Development and Proof-of-Concept Evaluation of a Sensory Science-Based Model for Product Development of Vegetable-Based Products for Children
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Development of the Theoretical Model
2.1. Materials and Methods
2.2. Results
2.2.1. Literature Review: Intrinsic Product Properties
Appearance
Taste
Flavour/Aroma
Texture
Sound
2.2.2. Literature Review: Extrinsic Product Properties
Labelling/Names
Characters
Visual Appeal of Packaging
Claims
2.2.3. Biological and Psychological Factors
Biological Factors
Psychological and Situational Factors
2.3. CAMPOV Model
3. Development and Evaluation of New Vegetable-Based Concept Ideas
3.1. Materials and Methods
3.1.1. Product Mapping
- Appearance: bright/vibrant colours, multiple different colours in a pack, shiny, fun shapes, different shapes in one pack, shape supports name (e.g., dairy-flavoured candy in the form of a milk bottle called “Milk Bottles”), long shapes, bite size, variability in colour/size/ fillings in one pack, multiple layers (e.g., topping)
- Taste: sweet, acidic/sour, savoury
- Texture: crunchy/crispy, chewy, melting, sticky, texture contrast (e.g., hard shell with soft inside, hard shell with crunchy inside)
- Other: fizzy sensation, fun to play with
- Packaging: bright, festive/party, characters on pack, familiarity of concepts
- Packaging size: individual pack size, easy portions, practicality
- Characters: use of different characters (cartoon, imaginary, animal)
- Names/claims: fun names, sensory claims (e.g., “Max sour: super sour, then sweet”)
3.1.2. Concept Generation
3.1.3. Focus Group Evaluation of Concepts with Children
Participants
Focus Group Sessions
Data Analysis
3.2. Results of Qualitative Evaluation of Concepts with Children
Overall Interest in Concept | Concept | Positives | Negatives |
---|---|---|---|
High | Rainbow Dippers | Visual appeal of coloured breadsticks and coloured dips, fun of dipping the food | Doubts about eating multiple flavours together in a rainbow dip |
Ice cream & ice block | Familiar with icy treats, visual appeal of colours | Worries about overpowering vegetable flavours | |
Fairy dust | Visual appeal of vibrant colours, carrot flavour, extreme sourness was polarizing | Spicy powder was not liked | |
Rainbow Squeeze-mate | Squeezing action was seen as fun, avoiding soggy bread was a benefit | Uncertainty of mixing of rainbow colours, dip should not be multiple flavours | |
Crunch & Sip KIT | Mini vegetables were seen as cute, both mini-vegetables and cut-up vegetables were said to be easy to eat, variety of vegetables was appealing | Atypically coloured vegetables were not appealing for all children | |
Children’s Cooking KIT | Cooking was considered to be a fun activity, when recipes are child-friendly | - | |
Medium | Vegetable sheets | Crispy texture and salty flavour were liked | Gooey in-mouth texture was not liked by children who do not like Nori sheets |
Pizza base | All children liked pizza and half found colours visually appealing | Doubtful about overpowering vegetable flavours, pizza should not change too much | |
VeggieStix | Visual appeal of fun shapes, fun to eat from a stick | Vegetable-only sticks were least appealing | |
Low | Yoghurt with vegetables | Pink colour was appealing to most children | Concerns about overpowering vegetable flavour |
Poppables/VegOPop | Flavour and texture of popcorn is liked | Concerns about overpowering vegetable flavours | |
Vegetable wraps & bread rolls | Visually appealing use of colours for half of children | Familiar product category should stay as is | |
Veggie bites | Visually appealing fun shapes and bright colours | Vegetable filling instead of meat filling | |
Sipp’a soup | Using a straw to sip soup is novel and fun | Soup is not a popular product to eat |
4. Discussion
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Factor | Properties to Promote Children’s Vegetable Acceptance |
---|---|
Intrinsic properties | |
Appearance | Bright colours, atypical colours of veg, variety of colours, fun shapes, small sizes/bite sized |
Taste/flavour | Sweet taste, suppression/absence of bitterness, good taste, pairing with liked tastes/flavours |
Texture | Crunchiness, lack of textural contrast |
Extrinsic properties | |
Claims/branding | Sensory claims, imaginative language, fun characters on pack, absence of health claims |
Psychological and situational factors | |
Fun | Fun sensations, fun eating experience |
Associative learning | Pairing with liked attributes |
Previous experience | Encourage repeated trying, familiarity to existing |
Role modelling | Mimicking parents, peers |
Concept Name | Concept Description | Potential Appealing Characteristics for Children |
---|---|---|
Rainbow Dippers | Combination of colourful dippers and dip | bright colours, atypical colours, variety (colour, flavour, texture), bite-sized, flavoursome, fun eating experience |
Yoghurt with vegetables | Smooth, colourful yoghurt containing vegetable | bright colours, flavoursome, taste contrast, sourness, smooth texture |
Ice cream & ice block | Ice cream and ice block containing vegetables | bright colours, atypical colours, colour variety, sweet taste, taste contrast (sweet/sour), flavoursome, novel sensation (sour taste), fun eating experience, familiarity with existing products |
Vegetable sheets | Flat, crispy vegetable snacking sheets (like nori sheets) | bright colours, atypical colours, colour variety, flavoursome, novel sensation, crunchiness, fun eating experience, familiarity with existing products |
Poppables/VegOPop | Crunchy vegetable popcorn | bright colours, atypical colours, colour variety, flavoursome, crunchiness, fun eating experience, familiarity with existing products |
Pizza base | Pizza base with vegetable in the dough | bright colours, atypical colours, contrasts (colour, texture), flavoursome, fun eating experience |
Vegetable wraps & bread rolls | Wraps and bread rolls with vegetable in the dough | bright colours, atypical colours, colour variety, fun shapes, familiarity with existing products |
VeggieStix | A variety of single-bite veggies (raw or cooked) on a skewer | bright colours, fun shapes, contrasts (colour, shape, flavour, texture), flavoursome, fun eating experience, familiarity with existing products |
Veggie bites | Vegetable-based bites, comes in nuggets or bite-sized patties | bright colours, atypical colours, fun shapes, shape contrast, bite-sized, textural contrast, fun eating experience |
Sipp’a soup | Straw filled with vegetable-based powder with different flavours, used to sip soup through | flavoursome, novel flavour sensations, suppression of bitterness, fun eating experience, associative learning |
Fairy dust | Vegetable-based powder with different flavours to sprinkle on vegetables and other food | bright colours, suppression of bitterness, taste contrast, novel flavour sensations (sour, spicy), fun eating experience, associative learning |
Rainbow Squeeze-mate | Vegetable dip/sauce single-use dispenser | bright colours, atypical colours, contrast (colour, flavour), flavoursome, novel sensation, fun eating experience |
Crunch & Sip KIT | Vegetable-based Crunch & Sip KIT with a medley of baby vegetables or cut-up vegetables, potentially with a subscription model | bright colours, atypical colours, fun shapes, contrasts (colour, flavour, texture), bite-sized, flavoursome, crunchiness, familiarity with existing eating occasion |
Children’s Cooking KIT | Box that contains a child-friendly recipe with all ingredients in it to get children involved in cooking, potentially with a subscription model | fun shapes, taste and textural contrast, fun eating experience, role modelling (mimicking parents) |
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Poelman, A.A.M.; Heffernan, J.E.; Cochet-Broch, M.; Beelen, J. Development and Proof-of-Concept Evaluation of a Sensory Science-Based Model for Product Development of Vegetable-Based Products for Children. Foods 2022, 11, 96. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11010096
Poelman AAM, Heffernan JE, Cochet-Broch M, Beelen J. Development and Proof-of-Concept Evaluation of a Sensory Science-Based Model for Product Development of Vegetable-Based Products for Children. Foods. 2022; 11(1):96. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11010096
Chicago/Turabian StylePoelman, Astrid A. M., Jessica E. Heffernan, Maeva Cochet-Broch, and Janne Beelen. 2022. "Development and Proof-of-Concept Evaluation of a Sensory Science-Based Model for Product Development of Vegetable-Based Products for Children" Foods 11, no. 1: 96. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11010096
APA StylePoelman, A. A. M., Heffernan, J. E., Cochet-Broch, M., & Beelen, J. (2022). Development and Proof-of-Concept Evaluation of a Sensory Science-Based Model for Product Development of Vegetable-Based Products for Children. Foods, 11(1), 96. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11010096