What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations

Some foods and flavours go better together than others, but the success of novel food combinations is difficult to predict. The current study investigated to what extent perceptual, conceptual and affective pairing principles influence consumer evaluations of usual and unusual product combinations. Dutch consumers (N = 177) evaluated two sweet-tasting food products (vanilla ice cream, chocolate custard) combined with three flavour products (coffee, soy sauce, fish sauce) in terms of congruence, liking and sensory qualities. Product combinations occurred in three conditions (between-subjects): flavour products were either mixed with the carrier foods beforehand (Premix) or presented separately from the carriers, and were either accompanied with a flavour description (Label) or not (No-Label). Results showed that consumer evaluations were influenced by a combination of perceptual (balance of intensity), conceptual (norms) and affective (surprise) pairing principles. Moreover, usual (coffee) combinations were appreciated more, and unusual (soy/fish sauce) combinations less, if flavour products were identified, but flavour identification effects were mediated by the moment of identification (before vs. after tasting). Findings highlight the cognitive nature of food pairing principles, and the power of language in predicting successful food pairings in particular.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: van Bergen, G., Ushiama, S., Kaneko, D., Dijksterhuis, G.B., de Wijk, R.A., Vingerhoeds, M.H.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Expectations, Food-flavour pairing, Hedonic perception, Language, Pairing principles, Sensory perception,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/what-makes-foods-and-flavours-fit-consumer-perception-of-unusual-
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6000942025-01-14 van Bergen, G. Ushiama, S. Kaneko, D. Dijksterhuis, G.B. de Wijk, R.A. Vingerhoeds, M.H. Article/Letter to editor Food Quality and Preference 102 (2022) ISSN: 0950-3293 What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations 2022 Some foods and flavours go better together than others, but the success of novel food combinations is difficult to predict. The current study investigated to what extent perceptual, conceptual and affective pairing principles influence consumer evaluations of usual and unusual product combinations. Dutch consumers (N = 177) evaluated two sweet-tasting food products (vanilla ice cream, chocolate custard) combined with three flavour products (coffee, soy sauce, fish sauce) in terms of congruence, liking and sensory qualities. Product combinations occurred in three conditions (between-subjects): flavour products were either mixed with the carrier foods beforehand (Premix) or presented separately from the carriers, and were either accompanied with a flavour description (Label) or not (No-Label). Results showed that consumer evaluations were influenced by a combination of perceptual (balance of intensity), conceptual (norms) and affective (surprise) pairing principles. Moreover, usual (coffee) combinations were appreciated more, and unusual (soy/fish sauce) combinations less, if flavour products were identified, but flavour identification effects were mediated by the moment of identification (before vs. after tasting). Findings highlight the cognitive nature of food pairing principles, and the power of language in predicting successful food pairings in particular. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/what-makes-foods-and-flavours-fit-consumer-perception-of-unusual- 10.1016/j.foodqual.2022.104680 https://edepot.wur.nl/574476 Expectations Food-flavour pairing Hedonic perception Language Pairing principles Sensory perception https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Expectations
Food-flavour pairing
Hedonic perception
Language
Pairing principles
Sensory perception
Expectations
Food-flavour pairing
Hedonic perception
Language
Pairing principles
Sensory perception
spellingShingle Expectations
Food-flavour pairing
Hedonic perception
Language
Pairing principles
Sensory perception
Expectations
Food-flavour pairing
Hedonic perception
Language
Pairing principles
Sensory perception
van Bergen, G.
Ushiama, S.
Kaneko, D.
Dijksterhuis, G.B.
de Wijk, R.A.
Vingerhoeds, M.H.
What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
description Some foods and flavours go better together than others, but the success of novel food combinations is difficult to predict. The current study investigated to what extent perceptual, conceptual and affective pairing principles influence consumer evaluations of usual and unusual product combinations. Dutch consumers (N = 177) evaluated two sweet-tasting food products (vanilla ice cream, chocolate custard) combined with three flavour products (coffee, soy sauce, fish sauce) in terms of congruence, liking and sensory qualities. Product combinations occurred in three conditions (between-subjects): flavour products were either mixed with the carrier foods beforehand (Premix) or presented separately from the carriers, and were either accompanied with a flavour description (Label) or not (No-Label). Results showed that consumer evaluations were influenced by a combination of perceptual (balance of intensity), conceptual (norms) and affective (surprise) pairing principles. Moreover, usual (coffee) combinations were appreciated more, and unusual (soy/fish sauce) combinations less, if flavour products were identified, but flavour identification effects were mediated by the moment of identification (before vs. after tasting). Findings highlight the cognitive nature of food pairing principles, and the power of language in predicting successful food pairings in particular.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Expectations
Food-flavour pairing
Hedonic perception
Language
Pairing principles
Sensory perception
author van Bergen, G.
Ushiama, S.
Kaneko, D.
Dijksterhuis, G.B.
de Wijk, R.A.
Vingerhoeds, M.H.
author_facet van Bergen, G.
Ushiama, S.
Kaneko, D.
Dijksterhuis, G.B.
de Wijk, R.A.
Vingerhoeds, M.H.
author_sort van Bergen, G.
title What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
title_short What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
title_full What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
title_fullStr What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
title_full_unstemmed What makes foods and flavours fit? Consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
title_sort what makes foods and flavours fit? consumer perception of (un)usual product combinations
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/what-makes-foods-and-flavours-fit-consumer-perception-of-unusual-
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