Consumer Preferences for Processed Meat Reformulation Strategies: A Prototype for Sensory Evaluation Combined with a Choice-Based Conjoint Experiment

Author:

Hong Xinyi12ORCID,Li Chenguang2,Wang Liming34ORCID,Wang Mansi1,Grasso Simona2,Monahan Frank J.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, China

2. School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College Dublin, D04V1W8 Dublin, Ireland

3. School of Economics and Management, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing 100124, China

4. Irish Institute for Chinese Studies, University College Dublin, D04V1W8 Dublin, Ireland

Abstract

Consumption trends demand healthier meat products and require research into reformulation strategies. Ambiguities in consumer preferences for two processed meat reformulation strategies (i.e., ingredient “reduction” and nutrient “addition”) were investigated. Using physical prototypes of omega-3-enriched pork sausages and sensory evaluation to reduce hypothetical bias, followed by a choice-based conjoint experiment, results suggested that consumers valued both “addition” and “reduction” reformulation strategies, and consumers’ willingness-to-pay (WTP) premiums were the highest for omega-3 addition, followed by fat reduction, and were lowest for salt reduction. Moreover, WTP was influenced by sensory preferences and was positively correlated with sensory liking levels. Providing health-related information improved consumers’ sensory perceptions of omega-3-enriched sausages. Findings imply that reformulated healthier meat products are acceptable to consumers. Moreover, to enhance consumers’ valuation on new launches of healthier processed meat products, meat manufacturers should inform consumers of health-related reformulation information, provide consumers with opportunities to taste newly developed healthier processed meat products, and continuously optimize consumers’ sensory experience.

Funder

Food Institutional Research Measure of the Irish Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,Food Science

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