Fiber is the New Protein. That Has Implications for Flavor and Product Development.

Consumers are already DIY-ing multifunctional recipes on TikTok, combining fiber with beauty-adjacent ingredients like collagen and biotin.
Consumers are already DIY-ing multifunctional recipes on TikTok, combining fiber with beauty-adjacent ingredients like collagen and biotin.
Maridav at Adobe Stock

For the last decade, protein has enjoyed superhero status in the nutrition world. According to Mintel’s GNPDa, the number of global food and drink products featuring high or added protein claims has doubled over the past 10 years. In contrast, fiber claims have remained relatively flat, despite a significant global fiber gap where most people consume far less than the recommended 25–30 g per day.

To enhance the product innovation process, a growing number of companies are introducing a new generation of dietary fibers that deliver a dual advantage—combining clinically supported health benefits for consumers with improved sensory performance and formulation flexibility for developers.

He explains that advanced taste-modulation technologies are helping overcome the sensory challenges associated with fiber fortification by improving overall flavor balance. These systems include bitterness masking solutions that work at the receptor level to reduce perceived intensity, sweetness enhancers that boost natural sweetness without adding sugar, and top-note rebalancing approaches that restore aroma and brightness often muted by fiber-rich formulations. Together, they enable better-tasting, more appealing products without compromising nutritional goals.

Suppliers are also trying to solve the challenge at the source. For instance, Roquette’s Nutralys Pea 850F is a pea protein isolate designed to eliminate the vegetal off-notes that have traditionally limited plant-based product appeal, aligning with surging demand for high-protein diets and functional beverages.

Late-onset bitterness: Insoluble fibers like cereal brans and fruit peels often introduce bitterness and astringency that emerge late and linger in the aftertaste.

Aroma "scalping": Some fibers can strip volatile compounds, muting delicate fruit flavors and brightness.

Textural misidentification: Astringency is often misidentified as bitterness; however, it is a tactile phenomenon characterized by chalkiness and mouth-drying.

Ingredient selection: Utilize next-generation isolates designed to eliminate vegetal off-notes at the start rather than relying solely on masking.

Masking systems: For existing vegetal notes, use blocker-masking technologies specifically calibrated for earthy tonalities and temporal profiling tool to harmonize sweetness from the early to late-stage finish.

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