Less Sugar and More Whole Grains in Infant Cereals: A Sensory Acceptability Experiment With Infants and Their Parents
Metadatos
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Frontiers
Materia
Sensory acceptability Sugar reduction Cereals Complementary feeding Whole grains Public health
Fecha
2022-05-13Referencia bibliográfica
Sanchez-Siles L... [et al.] (2022) Less Sugar and More Whole Grains in Infant Cereals: A Sensory Acceptability Experiment With Infants and Their Parents. Front. Nutr. 9:855004. doi: [10.3389/fnut.2022.855004]
Patrocinador
Hero ÁG (Switzerland)Resumen
There is an urgent need to reduce sugar intake in early childhood. Commercial infant
cereals are among the first solid foods introduced to infants at the beginning of the
complementary feeding period in most countries. The aim of this study was to examine
infants’ overall acceptability of low-sugar complementary cereals. To do so, a betweensubjects
experimental study with 165 parents and their infants aged 6–24 months was
conducted where one group tested a high-sugar refined cereal (21 g/100 g), and the
other a low-sugar cereal (<1 g/100 g) with 50% of whole grain, which represented
a 95.2% decrease in sugar content. We found no significant differences between the
two groups in terms of infants’ overall acceptability (infant’s reaction, estimated intake
and relative intake). Importantly, infants’ reactions to high- and low-sugar cereals were
not influenced by the time that infants had been consuming sweet cereals (15–25%
sugar) before the experiment took place. In addition, parent’s overall liking and sensory
evaluation (sweetness, color, taste, texture, and aroma) was positive and very similar in
both groups. Overall, our findings show that it is feasible to reduce sugar content in infant
cereals without sacrificing its sensory acceptability by infants and their parents. This
represents a good opportunity for the infant food industry to adhere to current healthy
and sustainable demands of lowering the sugar intake leading to important benefits in
infants’ health, without compromising competitiveness in the market.