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Are meat substitutes liked better over time? A repeated in-home use test with meat substitutes or meat in meals
- Source :
- Food Quality and Preference, 28(1), 253-263, Food Quality and Preference 28 (2013) 1
- Publication Year :
- 2013
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2013.
-
Abstract
- The overall aim of this study was to explore long-term consumer acceptance of new environmentally sustainable alternatives to meat. We investigated whether meat substitutes, which are relatively new food products, would be better appreciated after repeated consumption. Eighty-nine non-vegetarian participants joined an in-home use test and consumed one type of product with their self-selected hot meal for 20 times during 10 weeks: Quorn (meat-like), tofu (not meat-like) or a meat reference (chicken filet). Initial liking (100-mm line scale) for chicken was higher (81 ± 19) than for Quorn (60 ± 28) and tofu (68 ± 21). On a product group level, boredom occurred with all three products and after 20 exposures there were no significant differences in product liking anymore. However, there were noticeably different individual responses within the three product groups, showing both ‘boredom’ and ‘mere exposure’ patterns. Mere exposure occurred significantly more frequent with tofu, with more than half of the participants showing an increased liking over time. We also found that meal patterns were related to boredom: bored persons used more different types of meals, probably to alleviate product boredom. This study demonstrates that liking of meat substitutes can be increased by repeated exposure for a segment of consumers. In addition, it indicates that the meal context should be considered in future in-home repeated exposure studies. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Subjects :
- neophobia
meat replacers
Sensory-specific satiety
long-term acceptability
Context (language use)
vs. wanting food
boredom
unfamiliar foods
meat substitutes
medicine
food science & technology
Food science
product development
Sensory Science and Eating Behaviour
consumer acceptance
VLAG
disentangling food reward
Global Nutrition
Meal patterns
Wereldvoeding
Meal
mere exposure
Nutrition and Dietetics
vegetarian
Leerstoelgroep Productontwerpen en kwaliteitskunde
Neophobia
Boredom
Product Design and Quality Management Group
Home use
sustainability
medicine.disease
Test (assessment)
sensory-specific satiety
Sensoriek en eetgedrag
repeated exposure
repeated consumption
medicine.symptom
Psychology
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 09503293
- Volume :
- 28
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Food Quality and Preference
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3b1c1a8be42aebb7667534f3505a27ef