Offal contains an increased vitamin D concentration compared to lean meat(Reference Schmid and Walther1) and therefore, as an ingredient, may be an innovative strategy to enrich the vitamin D content of meat products to help address hypovitaminosis D reported globally(Reference Cashman2). However, it is essential that changes in sensory characteristics are minimised to ensure consumer acceptability(Reference Buttriss and Lanham-New3). This study aimed to 1) investigate vitamin D-enrichment of various pork offal concentrations (0- 40%) on the vitamin D content of pork sausages, and; 2) to determine sensory acceptability and consumer perceptions of vitamin D-enriched pork sausages compared to control.
Sausages were vitamin D-enriched with various concentrations (5%, 10%, 20%, 30% and 40%) of pork offal (heart, liver and kidney; approx. 33% each) or control (0%). Vitamin D3and 25(OH)D3 (μg/kg), were analysed in cooked offal and sausage samples by LC-MS/MS(Reference Neill, Gill and McDonald4). Vitamin D activity was calculated as: [vitamin D3 + (25(OH)D3 x 5)](Reference Cashman5). Sausages were developed from sausage meat, seasoning blend, rusk, water and casing, and frozen prior to sensory evaluation. Consenting adults (n = 50) aged 18–65 years were recruited. Sausages were oven roasted (180°C) until an internal temperature of >75°C was reached. Participants were presented with a trio of sausages (n = 1 vitamin D-enriched; n = 2 control) each randomized by a three-digit code, in an ascending series threshold test, based on the 3-AFC method(Reference Mojet, Christ-Hazelhof and Heidema6). Detection and recognition values were determined by best estimate threshold, calculated by geometric mean of the highest offal concentration missed and the next highest offal concentration (%)(Reference M Meilgaard, Civille and Carr7). Where participants recognised the sample that was different, they were asked to qualitatively describe the difference. Qualitative results were coded, categorised into themes and presented as frequency of participants (%) for each of the offal sausages (5–40%).
Theoretical vitamin D-enrichment of sausages resulted in a significant increase in mean ± SD vitamin D activity at 20% (17.0 ± 0.7 μg/kg), 30% (19.0 ± 1.0 μg/kg) and 40% (20.9 ± 1.4 μg/kg) offal compared to control (13.2 ± 0.3 μg/kg); P < 0.05. Sensory evaluation revealed that 40% of participants detected the vitamin D-enriched sausage (5% offal) and 23% of participants recognised the vitamin D-enriched sausage (5% and 7.1% offal). Eight themes were identified from the qualitative responses (seasoned, stronger flavour, harder texture, disliked taste, unidentified, meaty flavour, softer texture and liked taste). Participants reporting disliked taste (22%) and stronger flavour (22%) were greater at 20% compared to 5% offal concentration (4% and 12% respectively).
In conclusion, theoretical vitamin D-enrichment (20–40% pork offal) significantly increased vitamin D activity in cooked sausages. Preliminary sensory analysis indicates that consumers are aware of the difference with 5–7.1% offal concentration incorporated and may report the product as unacceptable. Further sensory evaluation, ideally with qualitative research, is required to confirm these results in a larger population group.
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by the Agri-Food Quest Competence Centre (ASFQCC) supported by Devenish Nutrition Limited and conduct in collaboration with Agri-Food and Bioscience Institute (AFBI). The first author is in receipt of a Department of Agricultural and Rural Affairs (DAERA) PhD studentship. Ethical approval was granted by Ulster University of School Biomedical Sciences Research Ethics Filter Committee (FCBMS-21–114-A).