| Literature DB >> 31906416 |
Johanna A Klotz1, Gertrud Winkler1, Dirk W Lachenmeier2.
Abstract
Very hot (>65 °C) beverages such as espresso have been evaluated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) as probably carcinogenic to humans. For this reason, research into lowering beverage temperature without compromising its quality or taste is important. For espresso, one obvious possibility consists in lowering the brewing temperature. In two sensory trials using the ISO 4120:2004 triangle test methodology, brewing temperatures of 80 °C vs. 128 °C and 80 °C vs. 93 °C were compared. Most tasters were unable to distinguish between 80 °C and 93 °C. The results of these pilot experiments prove the possibility of decreasing the health hazards of very hot beverages by lower brewing temperatures.Entities:
Keywords: coffee; esophageal cancer; espresso; hot beverages; sensory trial; temperature
Year: 2020 PMID: 31906416 PMCID: PMC7022572 DOI: 10.3390/foods9010036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Results of the ISO 4120:2004 sensory analysis using triangle testing for differentiation of espresso prepared using different brewing temperatures.
| Brewing Temperature | No. of Assessors | No. of Correct Responses | Significance 1 | LCI/UCI 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80 °C vs. 128 °C | 24 | 15 | yes (α = 0.01) | 0.19/0.68 |
| 80 °C vs. 93 °C | 24 | 11 | no (α = 0.20) | – 3 |
1 According to ISO 4120:2004 [23]. For the non-significant trial, the minimum number of correct answers to conclude that a perceptible difference exists (α = 0.05) would have been 13/24. 2 Lower and upper 95% confidence intervals (LCI/UCI) for the triangle tests calculated according to ISO 4120:2004 [23]. The limits can be interpreted as percentage of population that can perceive a difference between the samples [26]. 3 Not calculated for non-significant trial.