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Current Position:Home » News » Condiments & Ingredients » Ingredients » Topic

Rein in costs when reducing sodium

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2013-12-03  Views: 25
Core Tip: Reducing salt levels in meat products probably would be easier if formulators did not have to worry about rising ingredient costs.
Reducing salt levels in meat products probably would be easier if formulators did not have to worry about rising ingredient costs.

“Salt is very abundant and very easy to come by,” said Jim Lamkey, senior principal scientist for the technical services group of Spicetec Flavors & Seasonings, but he added many replacement ingredients are reasonable in price.

“They’re not extravagantly more expensive, but they are going to be higher in cost than what salt is,” he said.

Taking cost into account, ingredient suppliers are offering ways to save on the use of flavor-enhancing and flavor-masking ingredients.

Camlow P, an ingredient based on white button mushrooms grown in Europe, may enhance flavors of ingredients like oregano, thyme and paprika, said Mike Kagan, technical specialist for Cambrian, Oakville, Ont.

“Any spice that generally would be playing in the background,” he said. “Camlow P rounds the flavor out.”

Cost-savings may be achieved since not as large an amount of flavor-enhancing ingredients is needed, he said. In deli meat, such as air-dried pepperoni, the inclusion of Camlow P at 0.15% may lead to a sodium reduction of 25 percent. Camlow P also may bring out flavor in such products as rosemary oven-roasted turkey or Tuscany sun-dried tomato turkey, Kagan said.

Camlow P adds umami taste and may be labeled as natural flavor. For simple label benefits, it may replace such ingredients as autolyzed yeast extract, I+G and monosodium glutamate (MSG).

Cost in use for Camlow P is similar to cost in use for MSG, Kagan said. MSG may cost $1.10 to $1.15 a lb. When used at a 6 percent dose, cost in use comes out to 3 cents to 4 cents a lb. of product, he said. Camlow P may cost $14 to $18 a lb. When used at a 0.2 percent dose, cost in use comes out to about 3c per lb. of product.

DSM, Heerlen, The Netherlands, offers Multirome LS, which is more concentrated than traditional yeast extract-based flavors and therefore may be used in lower doses, according to the company.

“As Multirome LS is not a direct salt replacer, it is difficult to compare its cost in use with that of salt,” DSM said. “As a taste ingredient, it can help to significantly reduce sodium in a range of savory products. It also boosts the intensity of meat flavors and adds a lingering effect to enhance existing tastes.”

Nu-Tek Salt advanced formula potassium chloride may eliminate the cost of flavor enhancers completely. Traditionally companies have used potassium chloride and flavor-masking agents to replace sodium chloride in meat products, said Don Mower, president and chief operating officer of Nu-Tek Salt, LLC, Minnetonka, Minn.

“The resulting sodium reduction is typically low, and the addition of expensive flavor maskers doesn’t make it cost-effective,” he said.

The patented technology of Nu-Tek Salt minimizes the bitter taste and metallic notes generally found in traditional potassium chloride-based products, he said.

“The familiar flavor of processed meats isn’t affected,” Mower said. “There is minimal impact on formulation and (it eliminates) the need for costly flavor maskers. Additionally, since Nu-Tek Salt advanced formula potassium chloride can be used across a broad range of processed meats, it considerably minimizes R.&D. time and resources.”

Spicetec Flavors & Seasonings, a business of Omaha-based ConAgra Foods, Inc., takes a three-prong approach to removing sodium in meat products, Dr. Lamkey said.

For the first prong, the objective is to replace the functional component of salt. Potassium chloride supplies similar functionality to sodium chloride when it comes to moisture retention and texture, but potassium chloride also may bring a bitter taste, Dr. Lamkey said. The second prong is to mask any bitterness that arises from the addition of potassium. Flavors that have a sweet component to them often are added to mask that bitterness.

For the third prong, Spicetec Flavors & Seasonings will build back the flavor that was lost when sodium was reduced, he said. The added flavors will enhance existing flavors in pork, beef or poultry and create a well-rounded eating experience.

Replacing 10 percent to 15 percent of sodium in a meat product may require only a few alterations, Dr. Lamkey said. If a product has a complex flavor, such as a heat flavor in Buffalo-style chicken, consumers may not notice small changes in sodium, he said. They are more likely to notice small changes in products that do not have a complex flavor such as turkey deli breast.

Innophos, Inc., Cranbury, NJ, offers Curavis So-Lo 93, a phosphate blend containing a mix of potassium and sodium pyrophosphate that has been shown to achieve good functionality and appearance in reduced sodium processed meat and poultry applications. Curavis So-Lo has 93 percent less sodium than standard sodium phosphates, along with binding qualities and solubility.

Sodium reduction in meat product accompaniments also is possible. San Francisco-based Kikkoman Sales USA, Inc. made that evident at its booth during the Institute of Food Technologists’ annual meeting and food exposition in Chicago in July.

Kikkoman natural flavor enhancer-PY was used in the bread of an Italian beef sandwich with au jus to amplify umami and reduce salt by up to 30 percent. Kikkoman dehydrated less sodium PTN soy sauce, which contains 45 percent less sodium than regular soy sauce, was featured in the dry rub on the beef.

Breadings on meat products are another opportunity for sodium reduction. Using Soda-Lo salt microspheres from London-based Tate & Lyle, PLC may reduce the sodium in breadings by 40 percent.

Sodium reduction in general may remain an industry hot topic for a few years. The global sodium reduction ingredients market is expected to reach $1,006.6 million by 2018 through a compound annual growth rate of 11 percent, according to Dallas-based MarketsandMarkets.

 
 
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