Cross-approaches for advising cassava trait-preferences for boiling
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Abstract
Cassava is one of the most common food crops grown and consumed in
many parts of Africa, and boiled cassava is especially popular in West Africa.
However, its quality characteristics and attributes are not well documented. This
study aimed at generating data to produce useful information on cassava trait
preferences for boiling. To understand end-users’ trait-preferences for raw and
boiled cassava, the study used a mix of approaches including a qualitative survey,
process diagnosis and consumer testing. Gender-disaggregated data on cassava
varieties were clustered into three categories: “common varieties with similar rank”,
“common varieties but differently ranked” and “varieties exclusively cited by
women or men”. Raw cassava root for making high-quality boiled cassava should
have cracked peel, a sweet taste, and white flesh. Irrespective of cassava varieties,
the three descriptors: “hard to break in the hand”, “not crumbly in the mouth” and
“too bitter tasting” greatly penalized the overall liking, lowering values by a range of
2.2 to 2.6 on a nine-point scale (i.e. by about a quarter). Accordingly, high-quality
boiled cassava should be attractive with white, homogenous flesh, a sweet taste, easy to break in the hand, crumbly in the mouth, and fiber-free.
