Debut Biotech and DIC team up to make Holy Grail in natural food colors: a stable vibrant red

Natural colors are improving all the time, and several firms are now developing reds through microbial fermentation including Michroma​ (fungi), Phytolon​, Impossible Foods and Motif FoodWorks (yeast) as well as more traditional plant sources such as sweet potato, beets, purple carrots and tomatoes.

However, delivering a heat-stable, light-stable, naturally derived, vibrant red hue in products with neutral to higher pH remains very challenging if you want to avoid crushed cochineal insects, which are not vegan, vegetarian, halal or kosher, and can put buyers off.

Tomato lycopene work well in dairy, for example, but it’s not the kind of rich deep vibrant red you’d need for a red velvet cake; while beets – which can have an earthy flavor – work at a neutral to basic pH ranges, but are not very heat stable, and can turn brown. 

Meanwhile, anthocyanins from grape skin and juice, elderberry, purple and black carrots, purple sweet potato, red cabbage and red radish can work well in lots of applications such as beverages, but can change color from red to purple to blue if the pH starts to rise.

‘Some colors are really difficult to make in the cell, or you can make them in a cell but you have to ferment a million liters to make a couple of hundred kilograms’

To make its vibrant reds, Debut Bio​ first deploys a fermentation process whereby a micro-organism eats sugars and turns them into a valuable intermediate.

The next step deploys a ‘cell-free’ approach where Debut deploys some of the machinery of cells such as enzymes, nature’s tiny biological catalysts, and immobilizes them (essentially fixes them in place) to make a ‘wall’ of enzymes through which it can flow the intermediate, and a vibrant red color then comes out the other side, explained co-founder Dr Joshua Britton.

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