First sensory analysis of soybean drinks made from commercial grain grown in Mexico

Mónica López-Fernández, Octelina Castillo-Ruíz, Homar Rene Gill-Langarica

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

In Mexico there is an important production of soybeans; however, no evidence of the analysis of organoleptic attributes in Mexican soybean products was found, so the objective of this work was to sensorially characterise soymilk made from commercial beans grown in northern Mexico based on seven organoleptic attributes. A panel of trained judges evaluated 11 soymilks made from commercial soybeans grown in Mexico, two soymilks made from commercial soybeans reported to be free of lipoxygenases, and one control soymilk. Evaluated flavour attributes were beany, milky, greasy, toasted, bitter, metallic and rancid. The results showed that the soymilks from the JP 30790 and JP 28955 genotypes generated low beany notes. The Mexican variety Guayparime S-10 obtained the lowest beany flavour note. Among Mexican soybeans, the soymilks of Huasteca 700 and Vernal varieties got the highest values of the milky flavour and the JP 30790 and JP 28955 materials obtained intermediate values in this attribute; in the rancid attribute, the zero value was given to all the soymilks. The scarce beany notes and the high milky attribute, as well as the zero value in the rancid attribute favour an acceptable flavour in the soymilks.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)400-406
Number of pages7
JournalCzech Journal of Food Sciences
Volume40
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Keywords

  • Beany flavour
  • descriptive analysis
  • lipoxygenase
  • soymilk

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