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cupuacu

Blueberries, pomegranates, acai and goji are so last year.  Now there’s a new crop of superfuits ready for their close up.

I recently wrote about prickly pear (or cactus fruit), that I enjoyed in Lebanon last summer, and lychee fruit, which is a delightful grape-like fruit with a pebbly shell from China and Southeast Asia.

prickly-pear-12

Both of these fruits are in the running to be the next big superfuit.  Trouble is, once a fruit like this gets popular, it starts showing up in pills and potions (such as the Lichi Super Fruit Diet) or as extracts in fancy juices or energy drinks — and who knows how much actual fruit is inside. 

Rarely are people actually going out and eating these whole fruits.  For some of these, you need to go to the Amazon to even find them fresh.  I’m all in favor of people getting excited about eating more fruit — and if the superfruit phenomenon does the trick — then that’s great.  But  has the exotic fruit trend gotten out of hand?  

Are we overlooking apples and other homegrown fruits to get just a small spoonful of pulp that was squeezed from a  mysterious  fruit from the rainforest?  Are we drinking gallons of pricey high antioxidant juices from the Amazon and ignoring whole fruit?

It wasn’t that long ago that I wrote about the next big superfuits, but now there are even more new ones on the scene and a lot more products that boast about these exotic fruits on the label.  Here are some of the most popular:

Cupuacu

A sweet cousin to the cacao tree (where we get chocolate).  Typically grown in Brazil, cupaucu has been dubbed a “pharmacy in a fruit.”   [photo credit:   cupuacu-fruit on flickr].  One of the latest products to add a squirt of cupuacu is Musselman’s applesauce.

cupuacu stack

musselman's cupuacu

Maqui Berries

A deep purple berry native to South America, often sold as supplements or blended in mail-order superjuices. Claims to have massive amounts of antioxidants.  [photo credit:  sunfood  on flickr]

maqui berry

maqui berry powder

Guarana

A fruit from a shrub native to Brazil and Venezuela.  Most commonly used as a stimulant (similar to caffeine), rather than a flavor.  That’s why you’ll see guarana used in lots of energy drinks and nutrition bars. [photo credit:  amberbrasil on flickr]

Guarana-ambevbrasil

 guarana energy drink

Guava

A Brazilian fruit from an evergreen shrub.  The fruit is creamy in texture with a rind that softens when ripe. [photo credit:   larique on flickr]

guava

guava energy

Yumberry

The nickname of the Yang-mi fruit that is mainly cultivated in the subtropical region of southeast China, with evidence dating it back to 6,000 years ago.    [photo credit:  jeremy!  on flickr]

yumberry

yumberry sobe

Baobab

A tart African fruit that’s sometimes referred to as ”monkey bread.”   Baobab is one of the latest flavors of Pepsi in Japan, although there’s no actual fruit inside the bottle. [photo credit:  tonrulkens on flickr]

baobab pepsi_baobab

Borojo

A Colombian fruit that’s commonly used in jam, wine and desserts.  It also has a long history in traditional medicine in the tropics.  Now it’s become the latest source for dietary supplements.    [photo credit: climambiente on flickr]

borojo

borojo capsules

Pomelo

A Chinese citrus fruit that tastes like a sweet, mild grapefruit. [photo credit:  aWee on flickr]

Pomelo-aWee

pomelo citrus drink

Additional superfruits vying for attention (some easier to find than others in whole form):  blackcurrants, blood oranges, kiwiberry, mangosteen, mamey fruit, cashew apple, lulo fruit and fejoia. A dozen  Australian fruits may be in the running, according to an article published in Innovative Food Science & Emerging Technologies:  brush cherry, Burdekin plum, Cedar Bay cherry, Davidson’s plum, finger lime, Kakadu plum, Illawarra plum, Molucca raspberry, muntries, riberries and Tasmanian pepper.

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A Taste of Flavor and Ingredient Trends

by Janet on August 25, 2010

What’s hot in flavors and ingredients?  What will we be tasting more on restaurant menus and in packaged goods?

Here’s what a couple of trend trackers are predicting.

First, Mintel identified six flavor trends for 2010…yhst-56467450178178_2039_1407228

Cardamom – Known to be intensely aromatic with a strong, unique taste, cardamom will find a home in more than just ethnic fare. Think of cardamom as the new cinnamon. Cosmic Chocolate recently launched a chocolate bar flavored with cardamom and oranges.

Sweet Potato – Candied, fried, baked or boiled…sweet potatoes are one of the most diversely prepared vegetables. Aside from being a delicious snack or side dish, Mintel predicts they’ll become known as the new functional food since sweet potatoes are rich in dietary  fiber, beta carotene and vitamins C and B6.

AAAAC-bcGnoAAAAAAMpLoQHibiscus – Expect to see the floral flavor become a common ingredient in the beverage market, especially teas.   Donald Trump has gotten into the tea business (hey, at least not more supplements!).  One of the varieties of Trump Tea contains organic hibiscus.  Premium Essence Water from Hint now offers Hibiscus flavored water.  

Cupuaçu – The taste of the Amazon Rainforest, cupuaçu is in the running to be next big superfruit.  The Brazilian fruit is starting to appear in juices and energy drinks, and Musselmans launched a lime and cupuaçu flavored apple sauce showcasing this unique flavor.
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Rose water – Rose water is no longer just a fragrance. You can look forward to finding it as a common flavor in beverages and ethnic foods, especially desserts (like I just experienced in Lebanon, along with orange blossom water).

Latin – Latin spices will be heating up our palates next year, and you won’t have to dine out to get these exciting flavors.  Mintel predicts that Peruvian and Argentinean will be especially hot Latin flavors. Whole Foods Market now offers a Mayan Ceviche. Icelandic Salsa Shrimp Cocktail features a spice packet loaded with the popular Latin flavor of cilantro.

I recently attended an excellent webinar on wellness trends that was conducted by the Hartman Group.  I especially enjoyed this slide that looked at healthful ingredients — what’s trendy here and now and what will be hot around the bend.

trendy ingredients

Was so happy to see the spice sumac on the emerging list.  I do agree that sumac may be the next big spice to breakthrough.  I sure love the tart taste of sumac and hope it will soon be more widely available.   Here’s a look at fresh sumac that grows wild in all parts of Lebanon.

DSCN0544

 

Monica Bhide wrote a great piece on sumac in the Washington Post:

I turned to the one and only person I know who could write an encyclopedia entry on sumac and still have something more to share: Paula Wolfert, guru of Mediterranean cooking and author of numerous acclaimed books on the subject.

“I love the taste of sumac,” she tells me during our phone interview. “It is bitter, tangy, sweet, salt. In all very intriguing.”

Sumac, a berry, has been used in the Middle East as a souring agent for centuries. I asked Paula if lemon juice or vinegar were substitutes, and the answer was an emphatic no. “Sumac adds another dimension that lemon juice does not,” she said. It also adds a lovely red ting to a dish.

Sumac is sold as dried berries and ground. Please be aware that you need to buy this from a store and must not pick the sumac growing on the roadside in places as some of those varieties are poisonous. Paula advises storing the berries in the freezer and the ground sumac in the fridge.

This spice is a fantastic tabletop condiment, to be sprinkled on such dishes as salads, baked chicken, hummus, boiled eggs and more to provide that extra zing. Sumac goes well with chicken and fish. Even though lemon or vinegar can’t be substituted for it effectively, the reverse substitution — sumac instead of lemon or vinegar — can work wonders in kebabs, broiled chicken, fish, stews, salad dressing and more. Sumac can be used during the cooking process and then also sprinkled on top of the final dish.

And of course, sumac is the signature spice in fattoush, which I recently wrote about during my trip to Lebanon.

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bottom-bannerEveryone is always searching for the next big thing. And that’s especially true in the nutrition world. Nowadays, it seems the biggest guessing game is all about identifying what will be the next new superfruit.  What will capture America’s imagination in the same way as pomegranate, acai and gogi berry.

I’m torn about this whole superfruit thing.  There are great fruits in our own backyard, do we really need to scour the Amazon Rainforest and other exotic locales to find our fruit.  Often these tropical superfuits are only flavorings or sold in juice form only,  so it’s not really a better choice than picking up a whole peach, biting into an apple or eating a bowl of American-grown berries or cherries.

If you can actually find some of these new exotic superfruits and bite into them the same way the indigenous groups do in the Amazon, Peru, Asia or elsewhere, then that’s great.  But rarely is the actually fruit even available here to buy in the U.S.  Instead, we’re left with only a splash in a juice that’s blended with apple juice, white grape juice and other juices.  Or a small amount of pulp is added to yogurt, smoothies, granola bars and other packaged food to create an aura of health.

And I’m tired of this ORAC battle:  ”my ORAC value is higher than yours….” This measure of antioxidant capacity has become one of the primary marketing claims made by the superfruits.  This is a test-tube analysis and doesn’t necessarily translate to anything that actually happens in our bodies. True, antioxidants found naturally in fruits and vegetables may have health-promoting properties. But focusing on what juice has the highest ORAC value is basically meaningless.  And higher is not necessarily better.

Many of these so-called superjuices are sold via multi-level marketing (MLM) and are extremely expensive ($40-$50 per bottle), but the antioxidant values have been shown to be comparable to apple juice. I’ve previously written about the Sly Allure of the Superjuices, and Skeptoid has a great article about Monavie and Other “Superfruit” Juices.

Superfruit juices may be good sources of antioxidants compared to, say, spaghetti or a cheeseburger; but if you want antioxidants, you’ll get far more of them for about 1/100th the price by simply eating common fruit from the supermarket.

Even so, there’s a whole crop of new superfruits that are getting ready for their close-up.  They’re all attempting to break through and be the next superstar superfruit:

Maqui berry — A deeply purple berry that grows in remote distant Pantagonia, claims to have the highest antioxidant values of any fruit, a starring ingredient in the latest superjuice sold by MLM distributors
Lulo fruit — A South American fruit, also known as naranjilla, looks like an orange-colored tomato with light-green jelly-like flesh that tastes like pineapple or lemon
Mamey fruit — A taste between apricot, peach and papaya
CupuacuA cousin to cacao (cocoa beans), dubbed the “pharmacy in a fruit.”  The latest fruit from the Brazilian Rainforest to be featured in a superjuice called Fruta Vida that’s sold through distributors via MLM
Baobab — A traditional plant grown in Africa, known as “dead rat tree” because of the appearance of the fruit
YumberryNew commercial nickname for the Yang Mei berry from China, also called waxberries
Kiwiberry — Derived from the Actinidia arguta fruit, also known as “hardy kiwi fruit”

Yacon root –
Sweet-tasting tubers with a taste like a fresh apple and watermelon combined, contains the fiber inulin
Fejoia –
Popular in New Zealand and Australia, also known as pineapple guava or guavasteen
Gac — A Southeast Asian fruit with a traditional history of use of its eye health benefits, rich in lycopene and beta carotene
Indian gooseberry or Amia — A popular fruit used extensively in Ayurvedic herbal preparations, high in tannins
Guarana – A fruit from a shrub native to Brazil and Venezuala, a natural stimulant similar to caffeine
Acerola — Also known as Barbados cherry, bright red fruit well known for its vitamin C content
Aronia — A bright red fruit also known as chokeberries, high in anthocyanins
Pomelo — A Chinese citrus fruit that tastes like a sweet, mild grapefruit
UchuvaA sweet and tangy Columbia fruit, high in dietary fiber, showing up in trail mixes and nutrition bars, also known as Cape Gooseberry and Goldenberry

Uchuva

Uchuva

Other popular superfruits include mangosteen and noni, which are ingredients in several of the superjuices.  You may already be  familiar with some fruits that are superfruit contenders: blood orange, black currants and lychee.

The superfruit phenomenon is getting to be too much.  That’s why some people are attempting to define what superfruit even means, Comprehensive Criteria for Superfruit Status.  There’s even an organization that was created called the Superfruit Information Organization, although I found this site a bit curious. Even though it says the organization was created by “concerned citizens” who want to “band together and let the facts be known!” it seems like they’re just selling superfruit products.

I just wish people would think all fruits are super.

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