseed has recently gained attention as a functional food. The effect of adding flaxseed (7.3%, 11.6%, and 15.5%) to muffins on consumer acceptability was evaluated by a focus group, hedonic scoring, and food action rating scale (FACT). The majority of consumers (82.6%, P < 0.001) rated the control muffin (0 % flaxseed) higher than the flax muffin for appearance, color, flavor, texture, overall acceptability, and food acceptance. Flaxseed muffin (11.6%) was “neither liked nor disliked” to “liked slightly” in overall acceptability. This may have been accounted for by the observation that many persons aged 18 to 25 y did not think they needed to consume “health foods”. This “indifferent” and in some cases “negative” attitude toward the flax muffins, which they considered a “health food”, may have influenced the ratings the flax muffins received. Texture and flavor were strongly and positively correlated (P < 0.01) to overall acceptability. A flaxseed muffin provided at least 16% fiber of the daily recommended value. |
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Keywords: | flaxseed functional food muffin hedonic scoring FACT scale |
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