ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to evaluate the sensory profiles, consumer acceptance, and attribute appropriateness of three confectionery products—Jelly, Nougat, and Praline—based on consumer perception. A total of 150 untrained consumers participated in the sensory evaluation. Overall liking was assessed using a 9-point hedonic scale, in combination with Check-All-That-Apply (CATA) and Just-About-Right (JAR) methods. The results showed that consumers were able to clearly differentiate the sensory profiles of the three candy types. Jelly received the highest overall liking score (7.01 ± 1.09), followed by Nougat (6.54 ± 1.59) and Praline (6.38 ± 1.58), with significant differences observed among candies (p< 0.05). CATA and multivariate analyses revealed that Jelly was characterized by soft texture, smooth mouthfeel, fruity flavour, and rapid melting behaviour, whereas Nougat and Praline were associated with firmer textures and richer flavour attributes. JAR analysis indicated higher alignment of Jelly attributes with ideal intensity levels, with JAR percentages ranging from 62.0% to 72.5%, compared to 44.6–51.4% for Nougat and 41.3–48.6% for Praline. Penalty analysis showed that although larger mean drops in overall liking were observed for non-JAR perceptions in Nougat and Praline (MD up to −1.38), these penalties were largely non-significant. Overall, the integrated application of hedonic evaluation, CATA, JAR, and multivariate analyses provided a comprehensive understanding of consumer perception, drivers of liking, and attribute appropriateness across different confectionery matrices.
Tyagi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.