Food Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedSmoothing sourness: if the food or beverage you're formulating may cause your customers' faces to pucker, here are eight suggestions on how to reduce that acidic bite
Prepared Foods, Sept, 2003 by Claudia Dziuk O'Donnell
Acids perform a diversity of functions in a variety of foods, not the least of which is flavor enhancement. However, a consumer's pucker-faced reaction to a product indicates that sourness can overpower a formulation.
The addition of functional acidulants, the removal of fat, or the use of alternative sweeteners in a food product can result in an undesirable tartness. The wish to market unconventionally flavored foods, such as chocolate yogurt, makes sourness a problem in otherwise traditional products.
Astringency, aftertaste and mouthfeel complicate the perception of an acid. Though there are few rules of thumb, a checklist of options offers suggestions to control sourness.
Most RecentFood Articles
Accomplished Acidifiers
Acids, which are naturally present in fruits and vegetables, find their way into formulas for many reasons. Many contribute to a great tasting product: the tartness of citrus products or the tang of vinegar, for example. Fermentation of foods by microbes results in lactic, acetic and other acids.
Other acidifiers are added for functional reasons. Acids lower pH and heighten the effectiveness of preservatives--such as the organic acids sodium benzoate or potassium sorbate--for increased microbial stability. And oxidation is inhibited by reducing agents such as ascorbic and erythorbic acid or by chelating acids including citric acid and EDTA.
Reducing a product's pH also helps minimize the amount of heat needed for processing, which in turn protects the texture and flavor of foods. Food-grade acids also perform as leavening agents, improve foam and color stability, inactivate degradation enzymes, function as anticoagulants, and aid in gel formation and the curing of meat.
When the tartness of these functional ingredients gives a pronounced and undesirable sour taste, formulators may consider a series of approaches.
Checklist to Tame Tartness
1. Balance the sweet/sour profile with sugars. This is often the first suggestion given. Increasing sugar negates some of the acidity. Corn syrups mask tartness more than sucrose, but with a different flavor profile. Additionally, corn syrup solids and high fructose corn syrup have pH levels in the 3.5 to 5.0 range and may themselves help lower the pH of products such as pie fillings.
2. Use acid blends to smooth intensity peaks. The perception of how intense an acidulant's sourness is will vary over time. Citric acid, which gives a burst of tartness, can be combined with malic or adipic acid to smooth the taste sensation. Malic acid also has a sharp taste, but it comes on more slowly than citric acid. The taste of lactic acid is milder and tends to linger on.
3. The perceived tartness of an acidifier can change depending on other ingredients in the formula, an acidifier's concentration, the pH of the food or beverage and even product temperature. For example, one supplier of sodium acid sulfate (which may also be labeled as "bisulfate of soda" or "sodium bisulfate" says sensory tests show it has a sour intensity greater than citric, phosphoric or malic acid when used at concentrations of roughly 0.06% or more in water. However, low concentrations of 0.001% to 0.0135% (at pH levels from 4.0 down to 3.0, respectively), sodium acid sulfate is perceived to be less sour than these three alternative acids.
4. Use acidifiers that are compatible with the flavors present. Examples include lactic acid with dairy products, or malic acid with apple flavors. Note, however, that acid ratios can shift in natural products. For example, the high-malic/low-tartaric acid ratio in grapes reverses itself as the grape ages--an important factor in wine quality.
5. Add a second flavor component that is commonly associated with an acid tang. Strawberry flavor in vanilla yogurt, sour cream in a chocolate dessert, barbecue sauce in meat, or wine flavor in cheese sauce result in products with acceptable sensory profiles even though the food is acidified for other reasons. Soy sauce, a widely used "flavor enhancer," also has a slightly tart note associated with it.
6. Choose an acid with a mild flavor. Glucono-delta-lactone (GDL), which slowly hydrolyzes to gluconic acid, carries a reputation as an unusually mild acidulant; citric or fumaric acids more readily impart tartness.
7. Use buffers. Buffers, such as sodium citrate, are commonly used to control pH. However, highly buffered acid solutions appear to convey greater and more lingering sourness compared with unbuffered acids at the same pH.
8. Remove the need for the acid in the first place. High-methoxyl pectins require a low pH to produce a gel in candy, while low-methoxyl pectins only need calcium ions for gel formation. Blanching vegetables inhibits enzymatic activity as well or better than low pHs. Minimizing the microbial loads in salads may allow slightly higher pHs.
As formulators know, a touch of tanginess is tantalizing, but a striking sourness suppresses sales.
Neutralizing Effects
"Alkaline food" is a hot topic in the natural products industry; just type "alkaline foods" into any Internet search engine. A food scientist would be bewildered by the foods--fruits for example--that are categorized as alkaline. One health guru explains that how a food is listed depends on whether the food's ash is alkaline or acidic and that what is needed is "alkaline-ash foods to offset the effect of acid-forming foods." See www.inlighttimes.com/archives/2002/11/acid-alkaline-foods.htm.
Brought to you by CBS MoneyWatch.com
- 10 Best Places to Retire
- Companies with the Best 401(k) Plans
- Most Important Document for Your Heirs? It's Not Your Will
- Video: Should You Expect to Retire Rich?
- Over 50? Here's How to Get (and Keep) a Great Job
Most Recent Business Articles
- How do I determine my retainer fee?
- Why fly solo when an executive assistant can accelerate your CLNC® business?
- The CLNC® mentors held the key to my first case and to my CLNC® success
- Atlanta CLNC® 6-day certification seminar photo galleryplus sign up today for spring 2009 to save $100.00
- Speak to a full-time practicing CLNC® consultant
Most Recent Business Publications
Most Popular Business Articles
- Using object-oriented analysis and design over traditional structured analysis and design
- Big Fish Games Migrates Upstream to Fisher Plaza; High Growth Online Gaming Firm Vaults Fisher Plaza Occupancy Rate Above 90%
- Top of the line: some of the world's most well-respected doctors practice in South Florida. A guide to choosing the best physician specialists - Top Doctors in South Florida
- Sand filter basics: high-rate sand filters can be confusing for those new to the business. Understanding valve modes is the key
- BEHR Paints Introduces a Colorful New Way to Paint and Prime All in One with BEHR Premium Plus Ultra™ Interior
Most Popular Business Publications
Content provided in partnership with http://findarticles.com/source//

