Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study. / Micheelsen, Arun; Holm, Lotte; Jensen, Katherine O’Doherty.

In: Appetite, Vol. 70, 2013, p. 14-21.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Micheelsen, A, Holm, L & Jensen, KOD 2013, 'Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study', Appetite, vol. 70, pp. 14-21. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.081

APA

Micheelsen, A., Holm, L., & Jensen, K. OD. (2013). Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study. Appetite, 70, 14-21. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.081

Vancouver

Micheelsen A, Holm L, Jensen KOD. Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study. Appetite. 2013;70:14-21. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.081

Author

Micheelsen, Arun ; Holm, Lotte ; Jensen, Katherine O’Doherty. / Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study. In: Appetite. 2013 ; Vol. 70. pp. 14-21.

Bibtex

@article{6cbecd32e8ce46ed997c18a366146577,
title = "Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study",
abstract = "With direct reference to New Nordic Cuisine and Nordic dietary recommendations, the OPUS Research Centre in Denmark is developing and testing a healthy, regional New Nordic Diet (NND) that promises to have outstanding gastronomic properties. The NND is disseminated to Danish consumers with a view to improving public health. To explore the acceptability of the NND to consumers, a qualitative study comprising focus groups, home-testing of NND prototype meals and personal interviews was conducted in urban and rural areas (N =38). Most participants, particularly women and residents in urban areas, are positive towards the ideas underlying the development of this new diet and enjoy the taste and appearance of NND meals. Barriers to acceptance include the untraditional formats of NND meals, the time needed to prepare them, the unfamiliarity of ingredients, perceived problems regarding product availability, reservations about the elitist character of this project and unwillingness to exclude non-Nordic dishes on an everyday basis. The study concludes that several social and cultural barriers must be overcome if the NND shall constitute a source of improved public health. The pursuit of this objective could more fruitfully take its point of departure in in-depth consideration of existing food practices among Danish consumers.",
keywords = "nutrition and dietetics",
author = "Arun Micheelsen and Lotte Holm and Jensen, {Katherine O{\textquoteright}Doherty}",
note = "Published online 20 June 2013",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.081",
language = "English",
volume = "70",
pages = "14--21",
journal = "Appetite",
issn = "0195-6663",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Consumer acceptance of the New Nordic Diet. An exploratory study

AU - Micheelsen, Arun

AU - Holm, Lotte

AU - Jensen, Katherine O’Doherty

N1 - Published online 20 June 2013

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - With direct reference to New Nordic Cuisine and Nordic dietary recommendations, the OPUS Research Centre in Denmark is developing and testing a healthy, regional New Nordic Diet (NND) that promises to have outstanding gastronomic properties. The NND is disseminated to Danish consumers with a view to improving public health. To explore the acceptability of the NND to consumers, a qualitative study comprising focus groups, home-testing of NND prototype meals and personal interviews was conducted in urban and rural areas (N =38). Most participants, particularly women and residents in urban areas, are positive towards the ideas underlying the development of this new diet and enjoy the taste and appearance of NND meals. Barriers to acceptance include the untraditional formats of NND meals, the time needed to prepare them, the unfamiliarity of ingredients, perceived problems regarding product availability, reservations about the elitist character of this project and unwillingness to exclude non-Nordic dishes on an everyday basis. The study concludes that several social and cultural barriers must be overcome if the NND shall constitute a source of improved public health. The pursuit of this objective could more fruitfully take its point of departure in in-depth consideration of existing food practices among Danish consumers.

AB - With direct reference to New Nordic Cuisine and Nordic dietary recommendations, the OPUS Research Centre in Denmark is developing and testing a healthy, regional New Nordic Diet (NND) that promises to have outstanding gastronomic properties. The NND is disseminated to Danish consumers with a view to improving public health. To explore the acceptability of the NND to consumers, a qualitative study comprising focus groups, home-testing of NND prototype meals and personal interviews was conducted in urban and rural areas (N =38). Most participants, particularly women and residents in urban areas, are positive towards the ideas underlying the development of this new diet and enjoy the taste and appearance of NND meals. Barriers to acceptance include the untraditional formats of NND meals, the time needed to prepare them, the unfamiliarity of ingredients, perceived problems regarding product availability, reservations about the elitist character of this project and unwillingness to exclude non-Nordic dishes on an everyday basis. The study concludes that several social and cultural barriers must be overcome if the NND shall constitute a source of improved public health. The pursuit of this objective could more fruitfully take its point of departure in in-depth consideration of existing food practices among Danish consumers.

KW - nutrition and dietetics

U2 - 10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.081

DO - 10.1016/j.appet.2013.06.081

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23792909

VL - 70

SP - 14

EP - 21

JO - Appetite

JF - Appetite

SN - 0195-6663

ER -

ID: 47645632