Loading…

Comparing liking and attitudes of Chinese immigrants in New Zealand towards drinkable yoghurt: an exploratory study

•Acculturation can take at least 3 years to impact influence immigrant sensory preferences attribute liking.•Thickness preference liking was maintained by immigrants even after long time of residence.•Recent immigrants may mimic overseas consumers be representative of overseas market in early initia...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Food quality and preference 2021-12, Vol.94, p.104299, Article 104299
Main Authors: Dupas de Matos, Amanda, Hay, Catriona, Low, Julia, Feng, Jing, Lu, Di, Day, Li, Hort, Joanne
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•Acculturation can take at least 3 years to impact influence immigrant sensory preferences attribute liking.•Thickness preference liking was maintained by immigrants even after long time of residence.•Recent immigrants may mimic overseas consumers be representative of overseas market in early initial product testing.•Yoghurt temperature of consumption changed as residence time increased.•Adoption of Western eating habits at breakfast took short time. Whilst food choices may change when exposed to a new culture, the time and extent of the acculturation process is not clear. Focus groups (FGs) were used to explore whether recent Chinese immigrants to New Zealand (NZ) could be representative of consumer product opinions in China and whether these could be associated with residence time. Four population groups - Chinese in Beijing (BJ), Chinese in NZ for less (CH  3y) than 3 years, and NZ Europeans in NZ (NZE) - were recruited to consider drinking yoghurt. FGs were conducted in Chinese or English using the same discussion guide. Transcripts were uploaded into NVivo software to extract key themes using an interpretive coding approach. CH  3y closely matched NZE, particularly for sweetness intensity. The only attribute that was not affected across immigrants was “thickness”, where thick drinking yoghurt was liked more, in line with BJ, compared to NZE. Reasons, type and temperature of consumption described by CH  3y mainly consume chilled yoghurt closely aligning with NZE, indicating that habits were associated with residence time. This exploratory study revealed that, for English speaking Chinese immigrants, the acculturation processes could take at least 3 years to affect immigrant attribute liking, but liking for some attributes was maintained, even after a longer time of residence. This understanding suggests that, with caution, recent immigrants may be an option to mimic overseas consumers in initial consumer product evaluations, especially when travelling is not possible in pandemic situations.
ISSN:0950-3293
1873-6343
DOI:10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104299