As Deneen Schaudies, registered dietician at Daily Crunch, puts it, “Consumers want healthy snacks but aren’t willing to give up taste and texture. Daily Crunch’s sprouted nuts have a whole core that provides a uniquely crunchy texture that’s extremely satisfying.”
Williams argues that walnuts “let developers formulate products that’re both nutritious and indulgent.” Respondents to a 2019 consumer survey may’ve cited taste as their number-one reason for consuming walnuts, she says, but 90 percent also recognized walnuts as “healthy foods” and 78 percent claimed that their health benefits “positively impacted” purchase decisions. “So with walnuts,” she concludes, “product developers don’t have to choose nutrition or indulgence. They can have both.”
For his part, Gillespie calls hazelnuts “the perfect healthy-indulgence snack-mix ingredient,” as they “check off so many boxes when it comes to consumers’ wants and needs: a crunchy texture, decadent brown-butter flavor, lots of protein, high levels of antioxidants—and in the case of our hazelnuts, sustainable growth by a cooperative of 200 family farms in Oregon.”
And that’s no longer a fringe benefit. Gillespie points to Accenture research suggesting that the pandemic intensified interest in “conscious consumption, meaning that consumers are paying more attention to where their food comes from, the provenance of ingredients and how they’re grown,” he says. The upshot: “Brands should take a close look not only at their own sustainability story, but at the environmental impact of the ingredients they choose.”
Orley has also noted rising consumer concern about ESG—environmental, social and governance—practices. In response, Daily Crunch recently committed to sourcing almonds exclusively from bee-friendly U.S. farms. Currently the only snack brand to do so, Daily Crunch also boasts Non-GMO and vegan certification, Orley says. “We strive for sustainable clean sourcing for our ingredients while also ensuring superior taste. And effective 2021, all bags are made from post-recycled plastic.”
But as important as sustainability may be, what ultimately sustains consumer interest is taste. And here, plenty of creative exploration is afoot.
“Flavor—spicy, savory, sweet, global—will continue to change the look of the nut and snack-mix aisle,” Williams predicts. Whereas sea salt and honey-roasted were boundary-pushing profiles in the past, “Today,” she says, “we’re seeing everything from salted dark chocolate to rosemary and even wasabi flavoring walnuts.”
Walnuts’ irregular surface area and “subtle nutty taste” suit them to a variety of seasonings, Williams believes. They also have what she calls “the unique ability to impart sweetness to savory products while making sweet products more savory”— a valuable skill to have at a time when sweet and savory are becoming increasingly common bedfellows.
Indeed, Gillespie says, “Innova Market Research crowned ‘flavor mashups’ the top flavor trend for 2021, and we believe it’s a trend with staying power. We started experimenting with chili-pepper hazelnuts in 2019 and have more mashup innovations in the works.” He anticipates further experimentation with global ingredients and sweet-heat combinations, too—all of which are natural for hazelnuts, whose “nutty, buttery taste complements both sweet and savory ingredients,” he says.