By ELIZABETH FUHRMAN
contributing writer
Consumers crave new
taste experiences with
their proteins through
sauces and marinades.
A
cross the board, consumers
want more fl avor, especially
with their protein dishes.
Many protein categories are
saturated with product offerings, so
much so that consumers are looking
for new fl avors and more fl avors
to appease their palates. Sauces and
marinades provide a way to accomplish
this task.
Consumers want bold fl avors and
a lot of them, says Matthew Hudak,
U.S. research analyst for Euromonitor
International, Chicago.
“Anything with a lot of kick or
intense fl avoring has been resonating
with consumers,” he says. In
addition, younger consumers want
fl avors that are very strong and very
noticeable. “Sriracha is something
that is doing very well right now, and
it’s clearly a lot spicier than people
would have once accepted.”
Convenience is an important driver
in the use of sauces and marinades
in new product development, says
Yasemin Ozdemir, a market analyst
for Innova Market Insights, Duiven,
The Netherlands.
“Consumers with busy lifestyles
desire great-tasting meat dishes,
but with less time on their hands,
and also less knowledge about
what tastes good with which type
of meat,” Ozdemir says. “As a
result, they are turning to options
that make life easier for them and
producers are responding.”
One example of a convenience
option is the “all-in-one meal” with
compartments that contain all parts
of the meal. This can include items
such as salad, rice or potatoes, with
a compartment that has the seasoned
or marinated meat. All-in-one
meals are easy to prepare, as most
of the products give preparation
tips on the packaging.
“Ready meals with [pre-fl avored]
meat are a great solution for people
looking for tasty convenience,”
Ozdemir says. Hudak agrees that
complete-meal products are popular
now due to their convenience.
“Things like the new Campbell’s
skillet sauces are trying to make the
whole process of using sauces and
marinades much easier,” he says.
Furthermore, although the United States has historically
favored white meat chicken in its meals, Americans
seem to be including more dark meat in their at-home
meal preparation.
Another observation along the lines
of convenience is pre-marinated meat
and poultry. In 2012, 4.8 percent of all
meat and poultry products launched
in North America were pre-marinated,
Innova reports. In addition, North
America saw a 35 percent rise in premarinated
meat and poultry launches
compared to 2011.
“You can fi nd them in your regular
supermarket, but also at the local
butcher,” Ozdemir says. “For those
consumers that have little knowledge
about cooking and fl avors, these premarinated
meats are a perfect solution.”
Popular flavors
Ethnic fl avors are another big
trend in meat marinades and sauces.
Globally nearly 10 percent of all meat
marinades and sauces were tracked
with an ethnic fl avor in 2012, a rise of
19 percent compared to 2011, Innova
reports. This trend for ethnic fl avors is very alive in North America as 7.6 percent
of sauces and seasonings had an
ethnic fl avor, according to Innova. Top
ethnic fl avors in sauces and seasoning
launches tracked globally are Thai, Italian,
Indian, Asian, Chinese, Japanese
and Mexican, the research fi rm says.
Tradition is still a key positioning
in sauces and marinades though as
14.8 percent of meat marinades and
sauces were positioned as traditional
in 2012, Innova reports. Authentic
Italian sauces and Indian spices fared
well too.
However, product launch activity
shows that more and more products
with interesting new fl avor combinations
are reaching global markets. For
example, Innova has tracked a proliferation
of barbecue fl avors. The number
of barbecue-fl avored sauces tracked
increased by 27 percent globally from
2011 to 2012. A few examples of fl avor
combinations launched in 2012 are
full smoky fl avored barbecue sauce, hot
and spicy fl avored barbecue sauce, and
honey barbecue sauce.
“Once a very traditional sauce,
now [it is] a contemporized product to
spice up your meat,” Ozdemir says.
Sauces and marinades are not the
only way to season or fl avor your
meat or poultry.
“Rubs are the next big thing in
spicing up your meat,” Ozdemir says.
“They come available in all fl avors
you could wish for, and allow for
many ways of preparation: grilling,
roasting and stir-frying.”
Tyson Fresh Meats Inc. agrees that
the trend for pre-marinated products
is moving toward offering consumers
next step preparation levels with
great-tasting fl avor alternatives.
HEALTH MATTERS
Healthier formulations are one trend to watch for in bottled
sauces and marinades that could transition into the sauces
and marinades used for prepared foods. Health positioning,
such as lower-sodium and -fat options, has made its way
into the sauces and marinades category. However, healthy
positioning is not always refl ected in the claims on front of the
packaging.
“Health trends are hard to market with sauces and marinades,
as the whole purpose of sauces is to make things taste better,
which people do not normally associate with health claims,” says
Matthew Hudak, U.S. research analyst for Euromonitor International,
Chicago. “One thing that is catching on everywhere is
gluten-free, and most companies that have inherently gluten-free
products have been adding this to their labels.”
Some companies are choosing a stealth-health approach
in reducing sugar, fat and salt in their products, because
consumers can wonder why there was so much in it in the
fi rst place, says Yasemin Ozdemir, market analyst for Innova
Market Insights, Duiven, The Netherlands.
Innova reports that top health-positioning statements
globally in marinades and sauces are no additives/preservatives
(25.5 percent of product launches tracked in 2012 had
this claim), gluten-free (11.9 percent of product launches
tracked in 2012 had this claim) and natural (10.9 percent of
product launches tracked in 2012 had this claim).
Others with smaller percentages, but worth noting:
• 3.9 percent of all marinades and sauces have a low-fat
positioning
• 2.9 percent — no trans fats
• 2.0 percent — low sodium
• 1.9 percent — low cholesterol
“This includes seasoned and marinated
products along with topically rubbed steaks, chops and roasts that provide consumers
with more options for dinner,” says Kent Harrison, Tyson
Fresh Meats’ vice president of marketing and premium
programs. “Helping consumers with the next step in meal
preparation while still keeping them actively involved in
cooking dinner is what we call ‘active convenience.’”
For example, Tyson recently introduced Pork Shoulder
for Carnitas, a pre-seasoned pork product packaged in a
ready-to-go, cook-in-bag with easy instructions.
“Consumers simply place the cook-in-bag in a slow
cooker or regular oven,” Harrison says. “…We’ve seen
increased interest from consumers for authentically ethnic
fl avor profi les and products that are easy to prepare.”
Restaurant trends
Many restaurant trends are pushing forward the use
of sauces and marinades in retail products.
“Many companies are focusing on capturing restaurant-
quality taste at home,” Hudak says. “So anything
that is trendy in the restaurant scene is likely to see a
sauce or marinade that tries to copy.”
In restaurants, consumers are indicating they want
new types of fl avors and more fl avors added to their proteins. Technomic Inc., Chicago,
recently asked consumers how much
consumers wanted different types of
proteins to have added fl avor from a
variety of different products, including
marinades, glazes, sauces and condiments.
Across the board, consumers
said they wanted more added fl avor.
Particularly, for marinades and sauces,
interest increased 4 percent from 2010
to 2012, Technomic reports.
In 2010, half of consumers
wanted to add fl avor to their beef
through marinades, and those
thoughts grew to 54 percent by
2012, according to Technomic’s
“Center of the Plate: Beef & Pork
Consumer Trend Report 2013 –
US.” Consumers’ desires for more
sauces and condiments for beef
grew from 44 percent in 2010 to 48
percent in 2012. For pork, demand
for marinades grew from 42 percent
to 46 percent, and sauces and
condiments from 45 percent to 49
percent, during the time period.
Consumers’ desire for their chicken
to have more marinades grew from
52 percent to 60 percent, and sauces
and condiments wishes from 54 percent
to 59 percent from 2011 to 2013
as reported in Technomic’s “Center
of the Plate: Poultry Consumer Trend
Report 2013 – US.” Turkey, on the
other hand, was the only protein that
didn’t see big increases in the desire
for more fl avors. For turkey, demand
for marinades went from 37 percent
to 38 percent, and 43 percent to 44
percent for sauces and condiments,
during the time period.
“Turkey is not as familiar with consumers,
so they are a little less likely to
try new fl avors,” explains Kelly Weikel,
a senior consumer research manager at
Technomic. “Consumers do tend toward
some of the more established flavors
when they aren’t familiar, whereas
with something like chicken, it’s used
so widely, it’s so versatile, that consumers
are more open to using some more
types of flavor with it.”
Technomic’s reports also asked
what types of marinades, glazes,
sauces and condiments consumers
preferred, and honey, barbecue and
teriyaki topped the lists of the different
proteins. For beef and chicken,
consumers’ desires for bourbon fl avor
in both glazes and marinades grew 5
percent during the time periods. Demand
for brown sugar also increased
for a beef glaze or marinade. For
pork, consumers would like to see
more apple sauce fl avor. Chicken saw
an increase in some of the ethnic fl avors.
Teriyaki, chipotle and hot sauce
were all up in demand.
Americans’ palates also have
evolved their preferences for sauces
and marinades when dining out.
“They don’t necessarily have to be
standard or traditional, especially for
some of those meats that consumers
are really familiar with,” Weikel
says. “What people are really looking
for — for some of those proteins
that are so established and so saturated
— is a new spin on it. They are
looking for fl avor innovation, and a
lot of the innovation comes from the
ethnic-food trends.”
For example, Korean barbecue
and galbi, marinated beef or pork in ganjang-based sauce, has started to
become more mainstream, so many
restaurants are embracing other
Asian barbecues to incorporate more
emerging Asian flavors.
In general, bolder and spicier
flavors from cuisines such as
Cajun, Caribbean, Indonesian, Moroccan,
Peruvian, Lebanese, Portuguese,
and other Asian and African
countries are growing flavor trends
in restaurants, Weikel says. These
flavors have the potential to cross
over into more sauces and marinades
in retail products.
At-home trends
Dishes that have become very
popular dining out also are reaching
the mainstream crowd through
supermarkets, allowing the consumer
to create restaurant quality dishes
in their own kitchen. In 2012, 1.8
percent of all sauces and seasonings
tracked in North America had a
“restaurant style” claim, up from 1.3
percent in 2011, Innova reports.
Flavors also move from restaurants
to the kitchen.
“Consumers like to recreate their
favorite dining out dishes at home;
it is a good place to be inspired,”
Ozdemir says. “We can see sauces,
spices and fl avored ready meals
moving from the foodservice channel
to the retailer. Indian, Thai and
Mexican sauces and spices are very
normal and well-known kitchen items
nowadays.”
Wasabi is one successful product
that has translated from sushi
restaurants to kitchens, she says. For
example, Knorr recently launched a
garlic sauce with wasabi fl avor. Soy
sauce also has become a mainstream
table sauce in Western countries
because of its presence in Asian and
Japanese restaurants. Of all cooking
sauces tracked in 2012 by Innova, 6.3
percent is soy sauce.
Going forward, Hudak expects
to continue to see a lot of really
strong fl avors and a focus on making
the process of preparing meals
much easier. Sauces also will have
to work hard to keep people eating
at home more, because any level of
economic recovery typically frees
consumers up to go back to foodservice
outlets.
“We’ll probably see more youth
oriented creations — something that
caters to Millennials who grew up
on a variety of different food types,”
Hudak says. “This group is going to
slowly come into fi nancial maturity,
and companies will go after them.”
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