Simple, recognizable and great tasting:
Consumers want plant-based foods that taste good and feel natural. Learn why simple ingredients and smart processing are shaping the next wave of innovation.

The next plant-based brief may be simpler than the last one. For years, the category chased mimicry: make it look like meat, cook like meat and taste like meat. That ambition still has a place, but consumers are also asking tougher questions. Is it tasty? Is it natural? Is it affordable? Do I recognize the ingredients? Would I buy it again? This is pushing product developers toward a more grounded approach: keep it simple, use recognizable ingredients and focus relentlessly on taste.
Technology matters, but consumers do not buy process diagrams. They buy food.
That means the most important test is not whether a product ticks every innovation box. It is whether consumers enjoy eating it. This philosophy is at the heart of De Bonenboet, a Dutch producer of plant-based products that has built its brand around a simple principle: food should be made from recognizable ingredients, produced sustainably, and taste great. Rather than asking consumers to compromise for the sake of sustainability, De Bonenboet believes plant-based products should be judged by the same standard as any other food, they should be something people genuinely want to eat.
This is an important reminder for the whole category. Sustainability can open the door. Health can create interest. But taste brings people back.
Plant-based ingredients bring different strengths. Pulses, cereals, vegetables and fruits can all contribute protein, fiber, color, structure and flavor. But they also behave differently during processing.
Some ingredients create a strong taste that must be masked. Others bring a neutral base that can be flavored more easily. Some absorb water quickly, while others need more careful hydration. Some create attractive natural color, while others are better suited to chicken-style or fish-style products.
White bean fibers are one example of a promising ingredient direction. They offer a neutral taste, light color, dietary fiber and versatility for different product applications. Their mild profile can make them easier to flavor than stronger-tasting protein bases.
A growing barrier for 100% plant-based products is the perception that they can be too processed or artificial. That does not mean consumers reject innovation. It means innovation needs to feel understandable.
Plant-forward formats can help here. Products based on vegetables, pulses, grains and spices do not need to copy meat. They can create their own appeal through color, texture, flavor and visible ingredients.
For manufacturers, this opens room for product creativity. A lentil bite, bean-based snack or vegetable-forward patty can be positioned around taste, nutrition and naturalness rather than direct meat replacement.
Simple product concepts still require process expertise. A short ingredient list can make processing more demanding because there may be fewer functional ingredients to hide structural problems.
Water binding, cooling, mixing intensity, particle size, forming pressure, coating and heat treatment all need to work together. The aim is to protect the natural appeal of the ingredients while achieving industrial consistency.
This is where product testing becomes essential. Manufacturers can explore different bases, fibers, binders, coatings and cooking profiles before scaling up.
The next generation of plant-based products should not only ask: “Can we imitate meat?”
It should ask:
That is a more demanding brief, but also a more realistic one.
Alternative protein innovation does not need to become more complicated to become more successful. In many cases, the winning products may be the ones that feel simpler to consumers and smarter behind the scenes.
Recognizable ingredients, great taste and controlled processing can help manufacturers create plant-based foods that are not just tried once but bought again.
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