New Nutrition Business discusses good carbs, bad carbs trend

According to 10 Key Trends in Food, Nutrition and Health 2018, the annual trends report from New Nutrition Business, consumers’ quest for better carbohydrates and fewer carbohydrates is creating a wealth of opportunities.

The trend is allegedly fuelled by emerging science – discussed in the media and online – that’s associating carbs with health issues such as weight gain and blood sugar response.

Julian Mellentin, author of the report, says, “Consumers are increasingly experimenting with lowering their carb intakes, or improving the carbs they eat, in the hopes of benefiting their health and/or their waistlines.”

According to an NNB survey, in Spain, as many as 63% of consumers are regularly trying to eat fewer carbs; in the UK, that figure is 48% and in Australia 47%. And in North America, 36% of consumers believe they should eat less bread, pasta, potatoes and rice.

In Japan, food service operators are cutting carbs, with one restaurant chain kneading spinach and chlorella into noodles to lower their carb content by 25%.

Mellentin says, “Companies are responding to these opportunities by adopting one or more of five strategies. The biggest of these strategies is reformulation – not only substituting whole grains for refined wheat, for example, but offering gluten-free variants to take away a big digestive health issue that many consumers have with carbohydrates.”

One area that is moving quickly is the re-formulation of pasta. Explore Cuisine is one of several companies offering pastas and noodles made not from wheat but from dried peas, beans, lentils and chickpeas.

Even the potato industry is experimenting with new low-carb varieties such as Lotatoes, marketed in New Zealand by one of the country’s biggest fruit and vegetable companies.

Some companies are going yet further in changing “bad” carbs into “good” carbs. Hamburg-based milling giant Good Mills has launched a new type of wheat that directly addresses consumer concerns about gluten and difficult-to-digest carbs. Called 2ab Wheat, it is free from gluten and addresses concerns about Fodmaps, a rapidly-emerging consumer concern.

Another strategy that many companies are following is Greener Carbs.

Convenient vegetables, and vegetables in forms that can be substituted for traditional carbohydrates, are the fruit of creative NPD and skillful food technology.

For the first time, vegetables can be as convenient as traditional carbs. For example:

  • Green Giant in the US markets riced cauliflower (for use instead of rice) as well as spiralised vegetables and has massively expanded its range in 2017
  • Fazer, the Nordic bakery group, markets bread with a 30% vegetable content.

The Good Carbs Bad Carbs trend shows that Key Trends often overlap with, and fuel, one another. Digestive Health, Plant-Based and Snackification are all connected to this trend.

Another trend that’s a strong driver of Good Carbs is personalisation. Increasingly, people are going online, doing their own research and crafting their own eating style that they believe matches their needs as individuals. The belief that diet cannot be “one size fits all” is gaining ground.

For about 50% of the population, according to a survey by New Nutrition Business, the idea that each of us has unique nutritional and metabolic needs is becoming an accepted fact. These people, no matter what official dietary guidelines say, look upon carbs as a menu from which they feel free to select some as “good” and reject others as “bad”.

This creates opportunities for companies willing to respond creatively to this much greater variety of needs and beliefs.

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