Issue56  

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TOP STORY & ANALYSIS
Tesco Every Little Helps to Go Green

FMCG News Update
PepsiCo Off To A Flying Start
Tesco Reveals Britain's First 'Pensioner-Friendly' Supermarket
Grocers Must Go Beyond Traditional Differentiation Strategies to Succeed: Report
Security Of Milk Supply A 'Real Problem'
August Website Rankings of 100 Retailers
Checkout chic - Why Supermarket TV Ads Have Replaced Mumsy With Glam

RETAIL
Down The Aisle... Bottle Water Companies Fight Back
Out To Launch... Tregothnan And Demarquette – Fine Chocolates Launch Quintessentially English Chocolate Collection
Supermarket News... Sainsbury's To Push Own-Brand Goods
Beverage Bulletin... Input Cost Inflation Threatens To Cripple The Brewing Industry
Green Room... Soil Association Organic Food Award Winners 2008
Up The High Street... Retail Footfall Rises In August By 3.9%

MARKETING
Sales & Marketing... Bernard Matthews New £3m Ad Campaign
Movers & Groovers... Finsbury Boss David Brooks To Quit
Coke Works Through Identity Crisis

TRENDS
Trend For Energy Infused Food

Boy, How You've Changed!

What's a company to do when sales slump and interest in its product or service fades? One option: A major makeover.

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TEA BREAK

The 20 teachings of zen and funny boxing cat

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Love Your Planet

Soil Association Organic Fortnight: 6-21 September 2008


Soil Association Organic Fortnight, sponsored by Organix and Greenvale AP, is a nationwide campaign bringing together individuals, communities, retailers, restaurants, schools and organic farms for the UK’s biggest celebration of all things organic.

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Issue56   June 16, 2011

 
Trend For Energy Infused Food
Stimulants could be infused into many other foods

NRG Phoenix Fury Potato Chips from Golden Flake Snack Foods. These contain the same amount of caffeine as in three and a half cups of coffee

Foods with added stimulants are stealing a march on energy drinks as companies are developing new ways to energize consumers seeking alternatives to sugary beverages, according to a global consumer trends analyst.

Manufacturers are looking to attract customers with foods that provide all the stimulation of energy drinks, therefore offering the potential to cut out high levels of sugar, unpleasant tastes and unnatural chemicals, the analyst CScout claimed.

The trend monitor and strategic consultancy gave the example of Engobi’s caffeine-infused Energy Go Bites, with 70% higher caffeine content compared to conventional energy drinks.

And Dakota Valley Products uses a patented process to manufacture natural, healthy seeds infused with caffeine, taurine, lysine, and ginseng. This is said to give twice the amount of energy as an energy drink without the added sugar.

A CScout spokesperson said: “This trend shows that consumers may be distinguishing between somewhat unhealthy stimulants, which they desire, and high sugar content in drinks, which they do not.

“Stimulants could be infused into many other foods – breakfast foods may be a particularly good candidate, including energy-giving cereals, breads and spreads.”

Other products already on the market include the NRG Phoenix Fury Potato Chips from Golden Flake Snack Foods. These contain the same amount of caffeine as in three and a half cups of coffee, according to its manufacturer which said it was attracting the same customers who buy energy drinks.

Also in the US, global confectionery company Mars launched Snickers Charged this year, an alternative to the traditional Snickers brand in the US but with 60mg of caffeine, taurine and B-vitamins for an extra energy boost.

Caffeine content

Small amounts of caffeine have the potential to make people feel more alert, according to research, which makes it an appealing ingredient for the energy products sector.

Traditionally the main delivery format has been beverages such as coffee, which have a strong bitter taste that some consumers do not like. However, new technologies have been developed that make it applicable for different foodstuffs, presenting new opportunities to manufacturers.

Last year Maxx Performance announced the development of a proprietary way to encapsulate caffeine for foods using vegetable-derived lipids.

The company has worked in collaboration with bakery experts on prototypes to demonstrate its potential in bakery products and recently showcased brownies, donuts and cinnamon raison bread. The products are aimed at improving memory and performance but without impacting taste or flavor.

Also, in early 2007 a Colorado-based firm called Encaff Products also announced the development of caffeine-based donuts.

Founder Dr Robert Bohannon said at the time that early experiments yielded a bad-tasting product, but in collaboration with food industry experts he eventually came up with a patent-pending microencapsulation process that allows the inclusion of very small caffeine particles.

Encapsulation allows for a precise amount of caffeine to be included in a product.

Calls for regulation

However some products high in caffeine - such as Enviga, the beverage launched by Coca Cola and Nestle with calorie-burning claims and 100mg of caffeine per 12 ounce can - have been held up by pressure grounds as examples of why caffeine regulations require tightening.

The Center for Science in the Public Interest has been requesting, as a starting point, mandatory caffeine labelling and more responsible marketing of such products.
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