Analytical Determination of the Severity of Potato Taste Defect in Roasted East African Arabica Coffee.

2021 
The quality of East African coffee beans has been significantly reduced by a flavor defect known as potato taste defect (PTD) due to the presence of 2-isopropyl-3-methoxypyrazine (IPMP) and 2-isobutyl-3-methoxypyrazine (IBMP). Therefore, the aims of this study were to determine the correlation between these methoxypyrazines and the severity of odor attributed to PTD and discover additional analytes that may be correlated with PTD using Fisher ratio analysis, a supervised discovery-based data analysis method. Specialty ground roasted coffees from East Africa were classified as clean (i.e., no off-odor), mild, medium, or strong PTD. For the samples examined, IPMP was found to discriminate between non-defective and defective samples, while IBMP did not do so. Samples affected by PTD exhibited a wide range of IPMP concentration (1.6-529.9 ng/g). Except for one sample, the IPMP concentration in defective samples was greater than the average IPMP concentration in the non-defective samples (2.0 ng/g). Also, an analysis of variance found that IPMP concentrations were significantly different based on the severity of odor attributed to PTD (p < 0.05). Fisher ratio analysis discovered 21 additional analytes whose concentrations were statistically different based on the severity of PTD odor (p < 0.05). Generally, analytes that were positively correlated with odor severity generally had unpleasant sensory descriptions, while analytes typically associated with desirable aromas were found to be negatively correlated with odor severity. These findings not only show that IPMP concentration can differentiate the severity of PTD but also that changes in the volatile analyte profile of coffee beans induced by PTD can contribute to odor severity.
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