Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil

Vegetable oils can be used as an alternative to solid fats to produce biscuits with a healthier fatty acid profile. The aim of this work was to study how consumers perceived the information about fat on biscuit labels when olive oil or sunflower oil was used instead of a saturated fat and how much the replacement affected acceptability. Six samples of biscuits were prepared, varying in fat source (dairy shortening, olive oil and sunflower oil) and in fat content (10.6 and 15.6%). Biscuit labels were designed to include the claims "with olive oil", "with sunflower oil" or "low in saturated fat" and nutritional facts tables with the respective values that corresponded in each case. Consumers (n = 100) evaluated their liking for the samples and perception of their healthiness under three conditions: blind (the biscuit was provided), expected (the label was provided) and informed (both biscuit and label were provided). In general, consumers expected that they would like the olive and sunflower oil biscuits with low fat contents the most, although when they tasted the biscuits these samples obtained the lowest liking scores. Thus, they did not associate a low-fat vegetable-oil biscuit with a decrease in sensory properties compared to its high fat counterpart. Furthermore, when information on the fat source was provided the consumers seemed to attach less importance than they should have to the total fat level. Although the fat source claim ("with olive oil" or "with sunflower oil") and the nutritional claim ("low saturated fat content") included on the labels increased the consumers' liking scores, eventually both the sensory quality of the samples and the information provided affected the actual liking for the samples. However, the perception of the biscuits' healthiness was based on the label information alone and the hedonic characteristics of the samples did not affect it.

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Main Authors: Tarancón, Paula, Sanz Taberner, Teresa, Fiszman, Susana, Tárrega, Amparo
Other Authors: Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Format: artículo biblioteca
Published: Elsevier BV 2014-01
Subjects:Consumer expectations, Fat source, Biscuits, Label information,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/333095
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spelling dig-iata-es-10261-3330952023-08-10T12:10:11Z Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil Tarancón, Paula Sanz Taberner, Teresa Fiszman, Susana Tárrega, Amparo Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España) Consumer expectations Fat source Biscuits Label information Vegetable oils can be used as an alternative to solid fats to produce biscuits with a healthier fatty acid profile. The aim of this work was to study how consumers perceived the information about fat on biscuit labels when olive oil or sunflower oil was used instead of a saturated fat and how much the replacement affected acceptability. Six samples of biscuits were prepared, varying in fat source (dairy shortening, olive oil and sunflower oil) and in fat content (10.6 and 15.6%). Biscuit labels were designed to include the claims "with olive oil", "with sunflower oil" or "low in saturated fat" and nutritional facts tables with the respective values that corresponded in each case. Consumers (n = 100) evaluated their liking for the samples and perception of their healthiness under three conditions: blind (the biscuit was provided), expected (the label was provided) and informed (both biscuit and label were provided). In general, consumers expected that they would like the olive and sunflower oil biscuits with low fat contents the most, although when they tasted the biscuits these samples obtained the lowest liking scores. Thus, they did not associate a low-fat vegetable-oil biscuit with a decrease in sensory properties compared to its high fat counterpart. Furthermore, when information on the fat source was provided the consumers seemed to attach less importance than they should have to the total fat level. Although the fat source claim ("with olive oil" or "with sunflower oil") and the nutritional claim ("low saturated fat content") included on the labels increased the consumers' liking scores, eventually both the sensory quality of the samples and the information provided affected the actual liking for the samples. However, the perception of the biscuits' healthiness was based on the label information alone and the hedonic characteristics of the samples did not affect it. The authors wish to thank the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (AGL2012-36753-C02-01) for financial support and for Tárrega's contract within the Juan de la Cierva Programme and The Dow Chemical Co. (Michigan, USA) for providing free samples of the ingredients. 2023-08-10T12:10:11Z 2023-08-10T12:10:11Z 2014-01 2023-08-10T12:10:11Z artículo doi: 10.1016/j.foodres.2013.11.011 issn: 0963-9969 Food Research International 55: 197-206 (2014) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/333095 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2013.11.011 Sí none Elsevier BV
institution IATA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-iata-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IATA España
topic Consumer expectations
Fat source
Biscuits
Label information
Consumer expectations
Fat source
Biscuits
Label information
spellingShingle Consumer expectations
Fat source
Biscuits
Label information
Consumer expectations
Fat source
Biscuits
Label information
Tarancón, Paula
Sanz Taberner, Teresa
Fiszman, Susana
Tárrega, Amparo
Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
description Vegetable oils can be used as an alternative to solid fats to produce biscuits with a healthier fatty acid profile. The aim of this work was to study how consumers perceived the information about fat on biscuit labels when olive oil or sunflower oil was used instead of a saturated fat and how much the replacement affected acceptability. Six samples of biscuits were prepared, varying in fat source (dairy shortening, olive oil and sunflower oil) and in fat content (10.6 and 15.6%). Biscuit labels were designed to include the claims "with olive oil", "with sunflower oil" or "low in saturated fat" and nutritional facts tables with the respective values that corresponded in each case. Consumers (n = 100) evaluated their liking for the samples and perception of their healthiness under three conditions: blind (the biscuit was provided), expected (the label was provided) and informed (both biscuit and label were provided). In general, consumers expected that they would like the olive and sunflower oil biscuits with low fat contents the most, although when they tasted the biscuits these samples obtained the lowest liking scores. Thus, they did not associate a low-fat vegetable-oil biscuit with a decrease in sensory properties compared to its high fat counterpart. Furthermore, when information on the fat source was provided the consumers seemed to attach less importance than they should have to the total fat level. Although the fat source claim ("with olive oil" or "with sunflower oil") and the nutritional claim ("low saturated fat content") included on the labels increased the consumers' liking scores, eventually both the sensory quality of the samples and the information provided affected the actual liking for the samples. However, the perception of the biscuits' healthiness was based on the label information alone and the hedonic characteristics of the samples did not affect it.
author2 Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
author_facet Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Tarancón, Paula
Sanz Taberner, Teresa
Fiszman, Susana
Tárrega, Amparo
format artículo
topic_facet Consumer expectations
Fat source
Biscuits
Label information
author Tarancón, Paula
Sanz Taberner, Teresa
Fiszman, Susana
Tárrega, Amparo
author_sort Tarancón, Paula
title Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
title_short Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
title_full Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
title_fullStr Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
title_full_unstemmed Consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
title_sort consumers' hedonic expectations and perception of the healthiness of biscuits made with olive oil or sunflower oil
publisher Elsevier BV
publishDate 2014-01
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/333095
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