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Bringing out the salty side of sweets

Bacon in candy?
How does maple pecan buttercrunch with bacon and more pecans drizzled with milk chocolate sound? “It’s incredibly popular,” Amy Tarrant says of her Have Bacon Will Travel salty-sweet snack mix.



Tarrant, co-owner of Too Haute Cowgirls in Carbondale, Colo., says its just one of several fl avorful mixes including End of the Trail mix, which has caramel corn in white chocolate mixed with crunchy ginger, orange-spiced granola, almonds, cranberries and banana chips. Her Fistful of Fleur de Sel is a caramel corn in dark chocolate with handmade toffee and sprinkled in sea salt.

“We know people like chocolate and salt together,” says Tarrant. “Sweet and salty is addictive. People gravitate to it.” She sees a trend toward using “high end, quality ingredients and the consumers’ willingness to pay for increased quality.”

Eric Bertheau, owner of Tropical Valley Foods, agrees that more people are willing to pay for healthy alternatives. His Plattsburgh, N.Y., chocolate manufacturer launched a line of dark chocolate nuts, pretzels and dried fruits called Next by Nature and now have 13 varieties including almonds, walnuts, cashews and Brazil nuts. “This line is quickly becoming very popular,” he says.

“People are really getting in the mood for healthy snack alternatives,” he continues. “The big thing… has always been the price.”

Supermarkets want to offer some of what health food stores, like Whole Foods, offer, but previously had issues with the traditional candy buyer willing to pay the price for healthier snacks. Now though, people are accepting the higher price points because they feel it’s a good value.

Meanwhile, Next by Nature is a followup line to the company’s Next by Organic line, which is sold in high-end health stores. Although there are a number of consumers who will pay more for that proposition, Bertheau says his company wanted to go after the average consumer.

“We wanted to go beyond the hard-core health foods industry into mainstream,” he says. Where Next by Organic sells for $5.40 for a 3-oz. bag, he notes Next by Nature is a more “value-driven proposition” that can sell for 25 percent less.

“We’re all seeing the snack category enjoying tremendous growth, with eating habits shifting away from the large, sitdown meals to smaller and more frequent mini meals every few hours,” says Edmond Sanctis, co-founder and chief marketing offi cer of Sahale Snacks.

The Seattle-based company recently won the Most Innovative New Product Award, in the Salty Snacks Category at NCA’s Sweets & Snacks Expo, with its two new premium blends. The all-natural Sahale Snacks Premium Blend Maple Pecans includes pecans, walnuts, cherries and apples glazed with maple and cinnamon while the Sahale Snacks Premium Blends Pomegranate Pistachio is teamed up with pistachios, pomegranate, lemon, cherries, almonds and a hint of pepper. Each blend is in a 4-oz. re-sealable bag. They also introduced a new line of Grab & Go snacks in 1.5-oz. pouches in four fl avors: California Almonds & Sea Salt; Classic Fruit & Nut Blend; Almonds with Cranberries, Honey & Sea Salt; and Cashews with Pomegranate & Vanilla.

As sea salt increasingly becomes more popular, Natalia Wolting, communications and customer service coordinator for Endangered Species Chocolate, says there are more and more products offering it.

The Indianapolis company has extended its 3-oz. natural bar line to include a Dark Chocolate Sea Salt and Almond Bar. As one of 14 different fl avors in the natural bar line, it’s made with 72 percent cocoa and sea salt that comes from Redmond’s Trading Company’s Real Salt.

“It’s quickly becoming one of our topselling bars,” says Wolting. “Our research and feedback shows that a lot of consumers are looking for products that contain sea salt due to its health advantages, so there defi nitely is a market for it.”



“It’s an American love,” says Kirsty Ellison, vice president of sales and mar- Bringing out the salty side of sweets Candy makers turn to salt to enhance flavors, create premium products. By Carla Zanetos Scully Industry Trends keting at Seattle Chocolates, which why the company has launched several new products using sea salt. Coming this fall under the Truffl e Bar line is a Salted Almond bar, 2.5 oz. of roasted almonds and sea salt in dark chocolate selling for $3.

Then under the company’s jcoco brand, two of the six new premium bars which sell for $7.95 each, are infused with sea salt. Edamame Sea Salt is a milk chocolate bar with whole toasted edamame beans and sea salt.

“It takes an Asian delicacy, and treats it in a uniquely American way by roasting edamame like an almond and adding sea salt,” Ellison says. The Agave Quinoa Sesame, of South American infl uence, is a puffed quinoa coated with blue agave, a natural sweetener, to seal in the airy crunch mixed with sesame seeds, a dash of sea salt and Vanuatu-origin milk chocolate. Quinoa is a high protein grain.

Ellison says the jcoco brand is a result of the traveling of owner Jean Thompson who wanted “to get (fl avor) inspirations and translate them for the American palate.” Because the company cares about portion control, each bar is in an envelope containing three individually wrapped 1-oz. bars. With each purchase, a serving of healthy food is donated through food banks nationwide.

There’s always going to be a market for the sweet and salty.

“For consumers, it hits different taste buds – you get the sweetness up front and salty on the back side, which makes for a more interesting snack,” says DeMet’s Candy Co. Brand Manager Dave Persaud.

DeMet’s has launched Flipz Chocolate Mint covered Pretzels in 4-oz. stand-up pouches and 9-oz. canisters in dark chocolate. Persaud says there will be a holiday version, but they wanted this to be in the everyday line up.

The Stamford, Conn., manufacturer also has a new Turtles Sea Salt Caramel variety which adds the sea salt directly to the caramels “to give that extra salty pop,” he says. It’s available in a variety of sizes from 2.9-oz. lay down boxes to 6.4-oz. stand up boxes. “As different brands come up with more savory fl avors, we’ve seen a little bit more of an uptick (in sales) overall.”

For those who like salty pretzel bits mixed with peanut butter, Jer’s Chocolate, of Solana Beach, Calif., has added Pretzo Change-O Milk Chocolate Peanut Butter Bars to its line.

Mars Chocolate North America has several new products in this category including, Snickers Bites, unwrapped, bite-sized cubes that are a miniature version of the Snickers Bar, and run $1.49 for 2.8-oz. bags and $2.99 for 8-oz. stand-up pouches. “They’re ideal for consumers looking for the full taste experience of a Snickers Bar in a smaller portion, and they’re perfect for snacking, sharing, or most any occasion,” says Tim Quinn, vice president of trade development for Mars Chocolate North America.

For Halloween, there will be Snickers Brand Peanut Butter Pumpkins, combining roasted peanuts, caramel and milk chocolate with rich, creamy peanut butter in a festive pumpkin shape, available in 1.1-oz. size for $0.79-$0.99 and 2-to-Go (2.2 oz., $1-$1.49). Snickers Fun Size Variety Large Bag includes three fl avors: Snickers Original, Almond and Peanut Butter Squared Bars, selling at 18.51- oz. for $4.99-$5.99. Finally, Peanut & Peanut Butter Lovers Variety Bag (50 pieces), full of Snickers and M&M’S brands, this new variety comes with 11 percent more of the Halloween favorites consumers love. (SRP $7.99-$8.99, 28.02 oz.)

For Christmas, DeMet’s is releasing Flipz Gingerbread covered Pretzels and Flipz Peppermint covered Pretzels “which we think will be a big seller because most people associate ginger with the holidays,” Persaud says.

Source by www.candyindustry.com
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