I started talking about stevia on this blog a long time ago when we began here. it was another discovery i became aware of once I used this blog to police my constant browsing and started creating notes and posts. Then it was not even legal to use it which was obvious nonsense of course and that soon got rescinded.
Now the food manufacturers are in the midst of producing successful products with the stuff. A little bit tricky as this shows us.
For the casual user, the best trick is to take a few grains of sugar with your stevia to overcome the initial off taste. There is real potential in stevia acting as a dilutent for sucrose in particular which allows a sharp reduction is exposure. After all there is nothing wrong with sugar that prevents it from been used directly except that we eat far too much and that then becomes toxic to our health. If we ate a traspoon a day as a additive to a stevia sweetener, it would be totally harmless.
Sweet salvation: Can stevia be food producers' Holy Grail?
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/health/sweet-salvation-can-stevia-be-the-holy-grail-for-food-producers/article19976827/
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/health/sweet-salvation-can-stevia-be-the-holy-grail-for-food-producers/article19976827/
It
certainly doesn’t look like the Holy Grail. I’m standing in the test
kitchen at Loblaw’s head offices in Brampton, Ont., sipping from a
plastic cup. It contains water flavoured with a herb native to South
America that the grocery giant and others in the food industry are
hoping will be the answer to their prayers.
Food
scientists have placed four bottles on the counter for me, each with a
different sweetener: sugar, aspartame, sucralose and, in this cup,
stevia – the great green hope. For more than two years, the company has
been trying to enlist this promising newcomer in its campaign to remove
all artificial colours, flavours and sweeteners from President’s Choice,
the line of in-house packaged foods sold by Loblaws and its affiliates
across the country.
According to some projections, stevia could account for one-third of the $58-billion global market for food sweeteners some day, with the potential jackpot for products that make use of it truly monumental.
But first, Loblaw has to overcome a huge headache: the little matter of stevia’s taste.
As I sip, it takes a moment for the sweetness to reach my palate. That delay hasn’t been too much of an issue with some products. Loblaw’s PC Blue Menu apple crumble, for example. Or yogurt. Its procrastinatory tendencies aren’t a handicap when stevia is bolstered by naturally occurring sugars in fruit. But when it comes to pop, there is not much that is naturally occurring.
“It’s just water, flavour, essential oils,” says Maria Charvat, the vice-president of food product development. Artificial sweeteners like aspartame are more well-rounded, she explains, but with stevia, the delay is a problem, as is an anise-like aftertaste that some people can detect.
She’s right about the initial impact. I sip some Cott orange soda sweetened with stevia. It has an almost savoury note at first – neither a natural orange nor the pleasing candy orange that pop drinkers have come to know.
The
initiative started just after the federal government approved stevia in
May, 2012, giving Loblaw and other food producers a mouth-watering
prospect: a zero-calorie sweetener that doesn’t sound like it’s a
chemical.
And
what timing: The golden opportunity comes just when public concern
about the health effects of sugar is back on the upswing. Recently, the
World Health Organization urged people to restrict their daily
consumption to no more than 5 per cent of their total caloric intake.
At a press conference in March, the organization’s head of nutrition for health and development, Dr. Francesco Branco, said that “sugar might become the new tobacco in terms of risk.” But many of those trying to give up the sweet stuff are wary of laboratory-concocted substitutes. So some of the biggest food companies are banking on stevia to attract sugar-phobic consumers who want products that are natural like sugar or honey but without the threat to their waistlines. They want to have their cake and pretend they’re not eating it, too, so the first contender to get this right will have a running start at a highly lucrative market.According to some projections, stevia could account for one-third of the $58-billion global market for food sweeteners some day, with the potential jackpot for products that make use of it truly monumental.
But first, Loblaw has to overcome a huge headache: the little matter of stevia’s taste.
As I sip, it takes a moment for the sweetness to reach my palate. That delay hasn’t been too much of an issue with some products. Loblaw’s PC Blue Menu apple crumble, for example. Or yogurt. Its procrastinatory tendencies aren’t a handicap when stevia is bolstered by naturally occurring sugars in fruit. But when it comes to pop, there is not much that is naturally occurring.
“It’s just water, flavour, essential oils,” says Maria Charvat, the vice-president of food product development. Artificial sweeteners like aspartame are more well-rounded, she explains, but with stevia, the delay is a problem, as is an anise-like aftertaste that some people can detect.
She’s right about the initial impact. I sip some Cott orange soda sweetened with stevia. It has an almost savoury note at first – neither a natural orange nor the pleasing candy orange that pop drinkers have come to know.
Loblaw has tried the product on focus groups, reports Ms. Charvat, and “we failed miserably.”
Cola is even worse. Without consistent sweetness, its underlying flavour is “unpalatable,” Ms. Charvat adds.
The
big soft-drink brands, such as Pepsi (which has its own version) know
this. They’ve used stevia only as a half-measure – to reduce overall
sugar, not to replace it.
In
parts of Latin America and soon the U.S. and Britain, Coke is marketing
“Coca-Cola Life,” with a green label to signal that it has a
combination of sweetening agents.
But Loblaw is still reaching for the golden ring, and hopes to launch a stevia-only pop by next year.
People invited to splurge without consequence
This
is not the first sugar backlash, of course. The last wave hit in the
1980s, and led to a surge in popularity of low-sugar products and
artificial sweeteners.
Sweet’N
Low marketing invited people to splurge without consequence. NutraSweet
touted itself as the reason “why so many things taste so good,” using
images of athletes to encourage dieters to “look for the swirl” – a red
logo on products that included it. Sugar Twin claimed it was “so much
like sugar, it could fool you,” and one ad showed a model in a swimsuit
eating a strawberry with a big glob of whipped cream.
Sugar
fear was pushed to the back-burner soon after, trumped in the 1990s by
concerns about fat. Welcome to the era of fat-free cookies such as
SnackWell’s, low-fat frozen yogurt and anything else that stripped out
the fat and compensated for flavour with extra sugar.
More
recently, those concerns turned to salt. But now, sugar is getting more
attention again, thanks to front-page headlines; documentaries such as
Fed Up, which blames sugar for the obesity epidemic; bestsellers such as
Why Calories Count by Marion Nestle, a nutrition expert at New York
University, and Salt Sugar Fat by New York Times investigative reporter
Michael Moss.
“We’re
back at sugar again, as more science points to the health hazardin
sugars,” he says. “The companies are running from sugar faster than they
ever have before.”
In the past, he says, producers managed health scares by simply replacing one demon with another.
“The
food giants are really good at manoeuvring around concerns about
individual nutritional components – whether it be salt, sugar or fat –
in part by simply adding more of the other two when they’re reducing
one.”
But
things are much trickier this time around. Consumers have become more
aware, for example, of how the low-fat craze steered them toward
high-carb foods that sabotaged their efforts to eat better. And their
response to sugar concerns has changed as well: It’s no longer enough to
hand them a pack of Sugar Twin or soda sweetened with aspartame. Along
with a fear of sugar, now there is the fear of too much science in our
food.
Conflicting reports on whether aspartame is dangerous, for example, and questions about whether genetically modified foods are safe to eat, have freaked out consumers. Meanwhile, organic foods, locally sourced ingredients, and a skepticism over factory farming have all come into vogue. Writers such as Michael Pollan, the award-winning author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, have helped to instill the idea that the best way to deal with the conflicting information and ever-changing scientific findings on nutrition, is simply to eat real, natural food. Many confused, exhausted consumers have seized on this as their modus operandi.
Conflicting reports on whether aspartame is dangerous, for example, and questions about whether genetically modified foods are safe to eat, have freaked out consumers. Meanwhile, organic foods, locally sourced ingredients, and a skepticism over factory farming have all come into vogue. Writers such as Michael Pollan, the award-winning author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, have helped to instill the idea that the best way to deal with the conflicting information and ever-changing scientific findings on nutrition, is simply to eat real, natural food. Many confused, exhausted consumers have seized on this as their modus operandi.
At
Cargill Inc., they have a name for consumers like this: “naturally
splendids.” It’s shorthand at the food giant (that Forbes magazine says
is the largest privately held corporation in the U.S.) for a growing
group of customers – about 36 per cent as of 2012 – concerned about
where their food comes from and also looking to manage their caloric
intake.
They’ve
been using honey or agave instead of artificial sweeteners, but those
options do not solve the calorie problem of calories.
These
are the consumers who led Cargill, also a producer of sugar and
high-fructose syrup, into the stevia business, launching Truvia in the
U.S. in 2008, and later expanding to nine countries, including Canada.
(Stevia is the name of a plant and can’t be trademarked. which is why Cargill had to come up with another brand name.)
“We’ve
found it appeals to people looking to balance sugar or to make a choice
that is an evolution from the artificial choices that have been there
previously,” says Mark Brooks, until recently Cargill’s global business
director of Truvia consumer products. (He has left the but Cargill has
confirmed the information is representative of its strategy.)
Just
as Loblaw is emphasizing stevia’s naturalness by marking its products
with a green leaf, natue is the cornerstone of Truvia’s marketing
strategy.
For
the product launch, Cargill built a greenhouse with thousands of stevia
plants at Rockefeller Centre in New York. Visitors were given lemonade
and chocolate made with Truvia. They also were encouraged to pick a leaf
and taste it themselves.
For
the product’s British launch in 2011, Cargill went a step further: It
created a lake on the rooftop of a Selfridges department store in
London, with a waterfall and 8,000 stevia plants on the shoreline. The
public was invited to boat across to the plantation and bite into a leaf
and try a stevia-sweetened cocktail.
“It
was essentially taking you back to the home of the plant in Paraguay,”
Mr. Brooks recalls, “explaining how you can engage with it but also
where it comes from.”
Cargill’s
branding is designed to present Truvia as “the one true way,” Mr.
Brooks says. “We were aspiring for the holy grail of sweetness.”
So
far, the strategy is working. In just a couple of years, Truvia has
become the number three sugar substitute in Canada after Splenda and
Sugar Twin, with 6.6 per cent of the overall market and 38.8 per cent of
sales among stevia sweeteners.
Rebaudioside A – not exactly a name that conveys herbal purity
Although
stevia is quickly becoming popular, critics say there are many unknowns
about its long-term effects on health; and that it shouldn’t get a free
ride because it’s “natural.”
In
reality, there is plenty of processing that must be done to a stevia
plant to extract compounds that taste sweet. These processed,
concentrated extracts are referred to collectively as steviol glycosides
by Health Canada.
Rebaudioside
A, for instance, is one common extract used by food companies, but it’s
not a word you’ll often see on any product labels. In marketing terms,
hard-to-pronounce Rebaudioside A does not convey the herbal purity that
companies such as Cargill are pushing so heavily.
And
while Health Canada reviewed many animal studies on the health effects
of stevia before giving it the green light, some scientists believe the
approval was premature.
“All
the studies that should have been done have not been done,” says Lisa
Lefferts, senior scientist at the Center for Science in the Public
Interest, based in Washington, D.C.
David
Jenkins, who holds a Canada Research Chair in nutritional sciences at
the University of Toronto, says he has come across no disturbing data
linked to stevia extract, but agrees more research is needed.
“The
literature is not replete with good randomized, controlled trials on
stevia use in cardiovascular disease, stevia use in cancer patients,
stevia use in diabetes,” he says.
A tiny stack of stevia has the same impact as a pile of sugar. (Peter Power for The Globe and Mail)
As for pure stevia, the leaves may be a good marketing tool, but neither Health Canada nor the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have approved whole-leaf stevia plants as food additives.
n Canada, the leaves can be purchased for personal culinary use, but the department says it “has not been able to provide a definitive opinion on the safety of retail foods containing stevia leaf because the available scientific data … is considered incomplete.”
A holy grail: ‘I could go on and on” about sugar’s usefulness’
A tiny stack of stevia has the same impact as a pile of sugar. (Peter Power for The Globe and Mail)
As for pure stevia, the leaves may be a good marketing tool, but neither Health Canada nor the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have approved whole-leaf stevia plants as food additives.
n Canada, the leaves can be purchased for personal culinary use, but the department says it “has not been able to provide a definitive opinion on the safety of retail foods containing stevia leaf because the available scientific data … is considered incomplete.”
The
FDA highlights studies that “raise concerns” about the effect of stevia
leaves on blood-sugar levels as well as the reproductive,
cardiovascular and renal systems.
Some
experts warn that increasing reliance on any sugar alternative is not a
good idea for long-term health. Many studies have shown that people who
use them end up consuming more calories, perhaps because the body
doesn’t recognize or process them the same way as sugar-sweetened foods.
And
there is another, potentially bigger problem: the rivals are often more
intensely sweet than sugar. By offering up the chance to crowd our
palates with more of what we crave, without consequences, these products
have nutritionists concerned that we find it more difficult to eat
what’s best for us: namely, vegetables.
“What this has done is taught us, especially kids ... to expect sweetness in everything we eat,” Michael Moss says.
“So
when you drag their little butts over to the produce aisle, and try to
get them to eat Brussels sprouts, and they pick up one of those other
basic tastes including bitterness, they’re much more apt to start
screaming. At least my kids do.”
A holy grail: ‘I could go on and on” about sugar’s usefulness’
There are also some things that other sweeteners can’t replace.
Sugar
has properties that stevia does not: It browns in baking; it can
thicken and take on water, and it creates what is called “mouthfeel.”
“I could go on and on” about sugar’s usefulness, says Andrew Gugula, a Loblaw product developer.
Because sugar contains more solids, it has a fullness of texture that is unmistakable.
Back in the Loblaw’s test kitchen, when I sip on the water sweetened with aspartame or with stevia, it’s pleasing, but thin – sweet, but not scrumptious.
Back in the Loblaw’s test kitchen, when I sip on the water sweetened with aspartame or with stevia, it’s pleasing, but thin – sweet, but not scrumptious.
“That’s
the addiction,” Maria Charvat says, but consumers who want to spurn
sugar’s devilish wiles have been able to train themselves in the past.
Stevia
is derided for the anise-like residue, but aspartame also was thought
to have an aftertaste at first, and the calorie-conscious still lapped
up their Diet Coke, making it second only to Coke Classic as North
America’s top-selling soft drink.
Ms. Charvat and her team believe that people will do the same with stevia, if they can get the formula right.
And
in focus groups, she says, consumers are clear: They don’t want
ingredient lists filled with unpronounceable words, but they do want all
the pleasure of sugar with no consequences (or calories).
It
certainly sounds like the Holy Grail, as Cargill’s Mr. Brooks put it.
Or maybe the food companies are chasing a unicorn, a sweet fiction.
It
would be far better to sell consumers on the truth: that they have to
eat less stuff that tastes like candy and grab some Brussels sprouts.
But
that would require upending the message on which all marketing is based
– and admitting that people can’t have everything they want.
Susan
Krashinsky covers advertising and marketing for The Globe and Mail’s
Report on Business. She wrote this story with files from Globe Life
health reporter Carly Weeks.
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