Everything’s Coming Up Pumpkin Pie
By ANDREW ADAM NEWMAN
DURING Thanksgiving week, the aroma of pumpkin pie wafts throughout the
land, as it has for generations. But these days, chances are the source
of the smell is not actually pie.
While Starbucks, now serving its seasonal pumpkin spice latte for the
ninth year, is often credited with helping popularize the flavor,
pumpkin spice has spread to myriad categories.
There were 79 limited-time menu items featuring pumpkin at the top 250
restaurant chains from August through October, more than double the 37
during the same period in 2011, according to Technomic, a restaurant market research firm.
Those dishes included pumpkin bagels at Bruegger’s Bagel Bakery, pumpkin
ale at BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse and pumpkin spice pancakes at
Shoney’s.
“Pumpkin,” a New York magazine headline declared in October, “is the new bacon.”
Darren Tristano, executive vice president of Technomic, said comfort foods often influenced flavor trends.
“That familiarity and comfort feel is something that I think Americans
are clinging to because the economy has been rough on many of us,” Mr.
Tristano said, adding that such foods represented “a nice, simple
pleasure and an affordable indulgence.”
It may not occur to a diner at McDonald’s washing down pumpkin pie with a
pumpkin shake or pumpkin spice latte, but flavor trends are not cooked
up by food brands alone. Companies that specialize in flavors often are
the instigators.
Dianne Sansone, a flavor chemist and head of technical services at Flavor and Fragrances Specialties,
which is based in Mahwah, N.J., said the company first developed a
pumpkin spice flavor in the early 1990s for a coffee brand, well before
use of the flavor became widespread. Nondisclosure agreements prohibit
the company from naming customers, but its Web site says they include
both “Fortune 100” and “middle market” companies.
Typically food brands provide a base, like unflavored ice cream or
yogurt, and in a subsequent presentation Flavor and Fragrances serves
company representatives samples to demonstrate how a flavor like pumpkin
spice tastes in their product.
What companies end up buying is not just a recipe, but a physical product as well.
“We send out 400-pound drums of flavor that go into things like coffee
and cupcakes and cookie filling,” Ms. Sansone said.
Yoplait, a General Mills brand, asked consumers on its Facebook page
in 2011 for new flavor preferences, and as a result introduced Yoplait
Light pumpkin pie yogurt as a seasonal flavor this year.
Elizabeth Fulmer, associate marketing manager of Yoplait, said sales of the flavor far exceeded expectations.
“We didn’t know how big it was going to be,” she said. “We did this as a
little bit of an experiment this year and the response has been really
exciting.”
Planters, a Kraft Foods brand, introduced pumpkin spice almonds as a
seasonal flavor in 2011, the same year that Jet-Puffed marshmallows,
another Kraft brand, introduced a pumpkin spice variety.
Through a licensing agreement, Unilever introduced Starbucks pumpkin
spice latte ice cream as a seasonal variety this year. It is, in other
words, an ice cream based on a coffee drink that was based on a pie.
Another Unilever ice cream brand, Ben & Jerry’s, has marketed a
seasonal pumpkin cheesecake flavor for several years.
Hiram Walker introduced pumpkin spice liqueur, a seasonal offering, in
2007, when the flavor “was popular within coffee but not as widespread
as it is today,” said Juli Falkoff, a brand manager at the company,
which is a Pernod Ricard USA brand. “I feel like this season it’s really
pumpkin spice time — it’s everywhere you look.”
It may seem paradoxical, but pumpkin spice products often lack a pumpkin
note, connoting instead spices like cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger and clove
that are sold as the pumpkin pie blend in spice aisles.
Coffee brands, among the first to introduce pumpkin spice flavors in
products that are not baked, continue to experience strong demand.
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, which introduced a seasonal pumpkin
spice coffee in 2001, has in recent years begun selling it in early
August instead of later in the month because of pent-up demand.
Derek Archambault, senior brand manager at Green Mountain, says that in
the first week it is sold each year, it often is the best-selling
flavored coffee and occasionally the best-selling roast overall.
Along with Starbucks pumpkin spice latte ice cream, the company
introduced an instant coffee version of the flavor this year under its
Via line. When some stores, primarily in Manhattan, ran out of what
Starbucks calls the sauce used to flavor the pumpkin spice latte in
October, a flurry of panicked messages from fans appeared on Twitter and
Facebook.
Lisa Passé, a Starbucks spokeswoman, said there was never an actual
shortage because warehouses remained well stocked. Rather, she said,
individual stores had “outages” for a day or two because of the
popularity of the flavor.
“This year we saw such increased demand that it’s in the running to be
the No. 1 seasonal flavor for the entire year,” said Ms. Passé. In
recent years, she added, the top seasonal flavor was peppermint mocha, a
winter item.
But some recently released products flavored with pumpkin pie spice have left consumers scratching their heads.
One such offering came from the Kellogg brand Pringles, which introduced
a seasonal variety of its stackable potato chips this month that is
available only at Walmart.
“Pumpkin Spice Pringles?” the Twitter user @emptychampagne
wrote, expressing a sentiment echoed by many on social networks and
blogs. “I give up. There is no hope for the future. None.”
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