Sensors (Aug 2020)

Sensory and Physicochemical Evaluation of Acacia and Linden Honey Adulterated with Sugar Syrup

  • Zsanett Bodor,
  • Zoltan Kovacs,
  • Mahmoud Said Rashed,
  • Zoltán Kókai,
  • István Dalmadi,
  • Csilla Benedek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s20174845
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 17
p. 4845

Abstract

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Honey is produced by honeybees and is used as a food and medical product. Adulteration of honey has been a problem for several years now because of the relatively high price of honey on the market according to its valuable composition. The aim of our study is to determine the physicochemical properties of authentic Hungarian linden and acacia honeys (pure samples or manipulated ones blended with sugar syrup) as well as commercially available blends of European Union (EU) non-European Union (non-EU) honeys. Authentic linden and acacia were blended with sugar syrup at 10%, 20% and 50% concentration levels, and physicochemical properties were determined according to the methods of the International Honey Commission. Our objectives also included testing of the performance of electronic sensory techniques (electronic tongue (ET) and electronic nose (EN)) in the detection of adulteration, and the results are compared to the sensory profile analysis. The results provide good average recognition and prediction abilities for the classification of adulterated and authentic honeys (>90% for ET and higher than >80 for EN). Misclassifications were found only in the case of honey with 10% added sugar syrup. The methods were also able to reveal adulteration of independently predicted samples.

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