Americans are having a love affair with anything that contains even a hint of fruit. Consumer demand is so high, the U.S. is on a pace to roll out a record number of products that claim to have fruit content, according to Datamonitor. There have been over 240 fruit-related products launched in the past six months alone, compared to 124 in all of 2000.Marketers have taken the fruit craze so seriously that Kraft Foods Inc. (NYSE: KFT) will launch nine products in 27 fruity varieties this year. Other products include PepsiCo Inc.'s (NYSE: PEP) Frito-Lay brand Flat Earth Baked Fruit Crisps, with half a serving of fruit per ounce. Kraft's Jell-O is launching its first ready-to-eat Jell-O cut with fruit pieces, aptly named Fruit Passions. Baskin-Robins' has come out with a kid-friendly mixed berry blend called Penguin Swirl that turns your tongue black.
The fruit craze comes two years after the government changed the Food Pyramid's recommended level of fruit and vegetable consumption, which created greater demand. Tom Vierhile, director of Datamonitor's Productscan Online, told USA Today that some marketers may also be looking for ways to get their banned products back in schools. "Fruit gives a positive that marketers can talk up."
But schools, as well as the general public, need to be savvy label readers. While some new products might be"fruit-infused," they're not always healthy. Krispy Kreme's (NYSE: KKD) jelly-filled donuts could never be seen as a "healthier alternative" to those delicious creme-filled donuts. What ever happened to a good ol' piece of fruit? Caveat cenator.
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