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A food’s final properties play a large role in determining a consumer’s experience with and acceptance of that food. For example, cream cheese should be easily spreadable, even if it was just taken out of the refrigerator. Gravies and sauces should be easily pourable yet still have enough structure to form a nice layer that stays on top of the food. Viscosity measures how easily a liquid flows, and yield stress measurements provide information about the energy needed to overcome elasticity in semi-solid formulations. This makes yield stress measurements an ideal addition to regular viscosity measurements.
Another example is the flow behavior of foods such as molten chocolate. The properties of the final chocolate, such as the look of its surface or its mouth feel, are directly related to the molten chocolate’s viscous behavior. In addition, the transport, filling, dipping, coating or dosing steps during production of the chocolate depend on a well-defined viscosity and yield stress.
In addition to pure mechanical properties, rheology can also help estimate the stability and shelf life of a complex food formulation. The stability of a system like food emulsions or food dispersions can be predicted by measuring the formulation’s viscoelastic properties.
For quality control, the Thermo Scientific HAAKE Viscotester iQ Rheometer is the ideal partner. Whether it’s a quick single point measurement for batch release or a more comprehensive rheological analysis of the final product, the compact and easy-to-operate Viscotester iQ Rheometer will do the job.
Advance your QA/QC measurements to the next level with Thermo Scientific HAAKE MARS iQ Rotational Rheometer. Measure the viscoelastic properties of foodstuffs like apple sauce and peanut butter to assess texture, mouthfeel, spreadability and more. This modular rheometer offers a range of accessories to help evaluate and verify liquid and semi-solid food formulations throughout the product life-cycle (from production to storage to consumption).
Thermo Scientific HAAKE MARS Rheometers are designed to measure the broadest range of sample types from low viscous, water-like juices to highly viscoelastic cookie dough, to stiff, paste-like cream cheese or peanut butter. This robust R&D rheometer can obtain all relevant rheological parameters across a wide temperature variance and, if needed, also a wide pressure range.
Consumer acceptance of bread spreads correlates not only with the taste but also with the mouthfeel, pourability and spreadability of the spread. This influences purchasing behavior. Food spreads range widely from dairy products such as cream cheese to sweet bread spreads like jam to peanut butter, and they are available from many vendors. Food companies have to not only study their food formulation for processing behavior and shelf life, but also need to consider the sensory or end-use criteria.
Most spreadable foods are viscoelastic materials. Their textural characteristics, such as spreadability, are a measure of how easily and uniformly the spread can be formed at the temperature at which the customer uses them. Rheological investigation of yield stress and yield strain using the Thermo Scientific HAAKE Viscotester iQ Rheometer with a vane rotor setup is a quick, simple and accurate approach to help food scientists understand spreadability and consumer acceptance of food spreads.
Understand what to measure in your food development and processing workflows, and which tools are best to measure it.
Explore two collections of scientific application notes, interactive resources and articles that cover enhancing food properties via rheological measurements and the development of foods via extrusion.