Laura Reiley
CRANBURY, NJ (THE WASHINGTON POST) – Marie Wright dips four long strips of paper, the kind you’d sniff a perfume sample from Sephora, into bottles of clear liquid marked Methyl Cinnamate, Ethyl Butyrate, y-decalactone and Furaneol. She holds the four strips together and wafts them, fanlike, under her nose. Suddenly, the lab smells of strawberries.
Wright is the vice president and chief global flavourist for Archer Daniels Midland, one of the world’s largest food processors and suppliers. She’s a former perfume industry chemist who has created more than 1,000 individual flavours for major food and beverage companies, and she’s now facing one of the biggest challenges of her career.
Consumers are seduced and beguiled by flavourists without even being aware of it. Flavourists are the people who tinker with nacho cheese dust, Hot Pockets and pumpkin spice lattes. They are the tastemakers, driving consumer trends and making food craveable.
Wright and the planet’s 200 or so other flavourists are bringing their alchemy to plant-based meat. It’s the biggest craze the food industry has seen in a long time, driven by concerns about climate change, animal welfare and human health. It is still dwarfed by the USD49 billion beef industry; however, the Swiss investment firm UBS predicts growth of plant-based protein and meat alternatives will increase from USD4.6 billion in 2018 to USD85 billion by 2030.
Despite its swift ascent, plant-based meat is the antithesis of recent trends such as local and farm-to-table dining, representing an embrace of highly processed foods made palatable in a laboratory by technicians such as Wright.
“These are great proteins from a nutritional perspective, but plant-based presents some challenges with tastes that can be unpleasant,” Wright said.
First, there is the masking of the vegetal “green” notes in pea protein and the “beany” notes in soy, often by adding other ingredients and chemicals.
“There isn’t one magic bullet, not one molecule or extract. It tends to be common pantry items like salt, spices, molasses, honey,” Wright said. Vanilla extract is often used for masking because it is known for how it binds to a protein, rendering its own distinctive taste undetectable.
“It sacrifices itself,” she said.
She describes vegetal notes that are more about aromatics. The goal is not to remove these aromas, but to prevent them from being perceived.
“Smell and taste are closely linked in the appreciation of flavour but are independently triggered,” she said. “Taste is composed of the taste sensations perceived in the mouth and odour compounds perceived by the receptors in the nose linked to the olfactory lobe.”
Then comes the insertion of the mineral, musky, charry, “umami” flavours that we associate with meat. Wright huddles with fellow flavourist Ken Kraut, who works only on the savoury side. They swirl little plastic cups of clear liquid, sniffing and tasting. Too yeasty, they say. They want a little less soy and a bit more umami – that elusive, savoury monosodium glutamate flavour. Mushrooms give that umami flavour, as does Japanese green tea. Meat’s mineralised note can be mimicked by concentrated extracts of broccoli and spinach.
They’ve got a deadline. A big client is coming in the following week to test blended veggie-chicken meatballs, a plant-based burger and a few other proprietary products. Everyone is launching a plant-based burger these days, and as quickly as possible.
“They want to do it in anywhere from six weeks to three months – there’s an urgency, a panic,” Wright said. “Usually, a product is a year to 18 months to complete.”
Wright says an ordinary product – a snack bar or a protein drink – might cost a client from USD10,000 to USD200,000 to have ADM formulate a recipe, which the company can then produce in its own processing facilities. Plant-based meat is different.
“This whole area is expensive because it’s fairly high-tech, with a lot of dollars involved in research,” she said. “Something like this, you’re talking USD100,000 to USD1 million.”
There’s a lot of heavy lifting that goes into making vegan sea urchins out of soy and vegetable oils or sausage links out of lupin beans, a yellow and occasionally bitter legume. The world is agog at plant-based meats that taste uncannily like the real thing, but nutritionists warn that if companies increasingly rely on chemists to insert desirable flavours into food, consumers might temper their enthusiasm for this new raft of better-living-through-science processed foods.
With their pea protein isolates, their gum arabic and yeast extracts, these new foods are the opposite of whole foods, the obverse of transparent sourcing. Some nutritionists and food industry leaders are wondering whether the food system is being led astray by foods that have flavour and appeal inserted industrially.
“It doesn’t resemble the foods from which it came; it has a vast numbers of ingredients. It fully meets the definition of ultra-processed food,” said author Marion Nestle, a nutrition professor at New York University, about these new plant-based meats. “Are flavourists complicit? They always have been. These are industrially produced food to which flavours and textures and colours are added so it’s attractive. What they do is cosmetics.”
Back at the lab, Wright and team nudge the burger formula, trying to achieve the aroma and flavours resulting from the Maillard reaction, a chemical process between amino acids and sugars that gives caramelised meat its distinctive seared flavour.
They dry liquids in a spray dryer, tiny droplets sent through a hot chamber in a stainless-steel box, the water driven off to produce powders. They consider the protein, the flavourings and the binders, looking for a mineral, bloody note and seeking appealing top notes that mimic seared sirloin. They go beyond sweetness, sourness, saltiness, bitterness and umami, reaching for a lesser-known “sixth taste” sensation that the Japanese call kokumi, which translates as something like “heartiness” or “mouthfulness”.
Then they take their thoughts into the kitchen.
John Stephanian, ADM’s culinary director, went to culinary school but considers himself a culinologist, a job where the culinary arts and the science of food meet. He’s plating the plant-based burgers as the flavourists arrive, deep ruddy patties with charry grill marks, tucked onto glossy brioche buns with delicate Parmesan crisps. Wright tastes, appraising. How is the chew? Is it meaty enough?
Wright grew up east of London and studied chemistry at King’s College London. She worked in Europe for years, moved to New Jersey and commuted back and forth to South America to set up flavour labs. Salaries for flavourists vary widely, she said, from USD50,000 to USD500,000. Flavourist is a mentoring profession, with trainees spending years as underlings in places such as ADM’s Academy of Future Flavourists programme. It takes seven to 10 years to achieve flavourist status, and 20 to be a senior flavourist, Wright said.
“Learning the materials takes three to four years. Like being a pianist, you have to practise. A trainee may do 20 to 30 versions of a flavour,” she said.
Flavourists work with beakers and magnetic stir bars. They work with gas chromatography mass spectrometry instruments that separate chemical mixtures and identify the components at a molecular level. They paint their pictures with essential oils, resinoids, concretes and absolutes, the building blocks of fragrance and flavour. But mostly, they use their noses and skills of prognostication.
Designing an average of 300 new products a year, flavourists have tens of millions of dollars riding on their senses and gut instincts about the next big thing in the food industry.
“There are so many influences from all over the world. If you’re going to hang your hat on a flavour for next year, you may be wrong,” Wright said.
It’s about reverse engineering, listening to clients’ visions while tracking trends and predicting consumer fetishes and preoccupations.
“Consumers are driving trends. Trends only used to come from high-end restaurants. Now, a lot of trends are coming from street foods,” she said. “The consumer has changed. They’re saying, ‘I’m not going to eat that, and I have a say.’ “
She points to smaller food companies such as Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods, which have pushed food giants such as Cargill, Tyson Foods, Kellogg and Smithfield Foods into a headlong race to produce signature plant-based meats.
Before the day is over, Wright checks in with a flavourist working on an energy bar flavoured with salted caramel, then with a team in the mint lab working on a gum that both cools and tingles. She tastes a nitro coffee, deciding whether it should be flavoured with Madagascar or Ugandan vanilla – the former classic and beany, the latter sweeter with a hint of milk chocolate.
And about that burger. Nondisclosure agreements prevent her from naming the company behind this plant-based burger, but the meeting is a success, the company’s team staying for two days to hash out the details.
“They liked aspects of it, and they also wanted some changes in the fat delivery. They wanted a bit more of that bloody, minerally note and more of that seared taste, as well as that melty quality you get with animal fat,” Wright said.
“A few years ago, they didn’t have to taste so fantastic, but now we can really replicate a meat product without meat,” she said.
Clients often provide nutritional and price guidelines, with the ADM team working within constraints such as calorie counts or projected retail cost. Once the formulation has been approved, the client gets the recipe, frequently having it produced and packaged by a co-manufacturing facility. Wright and her group don’t produce the finished, packaged product. They invent the formula.
With food technology and the culinary zeitgeist moving so swiftly, predicting what will resonate with consumers is tricky – even with Wright’s expanding toolbox of ingredients and food technologies.
“It’s a huge area of investment,” Wright said. “If it doesn’t taste delicious, people are not going to buy it.”