Gourmet News • November 2021

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FEATURED PRODUCT:

FEATURED PRODUCT:

EDITOR’S PICKS:

Darrell Lea

Star Fine Foods

Health-Ade

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SEE PAGE 20

SEE PAGE 24

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T H E

B U S I N E S S

VOLUME 86 • NUMBER 11 NOVEMBER 2021 • $7.00 • Ginger’s BreadBoys Cookie Kits Help Make Home-Cooked Memories Year Round PAGE 6

• ‘Father of Modern Plastic’ Baekeland and the Legacy of His Historic Invention PAGE 8

• Danimer Scientific Earmarks Grant to Expand Research of HOSO in Plastic Alternative PAGE 8

• Innovation, Millennials Drive Changes, Gains in Frozen Seafood Market PAGE 10

• Florida Crystals Sugar Reveals Rebrand, Commitment to Sustainability, Transparency PAGE 12

• Michigan State Students Create Award-Winning Red Dagger Hot Sauce Bottle PAGE 14

N E W S P A P E R

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• Sweet Gifts PAGES 22 & 23

• Editor’s Picks PAGE 24

• Advertiser Index PAGE 26

T H E

G O U R M E T

I N D U S T R Y

LALA Brand Sweetens U.S. Market With Authentic Hispanic Desserts BY A.J. FLICK

With more than 62 million U.S. residents having Hispanic roots, the opportunities to bring familiar and favorite tastes expands with the population. This summer, LALA brand introduced fresh dairy products with the authentic taste of Mexico. Among the products were three flavors of dessert yogurt smoothies, and two flavors of fruit and crema desserts. “We were founded over six decades ago in La Laguna, Mexico,” said Matthew Okeson, head of Texas-based LALA U.S. Inc.’s innovation team. “LALA coming from La Laguna, which is a big

This time of year, it’s a sweet Italian tradition to give panettone – a domed, sweet, rich confection that’s more like a fruity bread than cake – as a gift. “Panettone is very specific to a time of year from November to January or February, the coldest months of

Innovation Often Misunderstood, Expert Says

dairy-producing region in Mexico.” LALA is a familiar brand in Mexico, primarily known for its milk products. The company expanded into the U.S. market with drinkable yogurts in the 2000s, which were instantly popular, and has been expanding since then. “In talking to our Hispanic consumers, they’re looking for comfort and nostalgia,” Okeson said. “Here in the United States, it can be a cultural gateway for consumers, to

help tie them back to their Hispanic heritage through our brand.” The Postres Auténticos yogurt smoothies line includes one of the most popular tastes in Hispanic desserts drawn from the decadent milk cakes called tres leches. “It’s indulgent and sweet,” Okeson said. “It should remind consumers of the

the year,” said Marco Mazzacani, director of business development for Antiqui Sapori Dell’Etna, maker of Pistì pastries. “But now there are a lot of chefs and pastry chefs who are trying to present and serve panettone, for example, with ice cream, to convince people to eat panettone for the

rest of the year.” Pistì’s artisan panettone is made with pistachio green grain dough mixed with dried fruits or pistachio cream between layers and topped with pistachios and other nuts, sugar, dark chocolate glaze or white chocolate. “It’s not a light sweet,” Mazzacani noted. Founded 20 years ago by two young entrepreneurs, Nino

There’s one big problem getting in the way of innovation. “Nobody knows what it means anymore,” said Natalie Taake, senior innovation manager for Kroger. “Businesses are always so focused on strategy, tactics and roadmaps. Innovation ends up feeling like a really fluffy word.” Taake spoke on “How to Prevent Innovation” at the fall summit for My Private Label, which was rebranded as the Retail Brands Institute during the conference. “No organization is actively trying to prevent innovation,” Taake said. “But innovation gets overlooked as a powerful weapon. Over time, innovation gets deprioritized as lip service, a fluffy, overused word.” Taake discussed “five simple steps on how innovation dies in an organization.” “Step 1, trying to make everybody happy,” she said. “By failing to realize the one-size-fits-all solution is no longer relevant in a fragmented market, we miss the opportunity to meet consumers’ individualized needs by dumbing things down, trying to make

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Pistì Shares Italy’s Sweet Traditions of Pistachio Delicacies With the World BY A.J. FLICK

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F O R

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BY A.J. FLICK

World Leaders Commit to Tackling Hunger, Climate Change, Biodiversity Loss in Historic Global Meeting In a historic global meeting, more than 150 countries made commitments to transform their food systems, while championing greater participation and equity – especially amongst farmers, women, youths and indigenous groups. The first UN Food Systems Summit in September convened world leaders in an effort to spur national and regional action to deliver the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals through transforming food systems. Among the goals for 2030

are zero hunger, zero poverty, gender equality and climate action. Following from the latest IPCC report, which raised a “code red” for human-driven global heating, the U.S. administration, one of the world’s major agricultural producers, pledged $10 billion over five years to address climate change and help feed those most vulnerable without exhausting natural resources. Half of these funds will be invested domestically in “recognition that all countries, even those

that produce a surplus of food, must take steps to improve nutrition and adapt their food systems to a changing climate.” Food systems transformations are key in supporting the three billion people globally who are malnourished and protecting the resource base on which global livelihoods rely. The Summit, called by the UN secretary-general in 2019 to accelerate global progress by leveraging the interconnected importance of food systems, featured commitments from more

than 85 heads of state around the world. The COVID-19 pandemic increased the number of people living in poverty in 2020 by up to 124 million people, and it is projected that around 600 million people will still live in poverty by 2030. Partly due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the prevalence of undernourishment increased to around 9.9 percent in 2020, with estimates of hungry people Continued on PAGE 16


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