By Bob
Ratliff MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Sensory evaluation is not on the minds of most
people as they do the weekly grocery shopping. It is,
however, what determines which new food products reach the
store shelves and the focus of a new laboratory at
Mississippi State University. MSU's
Department of Food Science and Technology dedicated the
James E. Garrison Sensory Evaluation Laboratory on April 4.
The almost 3,000 square-foot facility contains offices,
fully equipped kitchens and areas to conduct a variety of
sensory evaluations on food products. "Sensory
evaluation is the process of forming an opinion about a food
or any other product using one or more of the five senses:
taste, touch, smell, sight and hearing," said Patti Coggins,
manager of the lab and an assistant professor of food
science and technology. "Sensory evaluation of a food
product in a designated lab strengthens the research that
has gone into its development." Several
methods can be used to perform food product evaluations,
including supermarket taste tests and mail questionnaires,
but Coggins said the most reliable and scientific approach
is using a selected panel in a laboratory
setting. The
Mississippi State lab uses panelists selected from
volunteers within the university and from women's clubs and
other groups. Evaluations are usually set up in booths with
trays containing samples of the food products to be tested,
a glass of water for rinsing between samples, crackers for
neutralizing the mouth after each sample and an evaluation
form. The
most unique feature of the new lab is the testing booths
equipped with "breadbox" doors for passing food samples to
panelists. The doors can be raised, a sample placed inside
and then closed. The panelist can then remove the sample
without ever seeing the room or people on the other
side. "This
is a European design and the only one of its type in use in
the South," Coggins said. "We chose it because it allows for
the fewest possible outside factors influencing an
evaluation." In
addition, the lab contains two kitchens equipped with
appliances provided by Viking Range Corp. of Greenwood and
rooms with several different seating arrangements for panel
discussions of products under evaluation. The
facility will be used in food product research by MSU
faculty and students. It also is available for contract use
by private companies for independent, professional
evaluations of their new food products. "The
Garrison Sensory Evaluation Lab expands the scope of the
work we've been doing in this area for more than a decade,"
said Charles White, food science and technology department
head. "It offers exciting new possibilities for research by
our faculty and graduate students, as well as support for
the food industry in Mississippi and the surrounding
region." James
E. Garrison, a Pontotoc County native, is the retired
president of Murray, Ky.-based Ryan Milk Co., and MSU's 1997
National Alumnus of the Year. -30- Released:
April 14, 2003
News
Release
![]()
Lab gives new
taste to MSU
food research
Contact: Dr. Patti Coggins, (662) 325-4002
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 11:07:14
URL: http://msucares.com/news/releases/03/030414.html
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