As consumer rejection of artificial colors, flavors and additives has become mainstream, easy-to-understand ingredients lists are no longer a bonus for shoppers, but a baseline expectation. This purchasing behavior has given rise to the “clean label” trend, spurring brands across categories to clean up their products by formulating with simpler ingredients. ###But consumer and manufacturer understandings of what clean label means are often at odds with one another, panelists at the Institute of Food Technologists conference said last week. This confusion stems from the lack of a legal definition for the term, as well as the trend’s confluence with other movements sferrous fumarate with vitamin b12 and folic acidhaping the industry — such as transparency, traceability and free-from foods. ###And while this gray area gives companies the opportunity to craft their own working definitions for their brands, IFT attendees also worried it gives them the power to mislead shoppers. ###“I think consumers have legitimate questions and legitimate confusion about what is better or worse them in food… [but] companies have treated clean label programs as first and foremost a marketing campaign rather than a [tool] to improve public health,” Laura MacCleery, policy director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said at a panel. “There’s health-washing going on in products that are essentially no better for you nutritionferrous fumarate medscapeally.”###But how dangerous is this disconnect between consumer perception of clean label foods and the health benefits that these products actually offer? And despite these risks, has the clean label trend resulted in any tangible positive results?###One of the reasons the concept of clean is so confusing, panelists said, is because the term has extended to items beyond food. ###Product packaging has also evolved to reflect the values shoppers most often associate with the term. RXBAR’s front-of-pack marketing, which simply consists of a list of the bar’s ingredients, is perhaps the iconic example of design catering to clean label-focused shoppers. The buzzworthy packaging is arguably what has driven the b
ar maker’s explosive growth, which has spurred copycat products like Haagen-Dazs’s line of ice cream made with only five ingredients — a value-add that is prominently displayed on the fhow much magnesium malate should i takerozen treat’s carton. ###But manufacturers don’t necessarily need to call out their ingredients on product packaging in order to capture the attention of health-conscious consumers. Dan Ahern, director of global innovation and design of Graphic Packaging International, said packaging design alone can convey a sense of transparency to the consumer, pointing to the rise of see-through windows, large amounts of white space and even “clean” font choices as evidence of consumer hunger for clean fare. ###Some panelists feared that the term’s growing ubiquity in the food space has caused it to become a catch-all descriptor for healthy, better-for-you foods — in the mind of the consumer at least. Some argued that this has led brands to eliminate technical-sounding additives — regardless of whether they improve the nutrition of a product or not — in order to qualify as “clean” and position their product as mrn labs magnesium glycinateore nutritious than competitors. ###”There are several trends that are driving the consumer. One of those is this whole notion around transparency,” Mehmood Khan, PepsiCo’s vice chairman and chief science officer, told Food Dive in an interview. “You have to balance that tension with the comprehension and understanding of the consumer … [because] if I told you that something as simple as ascorbic acid is in this product, unless you have a science background, that’s a pretty scary compound … but it’s just vitamin C. But the regulations require me to call it acid.”###MacCleery said that this is one of the clean label trend’s biggest shortcomings. ###“There is a lack of consensus that’s been built particularly in the U.S. about what kinds of additives are bad for you or good for you,” MacCleery said. “[CSPI] did an audit of the clean label programs that
companies have initiated, and we found some of the things they’re dropping are actually a benefit to public health. They’re dropping them because they have ugly-sounding names, but there may not be a scientific reason to do that.”###While some industry players worry that clean label call outs on food and beverage do nothing more than give shoppers permission to ignore
more detailed product nutrition information, others believe that consumer interest in clean label signals an openness to learn about the realities of the food space.###According to FMI’s 2017 Grocery Shopper Trends, 65% of shoppers seek to avoid ingredients like salt, sugar and antibiotics, while 59% look for minimal processing claims like “no artificial preservatives” and “non-GMO.” Shoppers also want to know what “natural” means, and what terms like “cage-free” actually entail.###Khan said that PepsiCo’s Performance with Purpose 2025 sustainability agenda is divided into three pillars — product, planet and people — to meet these evolving consumer expectations. ###”The modern consumer truly has a breadth of interests,” he said. “The consumer wants to know everything to do with ingredients, how
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