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How to measure and analyse the texture of food, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and adhesives.

Tuesday, 4 August 2020

Stickiness in Foods - Desirable or unwanted?

Chewing gum on shoe
When a food is described as ‘sticky’, that may refer to one of several manifestations: adhesion to processing equipment, cohesion of powders, sticking to packaging, and sticking to fingers and parts of the mouth. This last characteristic affects the appreciation of food texture perceived during consumption.

In most food systems, the adhesion force in any one context is a combination of an adhesive force and a cohesive force. A food material is perceived as being sticky when the adhesive force is high and the cohesive force is low. Not all foods possess adhesiveness, and so it is not a property worth measuring in all cases. Adhesion can be either a benefit, drawback, or both depending on the circumstances.