Food and Nutrition Sciences

Volume 4, Issue 10 (October 2013)

ISSN Print: 2157-944X   ISSN Online: 2157-9458

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.92  Citations  h5-index & Ranking

Virgin Olive Oil Acceptability in Emerging Olive Oil-Producing Countries

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 351KB)  PP. 1060-1068  
DOI: 10.4236/fns.2013.410138    6,399 Downloads   9,085 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

A sample of 99 habitual consumers sensory-evaluated 2 extra virgin and 2 ordinary olive oils in terms of overall liking and willingness to purchase based on 9-point structured scales and responded to a check-all-that-apply question comprising a list of 18 positive and negative attributes. In the second session, the same consumers evaluated the same oils also based on their respective commercial specifications and sensory profiles previously prepared by a panel of 9 trained tasters. Two consumer clusters with contrasting behavior were identified. Whereas 52% of respondents gave high overall liking scores to the extra virgin oils and scores below commercially acceptable limits to those of ordinary virgin quality, 48% gave low overall liking scores to the extra virgin oils and high overall liking scores to those oils that were defective. Consumers of neither cluster were influenced by the information made available in Session 2. Although a slight majority of consumers described the oils consistently with the sensory profiles available from the tasting panel, an alarmingly large number of respondents described the two extra virgin oils in terms of defective, bad-tasting, strange-tasting, poor quality and rancid, and those oils that were defective in terms of good quality, tasty, sweet, aromatic, mild-flavored, delicious and fresh. These results highlight the need for the implementation of relevant consumer sensitization programs in emerging olive-producing countries like Uruguay, where virgin olive oils of varied quality are locally available.

Share and Cite:

A. Gámbaro, A. Ellis and L. Raggio, "Virgin Olive Oil Acceptability in Emerging Olive Oil-Producing Countries," Food and Nutrition Sciences, Vol. 4 No. 10, 2013, pp. 1060-1068. doi: 10.4236/fns.2013.410138.

Cited by

[1] Digital Detection of Olive Oil Rancidity Levels and Aroma Profiles Using Near-Infrared Spectroscopy, a Low-Cost Electronic Nose and Machine Learning Modelling
Chemosensors, 2022
[2] Olive oil and nuts among two ethnic groups: an evaluation of their acceptability, a survey and systematic review of previous interventional evidence of their effects on …
2021
[3] Alignment and proficiency of virgin olive oil sensory panels: The OLEUM Approach
2020
[4] Pesquisa sobre hábitos de consumo e preferências dos consumidores com relação ao azeite de oliva no Rio Grande do Sul
2019
[5] Sensory evaluation of high-quality virgin olive oil: panel analysis vs. consumer perception
Current Opinion in Food Science, 2018
[6] O desenvolvimento da olivicultura no Rio Grande do Sul: potencialidades e desafios
2018
[7] A new simplex chemometric approach to identify olive oil blends with potentially high traceability
Food Chemistry, 2016
[8] Olive oil? Healthy or not?!
2016

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.