Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA

Increased vegetable consumption could decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), obesity and certain cancers. Smoothies are one of the ways to increase vegetable consumption. The aim of this study was to develop a vegetable-containing smoothie with improved nutritional value and consumer acc...

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Main Author: Daffa, Basma
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60118/
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author Daffa, Basma
author_facet Daffa, Basma
author_sort Daffa, Basma
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Increased vegetable consumption could decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), obesity and certain cancers. Smoothies are one of the ways to increase vegetable consumption. The aim of this study was to develop a vegetable-containing smoothie with improved nutritional value and consumer acceptability. A survey was conducted on university students (from UK and KSA) to assess their opinions, followed by tasting sessions with several potential smoothies. Following this, the most acceptable smoothie recipe was selected for further analysis. Some key nutritional parameters; ascorbate, antioxidants, phenolics, sugars and fibre of the novel smoothie were measured and compared with commercial smoothies available in the UK market. Also, the retention and stability, during 1, 3 and 5 days of storage at 4°C of these nutrients were analysed. The survey revealed that there was good awareness of the 5 A DAY requirement in the UK, but only fair awareness in the KSA student sample of increasing fruit and vegetable (F&V) intake. Price was a potential barrier for students. Tasting trials indicated that the UK student’s acceptance was limited by firstly taste then texture and colour. The novel smoothie based on beetroot and red pepper appeared to be most acceptable. The nutritional value of this smoothie (ascorbate 30 mg/100mL, antioxidant capacity 1031µmoles Trolox Equivalents/100mL, phenolics 57mg Gallic Acid Equivalents/100mL and fibre 6g/100mL) appears to be higher than current commercial smoothies. It was also slightly lower in total sugars with 9g/100mL. This smoothie retained the nutritional benefits of the constituent F&Vs during processing. Also, the nutritional value of the designed smoothie was stable during storage at 4oC over 5 days, apart from ascorbate which declined dramatically. Potential commercial barriers included the high viscosity. Preliminary experiments were carried out to investigate the potential to reduce viscosity using enzyme cocktails. The smoothie containing 47% vegetables and 53% fruit could be one of the easiest ways of increasing F&V consumption, particularly amongst students, to maintain a healthy diet.
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spelling nottingham-601182025-02-28T14:50:34Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60118/ Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA Daffa, Basma Increased vegetable consumption could decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), obesity and certain cancers. Smoothies are one of the ways to increase vegetable consumption. The aim of this study was to develop a vegetable-containing smoothie with improved nutritional value and consumer acceptability. A survey was conducted on university students (from UK and KSA) to assess their opinions, followed by tasting sessions with several potential smoothies. Following this, the most acceptable smoothie recipe was selected for further analysis. Some key nutritional parameters; ascorbate, antioxidants, phenolics, sugars and fibre of the novel smoothie were measured and compared with commercial smoothies available in the UK market. Also, the retention and stability, during 1, 3 and 5 days of storage at 4°C of these nutrients were analysed. The survey revealed that there was good awareness of the 5 A DAY requirement in the UK, but only fair awareness in the KSA student sample of increasing fruit and vegetable (F&V) intake. Price was a potential barrier for students. Tasting trials indicated that the UK student’s acceptance was limited by firstly taste then texture and colour. The novel smoothie based on beetroot and red pepper appeared to be most acceptable. The nutritional value of this smoothie (ascorbate 30 mg/100mL, antioxidant capacity 1031µmoles Trolox Equivalents/100mL, phenolics 57mg Gallic Acid Equivalents/100mL and fibre 6g/100mL) appears to be higher than current commercial smoothies. It was also slightly lower in total sugars with 9g/100mL. This smoothie retained the nutritional benefits of the constituent F&Vs during processing. Also, the nutritional value of the designed smoothie was stable during storage at 4oC over 5 days, apart from ascorbate which declined dramatically. Potential commercial barriers included the high viscosity. Preliminary experiments were carried out to investigate the potential to reduce viscosity using enzyme cocktails. The smoothie containing 47% vegetables and 53% fruit could be one of the easiest ways of increasing F&V consumption, particularly amongst students, to maintain a healthy diet. 2020-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60118/1/FINAL%20Basma%27s%20PhD%20thesis%20Feb%202020.pdf application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60118/10/FINAL%20Extra%20Correction-PhD%20Work%20plan.pdf Daffa, Basma (2020) Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Smoothies; Vegetable consumption; Taste; Nutritional value
spellingShingle Smoothies; Vegetable consumption; Taste; Nutritional value
Daffa, Basma
Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA
title Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA
title_full Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA
title_fullStr Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA
title_full_unstemmed Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA
title_short Nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the UK and KSA
title_sort nutritional value and consumer acceptability of smoothies in the uk and ksa
topic Smoothies; Vegetable consumption; Taste; Nutritional value
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60118/