Plus, Wholly Veggie on the block͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ 
 
 
NoshAugust 29, 2024
DAILY BRIEFING
Today's news & insights for the food industry.

In this issue of Daily Briefing

  • 🥕 Wholly Veggie On the Block
  • 🥥 The Coconut Cult’s Refreshed Look
  • 📺 Marketing: A Cereal ‘Super Bowl'
  • 🍪 Hostess Boosts Smucker Earnings
  • 🤔 A Mid-Year (ish) News Quiz

📰 Today's Top Story

🧀 How The Plant-Based Cheese Category Has Matured

🧀 How The Plant-Based Cheese Category Has Matured

The plant-based cheese market has come leaps and bounds over the past decade with products improving on everything from taste to texture and, now, even smell. But one of its biggest hurdles appears to be getting consumers to stick around as makers tweak formulations and figure out how to speak to an audience beyond the vegan crowd. 

Data Dive: The category overall has seen sales ebb and flow over the past three years, according to recent data from market research firm Circana

  • In 2022, sales were up nearly 70% year-over-year; by 2023, sales were on the decline (-9%), and those drops have begun to decelerate now in 2024 with sales down 4.5% year-over-year. 

What’s going to make for a brand that can grow? According to Bart Adlam, CEO of Bellevue, Washington’s GOOD PLANeT Foods, it comes down to the product types and a brand’s ability to appeal to flexitarians. After six years of selling a category-standard coconut oil-starch-based alt-cheese, GOOD PLANeT thinks it’s found a toehold through its Olive Oil cheese platform, which launched last fall. 

The product quickly garnered national distribution at Whole Foods, Sprouts and Misfits Market; it has lately secured regional placements at Wegmans, Price Chopper, Giant, and Woodman’s, as well as a growing list of small chains and independents. Adlam noted the shred format has been most successful, followed by its recently launched slices. 

What Adlam said: “There was specific concern [among consumers] with how high the saturated fat is on the leading brands, which are coconut oil based. At this time we were actually seeing the small plant-based cheese segment decline in size, and it was clear that, as an industry, we were not doing enough to appeal to the flexitarian consumer.”  

That’s a valid concern: According to The Brightfield Group’s Quarterly Consumer Wellness Survey from Q2, plant-based cheese consumers are primarily millennials that are likely to prioritize high protein, low sodium and clean label products and often buy almond milk (53%) or oat milk (38%) but aren’t strict vegans.

Good Planet isn’t alone. Plant-based cheese platform Vevan, owned by Schuman Cheese reformulated its entire line earlier this year, swapping its coconut and palm oil base for pea milk in an effort to improve the product’s nutritional position and performance. And of course there is Plonts: the new brand proudly proclaims it has created stinky plant-based by using microbes and aging techniques. 

But beyond the startup and semi-artisanal scene, major food industry players have also dug deeper in an attempt to offer more plant-based cheeses. Kraft’s evolving JV with NotCo produced the first plant-based version of its iconic blue box mac and cheese, which was a fast follow to its lineup of alt-cheese slices and plant-based Philadelphia cream cheese. Both Walmart and Whole Foods have joined the category under their respective private label brands: Walmart has two vegan-friendly cheese SKUs under its bettergoods platform and Whole Foods introduced plant-based parmesan shreds to its 365 brand. 

Go Deeper: Plonts Bets on Microbes to Crack the Code on [Stinky] Plant-Based Cheese

 

✨ What You Need to Know ✨

🥕 Wholly Veggie On the Block

Frozen foods maker Wholly Veggie is exploring a sale, restructuring, recapitalization or refinancing of assets and business operations. 

🛒 The Toronto-based company manufactures and distributes plant-based meals and snacks including Buffalo Cauliflower Wings and Mozzarella-Style Sticks that are sold throughout the U.S. and Canada in more than 4,500 stores, including Walmart, Kroger, Sprouts Farmers Market, Target and Whole Foods Market.

💰 According to a trustee’s report filed on Aug. 22, Wholly Veggie reported annual revenues ranging from $2.1 million to $11 million and net losses ranging from $1.5 million to $5.4 million since 2019, citing such challenges as overcrowding, inflation and rising interest rates
 

🥥 A (Small) Bite Of The Coconut Cult’s Refreshed Look

Anyone who has tried The Coconut Cult is probably aware that a little bit goes a long way, but for those who aren’t familiar with the plant-based yogurt brand, the recommended daily amount is only a tablespoon or two. Messaging that to potential customers was part of the brand’s label refresh this year. CEO Ari Raz talked with Nosh recently about the strategy behind the new look and how it is part of positioning the brand for future growth.

🦩 Raz talked about how the brand needed to be recognized for its name as opposed to the pink flamingo icon that graced its labels since launching in 2016.

🧐 Communicating with consumers efficiently is important for The Coconut Cult because it lives somewhat in-between the supplement and dairy-free yogurt categories.

🫰🏻 Despite its higher price tag, The Coconut Cult has a fanatical following among natural channel shoppers in retailers like Sprouts and Whole Foods, but the company’s new look is hoping to tell its value-proposition to a broader consumer base.

Nosh Insiders can read the full interview to dig deeper into the brand’s redesign and how Raz is leveraging his learnings as Once Upon A Farm co-founder.
 

📺 Marketing: A Cereal ‘Super Bowl’, Irritable Parent Syndrome

🌭 Hot dog! Applegate Farms’ latest brand campaign features a ruggedly handsome farmer who is often mistaken for a fashion model. The “Model Farmer” ad is intended to highlight the meat processor’s commitment to regenerative agriculture practices. 

📸 Jack Link’s and Frito-Lay are spicing up professional headshots for Gen Z job seekers. The brands’ “Flavor Filter” at meatyourinnerflavor.com transforms selfies into bold, LinkedIn-ready photos inspired by Jack Link’s Flamin’ Hot, Fritos Chili Cheese and Doritos Spicy Sweet Chili flavored meat snacks.

😠 Back-to-school season coincides with the annual outbreak of “Irritable Parent Syndrome,” according to Kevin’s Natural Foods, which has teamed up with “American Pie” actor Alyson Hannigan to help families combat such symptoms as frantic dinner prep, overwhelming piles of dishes and the constant temptation to order takeout. 

🥣 Talk about a super bowl: America’s favorite football brothers and “New Heights” podcasters Travis and Jason Kelce partnered with General Mills to introduce the Kelce Mix, combining Cinnamon Toast Crunch, Lucky Charms and Reese’s Puffs cereal in one box, which will be available at retailers nationwide for $5.69 beginning in mid-September.
 

🍪 Hostess Boosts Smucker Earnings

Feeling the lift from its acquisition of Hostess Brands last year, The J.M. Smucker Co. reported net sales up 18% to over $2.1 billion in the first quarter of its 2025 fiscal year, ending July 31.

  • The fiscal quarter reflected not only the acquisition of Hostess, which closed in November 2023, but also the divestment of its Canadian condiments business back in January and the offloading of Sahale Snacks last year.
  • While net sales for its coffee business fell by $1.7 million and pet foods fell 9%, Smucker’s frozen handhelds and spreads business rose by 7%, while Hostess added $333.7 million in new sales with a $74.4 million profit.
  • The company lowered its full-year guidance from a projected range of 9.5% to 10.5% net sales growth to 8.5% to 9.5%. The guidance reflects a decline of around $100 million in contract manufacturing sales from divested pet food brands.
 

🎙️ Now Streaming: CPG Week

🤔 A Mid-Year (ish) News Quiz

🤔 A Mid-Year (ish) News Quiz

It’s the end of summer (mostly) and as kids return to school, the CPG Week team is returning to some of the quirkier stories from the past couple months in a playful new quiz including discussions around butter statues, food culture celebrity biopics, Pop-Tarts and “Brat Summer.” The podcast brings BevNET and Nosh Editor-in-Chief Jeff Klineman on for a wide-ranging conversation that hits on the overlap of CPG and professional sports, Mars’ acquisition of Kellanova, uncertainty of the definition of “brat” and what a Guy Fieri biopic might look like.

Listen to the full episode on Nosh.

Like what you are listening to? Please don’t hesitate to rate our show and leave a review on your podcast platform of choice.

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