Publication | Closed Access
Molecular and Sensory Studies on the Umami Taste of Japanese Green Tea
297
Citations
13
References
2006
Year
FlavoromicsFood AnalysisSensory SciencePolyphenolicsFood ChemistryBioanalysisAnalytical ChemistryPhytochemicalSensory StudiesChromatographyHealth SciencesUmami TasteBiochemistryGallic AcidJapanese Green TeaPharmacologyUmami IntensityGreen Tea BeveragePhytochemistryMedicine
Aimed at defining the key drivers for the quality-determining umami taste of a high-grade powdered green tea, called mat-cha, a bioactivity-guided fractionation using solvent extraction, solvent precipitation, preparative chromatographic separations, and human psychophysical experiments was applied on freshly prepared mat-cha. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and one-/two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance studies on isolated fractions led to the identification of l-theanine, succinic acid, 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoic acid (gallic acid), and (1R,2R,3R,5S)-5-carboxy-2,3,5-trihydroxycyclohexyl-3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoate (theogallin) as umami-enhancing compounds in the green tea beverage, and it can be shown by sensory studies that these compounds are able to raise the umami intensity of sodium l-glutamate proportionally.
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