Hybrid or blended dairy – a game changer or niche market?
Just Drinks · Just Food

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There’s no doubt the latest innovation from Ireland’s Kerry Group has caught the eye – but will the company find success with its new blended dairy range, Smug?

The company’s Kerry Dairy Consumer Foods unit has developed and launched six products: three ‘cheddar’ alternative SKUs, two butter-style products and a milk.

What Kerry seeks to achieve with Smug, which was rolled out in UK retailers, is unclear, particularly when consumption of fresh cow’s milk is declining in the UK and Europe, while 100% plant-based alternatives formulated with oats or almonds have gained some traction. Why the halfway house?

Kerry’s key marketing message is people’s health and the environment, lauding the Smug range as having as much as 40% less saturated fat and up to 54% fewer CO2 emissions – both varying across the range – than traditional dairy.

The brand is aimed at “conscious dairy lovers” and offers the “same creamy taste that can be lacking in dairy alternatives”, Victoria Southern, strategy, marketing and innovation director at Kerry Dairy Consumer Foods, tells Just Drinks.

“It is a great option for anyone looking to make more conscious purchasing decisions in terms of health and sustainability, without compromising on taste.

“We are not trying to ‘wean’ consumers off traditional dairy. What we have done is create a new way for dairy lovers to enjoy dairy with a product range that is fit for the future.”

“Middle ground”

Visiting a Sainsbury’s store on a bank holiday Monday afternoon, your author found the Smug blended milk on the top shelf, sitting in a display featuring a myriad of chilled regular milks. Directly opposite in the same aisle sat a plethora of plant-based alternatives.

The ingredients list for the Smug milk blend reads: semi-skimmed milk (74%); oat drink (26%) – water, gluten-free oats (1.5%); chicory root fibre; calcium carbonate; salt; stabiliser; gellan gum; Vit D2; Vit B2; iodine; and Vit B12.

Mark Voorbergen, a dairy industry consultant in the Netherlands, says Kerry may be attempting to reach the “middle ground” with a hybrid dairy range.

“A lot of the full-blown dairy alternatives, they have a taste problem, usually, and that's quite often being compensated for by sugars or a lot of processing,” he suggests.

“You may need a little bit less milk, which makes sense if you look at the European supplier landscape where we haven't grown in terms of milk output in the last three years. The protein side is the least expensive dairy component, it's mostly the fats.

“[The rationale behind Smug] could be an element of full-blown dairy alternatives that don't taste very good to something that's a little bit closer in terms of taste to what people are familiar with in dairy and maybe a little bit less processed as well.”