Olson Chelsea, Kumar Rajesh, Talavera Martin J, Anderson Christopher E, Hanson Jennifer A
Department of Food, Nutrition, Dietetics and Health, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA.
Sensory and Consumer Research Center, Kansas State University, Olathe Campus, Olathe, KS 66061, USA.
Nutrients. 2025 Aug 11;17(16):2602. doi: 10.3390/nu17162602.
: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration sets nutritional standards for infant formulas. Yet, the carbohydrate components of these formulas can vary markedly in type as well as sweetness intensity. Despite evidence suggesting sweetness can influence intake, limited research exists on the sweetness properties of infant formulas. This study evaluated the sweetness of six commonly used infant formulas in the United States. : A sensory panel ( = 15) was formed by selecting individuals who achieved a 100% accuracy on three distinct sensory acuity screening tests to assess their ability to detect, differentiate, and quantify various sucrose concentrations. Following training, the panel evaluated each formula during three separate sessions using a sweetness scale from zero to fifteen, where zero represented no sweetness (distilled water) and fifteen represented extreme sweetness (16 g sucrose/100 mL of water). Differences in sweetness were determined using 3-way ANOVA (infant formula, repetition, and panelists) followed by post hoc pairwise comparisons. : Individual sample sweetness ratings ranged from 0 to 4.5 with a mean rating for all samples of 1.9 (±1.3). Significant differences were detected among the formulas (5, 264) = 96.1, < 0.0001. One formula, a standard milk-based formula, which contains no added non-lactose sugars, was rated significantly sweeter than any of the other formulas while the sweetness ratings for three formulas which all include non-lactose added sugars were significantly lower than that of the other formulas. : The potential implications of these noted sweetness differences make this an important topic for future sensory, behavior, and health research.
美国食品药品监督管理局为婴儿配方奶粉制定了营养标准。然而,这些配方奶粉的碳水化合物成分在类型和甜度上可能有显著差异。尽管有证据表明甜度会影响摄入量,但关于婴儿配方奶粉甜度特性的研究却很有限。本研究评估了美国六种常用婴儿配方奶粉的甜度。
组建了一个感官评价小组(n = 15),小组成员是在三项不同的感官敏锐度筛查测试中准确率达到100%的个体,以评估他们检测、区分和量化各种蔗糖浓度的能力。经过培训后,该小组在三个不同的时间段使用从0到15的甜度量表对每种配方奶粉进行评估,其中0表示没有甜味(蒸馏水),15表示极甜(16 g蔗糖/100 mL水)。使用三因素方差分析(婴儿配方奶粉、重复测量和小组成员)确定甜度差异,随后进行事后两两比较。
各个样品的甜度评分范围为0至4.5,所有样品的平均评分为1.9(±1.3)。配方奶粉之间存在显著差异(F(5, 264) = 96.1,P < 0.0001)。一种标准的基于牛奶的配方奶粉,不添加非乳糖糖类,其甜度评分显著高于其他任何配方奶粉,而三种都添加了非乳糖糖类的配方奶粉的甜度评分显著低于其他配方奶粉。
这些明显的甜度差异可能产生的影响,使其成为未来感官、行为和健康研究的一个重要课题。