The study used a new sensory evaluation method and found consuming cheese while drinking wine impacted the description and preference of different wines.
The study was conducted at the Center for Taste and Feeding Behavior in France with frequent wine and cheese consumers from the city of Dijon.
The subjects evaluated four wines (Pacherenc, Sancerre, Bourgogne and Madiran) using a new sensory evaluation method developed by the researchers to show how perception and liking of wine change after cheese intake over several sips, which is closer to what happens in typical consumption.
Once the wines were initially evaluated, the task was repeated, but with a piece of cheese eaten in-between sips.
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Results showed that cheese consumption had an impact on the description for all wines, and impacted preference for most. None of the four cheeses included in the study had a negative impact on wine preference.
In the sweet white (Pacherenc), the duration of dominance of sweetness was not changed by cheese intake, but in the white dry wine, cheeses had an impact on the main aroma.
"Thanks to our research we learned that the duration of the perception of astringency of a certain wine could be reduced after having cheese and that the four evaluated cheeses had the same effect," said lead author Mara V Galmarini, from CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) in France.
According to the researchers, the sensory method developed in their work can help build better understanding of how the perception of one product is changed when consumed in combination with another.
This information can help food brands communicate their products' characteristics, thus improving consumers' experiences.
The study was published in the Journal of Food Science.