Test before you invest:
Alternative protein products can behave unpredictably during scale-up. Discover how product testing helps reduce risk before full production.

A product can perform beautifully in a development kitchen and still fail on an industrial line. That is one of the biggest challenges in alternative protein production. A promising formulation may taste good in small batches, but behave very differently once it meets high-speed mixing, forming, coating, cooking, freezing and packaging.
This is why testing is not an optional extra. It is a risk-reduction tool.
Plant-based and hybrid products are complex systems. They combine proteins, fibers, starches, oils, water, seasoning and sometimes meat. Each ingredient has a role, and each process step can change the final product.
A mix may become too soft after hydration. A coating may not adhere properly. A product may lose to much moisture during cooking. A formed shape may collapse. A frozen product may not reheat as expected.
These issues are frustrating because they often appear late, when investment decisions have already been made. Testing earlier helps manufacturers identify the weak points before they become expensive production problems.
Successful testing looks beyond the recipe. It asks practical production questions.
How should the protein be hydrated? What temperature gives the best formability? How much mixing is enough, and when does it damage the structure? Which forming technology gives the best shape retention? What coating system protects the product without overwhelming it? How does the product behave during frying, cooking, freezing and packaging?
By answering these questions in a controlled test environment, manufacturers can move from idea to industrial feasibility with more confidence.
Hybrid products bring their own scale-up questions. Meat and plant-based ingredients must be integrated in a way that maintains bite, juiciness and appearance. The plant-based component should reduce meat content without making the product feel diluted or artificial.
This requires careful control of mixing, particle size, water binding, cooling and heat treatment. Testing helps define the right balance between animal and plant proteins, while ensuring that the final product still fits consumer expectations.
Testing does not slow innovation down. It makes innovation sharper.
When manufacturers test before they invest, they can compare recipes, validate process parameters, reduce waste, optimize yield and shorten the route to launch. They can also involve R&D, operations, quality and commercial teams in one process, making the final business case stronger.
The alternative protein market is no longer driven by novelty alone. Products need to work in the factory, in the retailer’s freezer or chilled cabinet, and in the consumer’s kitchen.
Testing helps manufacturers build products that can survive all three.
Fill out the form, get your free copy of the white paper today and discover the key factors that influence success in plant-based and hybrid food production.
