Current status and perspectives of the official sensory control methods in protected designation of origin food products and wines
Ikusi/ Ireki
Data
2018-02-03Egilea
Symoneaux, Ronan
Coulon-Leroy, Cécile
Maître, Isabelle
Zannoni, Mario
Food Control 88 : 159-168 (2018)
Laburpena
Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) is part of the regulated quality schemes in the European Union
(EU). Producers of PDO food products and wines have to present EU authorities a technical specification
of their product, which includes its sensory description. European regulation 1151/12 establishes that
sensory characteristics included in PDO certification must be guaranteed. Nevertheless, there is no
standardized approach for the development of sensory control methods for PDO food products, so each
entity in charge of controlling the characteristics of the PDO products decides the best way to follow this
legal requirement. This paper presents the current situation in Spain, Italy and France in relation to the
official sensory control of PDO food products and wines and the accreditation of the laboratories for this
control (these three countries represent 68.9% of the total PDO products registered in the EU). This
manuscript also shows the main methodologies applied in the official sensory control of PDO food
products and wines. The wide diversity of methods used for the sensory control and associated panel
management among PDOs manifests the need to harmonize technical criteria and references at European
level. This is also urgent, because broad differences in the approaches and requirements for sensory
control could bring about unfair competition among PDOs. In this sense, European Sensory Science
Society (E3S) has become an EA recognized stakeholder collaborating in a framework in order to prepare
a document for the harmonization of methodological approaches and technical criteria for the sensory
control of PDO food products and wines.