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Type: Article
Savory Applications
How LTO Flavors Can Meet Consumer Expectations for Convenience, Nutrition & Taste in Snack Category
Kalsec shares key market research driving consumer demand in the evolving snack market with a focus on LTO offerings.
Ingredients
Flavor Bites: Methyl Cyclopentenolone
Found widely in nature, methyl cyclopentenolone features a cooked sugar, maple syruplike, profile that can be used in high levels in brown and nut flavors.
Sweet Applications
Flavor Bites: Anisyl Alcohol
Found naturally in Tahitian vanilla beans, the ingredient is an interesting floral note that can be used in a variety of brown, fruit and dairy flavor applications.
Ingredients
Organoleptic Characteristics of Flavor Materials
This month's column features organoleptic discussions on 2-Butanone, Ethyl levulinate, Methyl salicylate and more.
Ingredients
Organoleptic Characteristics of Flavor Materials
This month's column features organoleptic discussions on tarragon oil, orange oil, oakmoss absolute, coffee extract espresso, black tea and more.
Ingredients
Organoleptic Characteristics of Flavor Materials September 2018
This month’s column features discussions on chamomile oil blue, rose absolute, seaweed absolute, cuminaldehyde, ethyl-3-methyl 2-oxo-pentanoate and more.
Beverage
Flavor Bites: Anethole
Outside aniseed categories this chemical can be surprisingly useful in a wide range of flavors at much lower levels of addition, adding subtle nuances that are not remotely recognizable as aniseed.
Ingredients
Flavor Bites: trans-2 Hexenol
Featuring a distinct apple characteristic, the ingredient provides a green profile without a trace of the usual leafy notes and contributes to a finished flavor's authenticity.
Ingredients
Flavor Bites: Ethyl phenyl acetate
Though it shines in honey flavors, enhancing clove and bright floral notes, ethyl phenyl acetate’s soft profile in comparison to its fellow esters offers a wide range of applications, including hydrolyzed vegetable protein, green tea and more.
Ingredients
Organoleptic Characteristics of Rue Oil, Cardamom Oil, Furfuryl Thioacetate and More
This month’s column discusses rue oil, cardamom oil, furfuryl thioacetate and more.
Ingredients
Organoleptic Characteristics of Flavor Materials: August 2016
This month's issue features organoleptic discussions on espresso coffee distillate organic, d-Tridecalactone, Roastarome, 2-acetylfuran, 4-methyloctanoic acid, hexyl-2-methylbutyrate, 2-decenal, 2-acetylpyrazine, guaiacol, magnolia flower oil and more
Ingredients
The Nutmeg Conundrum
Why are nutmeg prices running counter to the rest of the essential oil market?
Ingredients
The Spice Trail: Nutmeg
Origins, cultivation and processing. Nutmeg and its sister spice, mace, come from the nutmeg tree (Myristica fragrans). This evergreen tree is native to the Molucca (or Banda) Islands in East Indonesia — known as the “Spice Islands” — and elsewhere in Indonesia.
Regulatory & Research
One on One: Tosla Nutricosmetics Discusses Collagen Masking Technology
The company’s chief innovation officer sheds light on the tech designed to achieve maximum palatability.
Beverage
Leveraging Mint Beverages to Meet Consumer Positive Nutrition Demands
How to capitalize on consumers seeking beverages that align with their personal wellness goals, while also providing exciting taste experiences.
Ingredients
Flavorist Panel Evaluates
cis
-4-Heptenal, Peanut kiiNote,
cis
-3-Hexenyl Acetate and Other Materials
Principal flavorist Cyndie Lipka's panel evaluates 10 materials
Ingredients
Honeysuckle in Perfumery and Cosmetics
Honeysuckle belongs to the family of floral odors like lilac and lily of the valley for which there are no natural materials available and are considered important in perfumery. In the past honeysuckle absolute produced commercially in small quantities was used in deluxe fragrances. The advent of aromatic chemicals enabled the perfumer to develop synthetic compounds, which are now used in perfumery.
Ingredients
Toxins, aflatoxins, natural toxicants and antinutrients in foods.
Safety data required for food additives. To deal effectively with food additives and safety requirements for them, there must be a constructive relationship between the flavor industry and the legislators. But that is not enough. The attitudes of the more vocal members of the community have had a good deal to do with regulatory and legislative principles under which we operate. We are not going to change those principles without changing some of the underlying attitudes. To achieve this, some new perspectives will be necessary.
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