Six start-ups rethinking cocoa for alt choc innovation
Itâs not a good time to be a chocolate manufacturer. For one, recording-breaking cocoa prices continue to plague the sector – not so long ago, cocoa was fetching an eyewatering $10,760 (âŹ10,039) per metric tonne.
And thatâs not all. Cocoa is also on the European Unionâs hitlist of deforestation-risk commodities, as a significant driver of forest loss in primary producing countries CĂŽte dâIvoire and Ghana.
Along with soy, beef, palm oil, wood, coffee and rubber, cocoa will soon come under the European Deforestation Regulationâ (EUDR) when itâs enforced in December this year. Since the new law affects all companies importing cocoa into the bloc, all major European chocolate makers will be impacted.
Deforestation aside, other irresponsible practices hang heavy on the sector. Forced labour has long been associated with cocoa production, contributing to even lower sustainability credentials.
Amid soaring prices, deforestation regulations, and unsustainable practices, chocolate makers may well be tempted to give cocoa alternatives a try. Which cocoa-free (or âtree-freeâ) innovations are promising to do everything cocoa can, and more?
We round up six start-ups rethinking cocoa with sustainability in mind.
Planet A Foods taps oats and sunflower seedsâWho would have thought that store-cupboard ingredients oats and sunflower seeds could be transformed into a cocoa-free chocolate?
In Germany, brother-sister duo Dr Maximilian and Sara Marquart are doing just that, with the aim of easing pressures on cocoa supply chains. Their start-up Planet A Foods already has a cocoa-free concentrate and butter on the market, which when used together creates cocoa-free
At least 20% of Planet A Foods’ alt chocolate is made from oats and sunflower seeds. GettyImages/Nes chocolate.
Sold under the ChoVivia brand, the final product is made with a minimum of 20% oats and sunflower seeds, âsustainableâ plant-based fats, sugar, and milk powder (or oat flour for the vegan version). The co-founders describe ChoViva as having a âdelicious aromaâ and âluxurious snapâ â all with 90% less CO2 emissions than conventional chocolate.
âWe ferment and roast oats in a special way,â Dr Marquart told FoodNavigator in an interviewâ. âThatâs a proprietary technology that my sister Sara developed. She has developed technology that converts oats into something that tastes like cocoa.â
Planet A Foods is invested in local processing, fermentation and roasting â meaning it all takes place at its own facilities, close to its customers.
The start-upâs ChoViva is already on the market in Germany, where shoppers can find it incorporated into biscuits, peanut butter cups, granola products, and even packets of Lindt vegan âchocolateâ.
Voyage Foodsâ replaces cocoa with upcycled grape seedsâOn the other side of the pond, Voyage Foods has also been rethinking chocolate with different raw materials in mind.
Although the US-based start-up doesnât limit itself to the chocolate category â Voyage Foods also makes coffee-free coffee and nut-free spread â it is invested in making cocoa-and dairy-free âmilkâ and semi-sweet chocolate products.
Grape seeds can be upcycled post-harvest and developed into a chocolate alternative. GettyImages/DimijanaThe companyâs cocoa-free chocolate uses upcycled grape seeds from postharvest wine production, which it combines with vegetable oil, cane sugar, sunflower protein flour, natural flavours, sunflower lecithin and salt.
For example, the companyâs cocoa-free chocolate replaces cocoa seeds with upcycled grape seeds from postharvest wine production that are combined with vegetable oil, cane sugar, sunflower protein flour, natural flavours, sunflower lecithin and salt.
âItâs all very clean label,â co-founder and CEO Adam Maxwell told our sister publication FoodNavigator-USA.â âThese are innocuous ingredients, whole ingredients that people understandâŠbut what is special about Voyage is really the transformation of these low or no value materials.â
As to Voyage Foodsâ sustainability credentials, according to ESG consumption firm Sphera, the companyâs chocolate alternatives use 99% less blue water, generate 81-84% less greenhouse gases, and are associated with 68-88% fewer greenhouse gas emissions from land use change.
In big news for the start-up, agrifood major Cargill recently announced a new commercial partnership with Voyage Foodsâ to produce alternatives to cocoa-based products and nut spreads without using cocoa, peanuts or hazelnuts.
The âbest wayâ to solve human and environmental health challenges through food is to supply the worldâs food brands and manufacturers with Voyage Foodsâ ingredients, said Maxwell. âPartnering with CargillâŠis the perfect way to scale these solutions globally to offer food manufacturers the ability to integrate cocoa-free confectionery and spreads produced with no nut or dairy allergens used in the recipe formulation, into their portfolios.â
Nukoko makes cocoa-free chocolate from faba beansâUnlike some alt choc innovators who rely on multiple ingredients to recreate cocoa, UK-based start-up Nukokoâ is focused on one raw material â and an unlikely one at that.
The faba bean â otherwise known as fava or broad bean â is widely cultivated in Europe and the UK. Thatâs attractive to Nukoko, since it automatically means itâs free from tropical deforestation and significant transport emissions.
Nukoko was founded by Kit Tomlinson, Dr David Salt, and Ross Newton. Image credit: NukokoFaba could also be considered something of a ârelativeâ to cocoa, since like cocoa beans, faba contains a seed storage protein known as vicilin.
âWhen that vicilin is broken down, and the peptides roasted, you get chocolatey flavours,â explained plant scientist and Nukoko co-founder Dr David Saltâ at Forward Foodingâs food tech event in London.
Dr Salt, who set up Nukoko alongside co-founders Ross Newton and Kit Tomlinson, believes that by using a controlled fermentation and drying process, before being roasted and ground into powder, the start-up can create a product with the potential to be cheaper than mass market chocolate when produced at scale.
Indeed, thatâs Nukokoâs target market. Instead of competing with high-end chocolate, the start-up wants to focus solely on supplying its cocoa-free offerings to makers of bulk, product chocolate.
Although Nukoko is starting its journey with faba, the bean is not the only one with alt chocolate potential, Dr Salt revealed. âWeâve looked at the gene sequences of a whole bunch of beans and compared the vicilin in them. I would say that faba is definitely not the beginning or end of this story.â
Celleste Bio makes âtree-freeâ cocoa butter and powder âCell cultivation is not new to the food sector. The concept of lab-grown meat or cell-based dairy is becoming increasingly commonplace on the food tech scene, but what about cell cultivated cocoa?
Unlike many alternative cocoa creations, cell cultivated cocoa is not technically cocoa-free. In Israel, Celleste Bio is developing tree-free, real
Celleste Bio is using just one or two cooca beans to cultivated cocoa butter and powder. GettyImages/Inna Tarasenko100% cocoa butter and powder, and for that reason, contends it shouldnât be considered an âalternativeâ.
To make cultivated cocoa butter and powder, the start-up takes a couple of beans from a cocoa pod, extracts the cells responsible for producing cocoa, and grows them with water, sugar and vitamins for nourishment.
With just those one or two beans, a continuous cycle can be created that repeats itself in a controlled setting, a company spokesperson explained. No additional beans are required, and no trees need be cut down.
According to Celleste Bioâs calculations, just one cell and one bioreactor can replace 10,000 square-metres of cocoa plantations and yield two tonnes of cocoa per year â the equivalent of 1,736 trees which take between four and seven years to grow.
The company is leveraging artificial intelligence computation to enhance cocoa customisation for chocolate manufacturersâ end-product specifications to optimise consistency and supply. The start-up also suspects that AI will help reduce costs related to formulation trials and waste.
âThe process mimics the natural habitat of cocoa farming without the unpredictability, volatility and compromises,â we were told.
Celleste Bio is already turning heads, attracting investment from snacks and confectionery major MondelÄz International. The start-up has the potential to improve sustainability and reduce the cost of cocoa, Richie Gray, global head of MondelÄzâs corporate venture arm SnackFutures Ventures, told FoodNavigatorâ. âWeâll continue to monitor and work in the regulatory landscape associated with that one.â
Foreverland champions forgotten crops and locally sourced ingredientsâThe Mediterranean is not known for its chocolate production, but Southern Italian start-up Foreverland is working hard to change this image.
The companyâs four founders â Massimo Sabatini, Giuseppe DâAlessandro,
Foreverland is working with carob, considered a forgotten crop in Europe. GettyIages/kaanates Riccardo Bottiroli, and Massimo Brochetta â are on a mission to overcome the âdarker sideâ of chocolate. âChocolate, one of the worldâs most beloved treats, often conceals a darker side to its production,â said CTO Bottiroli. Not only is the cocoa industry responsible for much deforestation but is also linked to forced labour.
Foreverland is rethinking chocolate with a focus on forgotten crops, upcycled food and locally sourced ingredients. The start-upâs cocoa-free chocolate products, which it markets under the name Freecao, is made from forgotten crop carob alongside a blend of different grains, sugar and vegetable fats.
âWeâve used a combination of traditional and patented innovative technologies to achieve the taste and texture of chocolate without cocoa.â
Compared to conventional chocolate, it boasts a significantly lower environmental footprint â using 90% less water and being associated with 80% fewer CO2 emissions.
Win-Win turns to carob and barley for alt choc creationsâIt was a warm day when FoodNavigator visited Win-Win on a site visit last year. Sun was streaming through the windows of the London-based start-upâs trendy East End office space, but without any threat of melting its cocoa-free innovations; the R&D lab is strategically located in the basement.
Thatâs where Win-Winâs head of chocolate Jon Hogan has full reign.
Win-Win is rethinking chocolate in its London-based R&D lab. Image credit: FoodNavigatorFounded in 2020 by Arhum Pak and Dr Johnny Drain, Win-Win makes cocoa-free chocolate alternatives made from barley and carob â but with conventional chocolate making equipment. Once these raw materials are fermented, the processing stage begins. âWe mix these raw materials with fat and sugar,â Hogan explained, surrounded by mixers and chocolate moulds.
In June last year, the start-up was predominantly using Ghanian shea butter as its fat of choice,â but was continuing to experiment with a variety of ingredients. On the day we visited the lab, and algae-based fat was being tested.
Once the ingredients are combined, Hogan sets about refining their particles for the âbest flavour releaseâ. The chocolate is then tempered for snap and âmeltabilityâ, co-founder Dr Drain explained. âYou want it to melt at body temperature.â
Concerning taste and flavour, Win-Win is confident itâs achieved the archetypal bitterness associated with dark chocolate, as well as its âfruity acidityâ. âWe have red berries, prunes, notes of butterscotch in the long finish and maltiness coming through from the barley,â Dr Drain told FoodNavigatorâ. âItâs a flavour profile that is very similar to that of premium dark chocolate: lots of acidity, brightness, complexity, and bitterness.â
Earlier this year, Win-Win underwent a subtle name change (Win-Win was previously branded WNWN, standing for âwaste not, want notâ). Under this new trade name, the start-up sells its cocoa-free chocolate alternative in wholesale packs to bakeries, foodservice operators, and the confectionery sector.