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Cargill Highlights Key Trends in Chocolate

Cargill’s cocoa & chocolate business has just released its comprehensive report highlighting key sector trends to help manufacturers develop their next winning innovations.

Based on insight gained from interactions with customers across numerous application categories, and on information gathered from projects with customers through Cargill’s application centers, the report highlights trends across four key themes: Indulgent; Premium; Healthy; and Sustainable and clean.

Speaking with FoodIngredientsFirst last week, Harold Poelma, President Cargill Cocoa & Chocolate, said: “Cocoa and chocolate is very much a global business, it’s a very exciting time for us at Cargill as people are getting more interested in cocoa as a flavor.”

“Interestingly, consumers are not only interested cocoa powder, but organic chocolate too,” he explains. “Over the past ten years Cargill have invested quite substantially in chocolate in Europe, and last year particularly with the acquisition of the chocolate business of ADM. Since then Cargill has become a strong player in this field and we have been able to bring a broader service and portfolio to our consumers which really fits into the global structure between Europe and North America.”

Indulgent – today’s consumer is looking for an ever-more indulgent experience, across flavor, texture and color, inspiring new levels of creativity in sweet foods around the world.

In flavors – vegetable and chocolate combinations are becoming popular across a range of categories, for example kale flavor fillings in chocolate bars and chocolate featuring alongside beetroot in cakes.

Texture is also evolving towards more indulgence, with larger chocolate chunk inclusions as well as new combinations of textures such as crispy chocolate layers on top of creamy desserts.

Cocoa powder is increasingly being used to play with shades and add depth of color.

Premium – demand for premium products is at an all-time high, with provenance and origin being key among cocoa and chocolate products. Besides specifying the origin of cocoa or chocolate, manufacturers increasingly highlight on the pack the country where the end-product was manufactured, satisfying consumers’ desire to buy local products. Inspiration from the artisanal industry is also observed. Processes behind the product are becoming more prominent on packaging – with details included such as ‘stone ground’ or ‘slow churned’ and even the conching time of chocolate.

Healthy – how diet affects health and wellness is increasingly on consumers’ minds, leading them to avoid ingredients perceived as unhealthy, and look for those perceived as healthy. Besides the long standing trend for sugar reduction and gluten free, lactose free claims are increasingly being observed in cocoa and chocolate products, with milk alternatives such as coconut milk increasing in popularity. Looking at ingredients seen as beneficial, the trend for protein is still booming and becoming mainstream, breaking free from the sports nutrition niche and focusing on satiety rather than sports recovery.

Sustainable and clean – where food comes from, how it is produced, and its true ethical and environmental cost, really matter to today’s consumer. Certified chocolate products are becoming more popular and spreading their reach out from chocolate tablets into dairy, bakery, biscuits and ice cream. Answering consumers’ needs for more transparency, clean and clear labelling is also more important than ever. In the quest to remove e-numbers, real fruits and plant extracts are being increasingly used to naturally color products.

Niklas Andersson, Marketing Director Cocoa & Chocolate Europe explains: “Whether working in confectionery, biscuits, bakery, cereals, dairy or ice cream, our report provides real insights that can help manufacturers get a head start on the competition when creating new products and innovations.

“Today’s discerning consumer is looking beyond value for money. They are better informed than ever before and, as our research demonstrates, they consider the contents of their food and its impacts on the future more than ever before. In short, they want food that tastes good, is good, helps them to be good and does good.”

Meeting these desires presents real challenges for food manufacturers and they need the ingredients and innovation capabilities to make the products that reflect today’s trends. Two such innovative ingredients examples are Cargill’s Caramel Equilibre, a unique white chocolate with caramel, and the new Gerkens dark intense red cocoa powder, a next-generation cocoa powder which brings great color to a range of products.

Alongside insight and ingredients, access to end-to-end expertise is essential so manufacturers can bring new products to market – and Cargill’s T-model approach provides this. By combining knowledge across multiple food-related industries, matched with a deep cocoa and chocolate expertise, Cargill can help customers translate the latest trends into innovative products to meet the demands of their consumers.

“Only Cargill can provide the insight, ingredients and end-to-end expertise that takes manufacturers every step of the way – from inspiration to application and then to market”, concludes Niklas Andersson.




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