Aroma-added packaging aims to allure
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Aug 04, 2003 (The Christian
Science Monitor via COMTEX) -- The secret to boosting
troop morale in Iraq, say US military officials, might soon be found
inside the metallic foil of a package of beef stew. And later, similar
packages may appear on supermarket shelves. While nation building and peacekeeping are at
the top of the military's agenda in Iraq, the Army is also mounting an
effort to make soldiers' food tastier. Army studies show that soldiers are undereating
- a fact that distresses many in the Pentagon already concerned that
American troops (many of them reservists) are overworked.
Why are the doughboys refusing some of their
grub? Military officials point to taste. Many of the
Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs) served to soldiers sit in storage for as many
as three years. They are nutritionally complete and safe to eat, say
military officials, but many lose a lot of their flavor.
The military's new strategy: Embed extra aroma
into the lining of the packaging to make the food more appetizing when a
soldier tears it open. "It's our hope that it will entice them to consume
the entire ration," says Lauren Milch, a physical scientist at the US Army
SBC Command in Natick, Mass. The Army's effort is just one example of a
larger shift in how food professionals are dealing with fading flavor. For
the most part, they are finding different ways to restore and manipulate
taste, and covertly influence consumers' purchases.
Their primary tool: aroma. "There's so much
literature now on the effects of odor on consumption of commercial
products," says Ms. Milch. "There's great potential for change now in the
food industry." Studies show odor strongly affects individual
behavior. Consider a study by the Smell & Taste Treatment and Research
Foundation (STTRF) of Chicago of people dining on Italian food. Families
who ate garlic bread experienced 22 percent fewer negative interactions at
the dinner table than those who went without it. Garlic bread eaters also
experienced 8 percent more positive interactions, says STTRF president
Allen Hirsch. The vital part of the garlic bread is its aroma,
says Mr. Hirsch, because 90 percent of taste comes from smell. "They are
probably thinking of their childhood and having a nostalgic response to
the smell of the garlic bread," he says. Given the power of aroma to persuade, marketers
are making scent a more consistent part of their sales pitches. One of the
most visible examples are scratch-and-sniff labels, tiny pads of scent
that emit an aroma when activated by consumers. "If you're selling a
product, how much more intimate can you get than having it right up under
the noses of your customers," says Bob Biava, president of Driscoll Label
Co., a scratch-and-sniff label manufacturer in Fairfield, N.J.
Once consumers smell a product, they are more
likely to buy it because aroma triggers an emotional reaction - a frame of
mind more conducive to spending, say experts.
Several brands of instant coffee include aroma
that was captured during the refining process, condensed, and injected
back into the container. Many manufacturers have designed water and juice
bottles in which a special aroma can be implanted, only to be released
once the cap is removed. "We can make a chocolate drink taste much more
chocolatey while limiting the amount of sugar in the drink," says Steven
Landau, chairman of ScentSational Technologies, an olfaction-packaging
technology firm. The idea of embedding aroma in packaging is new
to most consumers. But food manufacturers have been tweaking packaging for
two decades in order to protect the purity of their product.
Twenty years ago, Tropicana discovered that its
gable-topped orange juice cartons removed or "scalped" flavor from the
juice by absorbing important chemicals. Polyethylene, the most common
plastic used in commercial products, including beverages, is a top
scalper. "After a few months of shelf life, it's
definitely removing flavor from Kool-Aid and Capri Sun," says Aaron Brody,
president of Packaging/Brody Inc., a packaging consulting firm in Duluth,
Ga. "They say the kids can't tell the difference."
Foodmakers' inability to prevent scalping,
despite the wonders of 21st century technology, is a sore point for many
packagers. "Ask someone in the flavor business, and they'll say it's the
biggest problem in the history of mankind," says Mr. Brody.
The use of aroma to compensate for scalping will
proliferate over the next few years, say experts, because the technology
has matured and foodmakers are looking for new ways to differentiate their
products. Still, the technological progress has prompted a
pressing question: Do consumers have the right to know why their food or
drink smells so good? "That's the million dollar question," says Mr.
Landau, adding that bottled-water manufacturers will probably tell
customers that their competitors have added aroma in order to tout their
product's healthier composition. But many packagers admit that invisibility is a
key reason why the technology will succeed. |
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By Noel C. Paul Staff writer of The Christian
Science Monitor (c) Copyright 2003. The Christian Science Monitor
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