Ethnic flavors
There is obviously a lot of overlap between this category and spices. When it comes to ethnic cuisine, spices are often as important as main ingredients and techniques. As noted above, Middle Eastern and Asian, especially Korean, flavors are trending.
“Today’s consumers are a diverse and growing multicultural mix of individuals,” says Catherine Armstrong, brand ambassador for Comax Flavors (www.comaxflavors.com). “Multicultural consumers and the younger generation are driving new flavor profiles. We continue to see influences from Asia and the Middle East, and more recently from Cuba and Brazil.” In response, Comax has created flavor profiles for horchata, sriracha maple, toasted coconut flan, za’atar and brigadeiro.
Bell Flavors & Fragrances (www.bellff.com) has developed an entire line of Middle Eastern flavors that has followed its Spark trends program, says Chris Warsow, corporate executive chef. “The line was developed as customer interest in the cuisine grows. The cuisine relies heavily on legumes, grains and vegetables prepared in refreshing and light ways,” he says.
“High-quality proteins with very flavorful preparations are also appealing to diners,” he adds. Spices and flavors in that line include za’atar, berbere, pomegranate molasses, loomi lime, sumac, preserved lemon and hibiscus.
Edlong, which specializes in dairy flavors, has developed ways to incorporate innovative ethnic flavors into dairy-based foods and sauces.
“Peruvian cuisine has been called the original fusion cuisine as its influences are Spanish, Italian, Japanese, Chinese and recently French,” says Beth Warren, Edlong’s chief commercial officer.
Edlong has come up with a version of papa a la huancaína, a boiled yellow potato salad with a spicy, creamy sauce, that pairs aji Amarillo, which Warren calls Peru’s “star ingredient,” with Edlong’s all-natural heavy cream-type flavor.
Certain challenges are involved in maintaining a reliable supply of flavor components from remote or undeveloped regions of the world.
“The biggest challenge is getting farmers or their local manufacturing partners to abide by global regulatory and quality management standards,” says Wilkes of Blue Pacific Flavors. “This is a barrier for many companies, and requires a significant investment depending on the region and the degree of remote sourcing of the raw materials. “Many companies have limited capital resources to expand their manufacturing footprint, so it’s important that we address growth challenges early in our business development strategy.”