 
                          SIAL Paris 2010 Event Wrap-Up: Dispatches from the Global Food Marketplace
 Autumn Stein
 Autumn SteinPhotos
Table of Contents:
From el Bulli to the Supermarket?
Products and Purveyors and Packaging, Oh My!
The Takeaway: Coffee, Tea, and Trends
SIAL Homepage:
Visit en.sial.fr for more information on SIAL Paris 2010
It doesn’t take much to convince food industry types to go to Paris. It’s Paris, heavy-weight contender for food capital of the civilized, Michelin-starred world. But to get 136,500 of them to go to Paris for the same five days—simultaneously coordinating thousands of exhibitions and myriad events across a span of 215,000 square feet—requires logistical maneuvering of heroic proportions. Luckily, the folks at SIAL have been at it for every two years since 1964, self-appointed shepherds of an age of culinary globalization.
 We were the many citizens of the Global Food Marketplace, in  2008  and again this year, descending with ravenous hunger on the City of Lights by  night, and engaging major players by day. SIAL 2010 actually hosted more  countries this year (over 100) and more exhibitions (5,700) than any previous  year. Clearly, even as attendance ebbs and flows, interest and internationalism  (if also, sadly, plane fare) are increasing.
We were the many citizens of the Global Food Marketplace, in  2008  and again this year, descending with ravenous hunger on the City of Lights by  night, and engaging major players by day. SIAL 2010 actually hosted more  countries this year (over 100) and more exhibitions (5,700) than any previous  year. Clearly, even as attendance ebbs and flows, interest and internationalism  (if also, sadly, plane fare) are increasing. 
Parisian gastronomy aside, what actually happens inside the massive event space of SIAL isn’t immediately relevant to the craft of the chef. SIAL is better viewed as a massive, five-day panorama of the dynamic between the professional kitchen, global retail, and the evolution of consumer expectations. On the one hand, a chef’s technique or product could end up on the shelves of gourmet markets, altering diner expectations and thus driving further innovation in the kitchen. On the other, the trends, products, packaging developments, and dialogue that emerge from an event like SIAL can have a profound impact on the backbone of the industry.
SIAL simply reminds us that the seemingly impassable gulf between high-concept cuisine and mass marketing isn’t without its occasional—and transformative—cross-pollinations.
From el Bulli to the Supermarket?
   One of the most prominent examples of that came in the form  of two products, both utilizing Ferran Adria’s sci-food brainchild,  spherification. Born in the laboratory of el  Bulli, spherification was avidly adopted by forward-thinking kitchens  looking for new textures and flavor delivery systems (with a dash of spectacle  for good measure). But at SIAL, we saw products that can bring a taste of the mad  genius of el Bulli to consumer—and  professional—kitchens everywhere.
One of the most prominent examples of that came in the form  of two products, both utilizing Ferran Adria’s sci-food brainchild,  spherification. Born in the laboratory of el  Bulli, spherification was avidly adopted by forward-thinking kitchens  looking for new textures and flavor delivery systems (with a dash of spectacle  for good measure). But at SIAL, we saw products that can bring a taste of the mad  genius of el Bulli to consumer—and  professional—kitchens everywhere.
The Perlage di Tartufo from Tartuflanghe is no doubt aimed at the ultra-modern foodie, the kind who might have surrendered a kidney for a seat at el Bulli and is now draping every dish in black truffle, in mourning upon hearing news of the restaurant’s 2012 shuttering. Perlage di Tartufo professes to “imitate caviar,” and indeed it does, with the “same color and texture as caviar,” but a distinctive and highly addictive burst of truffle in place of caviar’s characteristic rich saline pop. And while it will surely enliven many an otherwise drab dinner party cocktail hour, we think spherified truffle juice might actually be of use to professional kitchens that don’t have the resources for house-spherification, but aspire to sleek, modern, molecular cuisine.
 And it’s not just under-resourced chefs who win when  spherification goes commercial. Mixologists might have a new ally behind the  bar with Monin’s La Perle de Monin (alginate spherified syrups). Suspend  flavors like Cassis, Caraçao Bleu, and Green Banana in your next cocktail and  you’ll get the benefits of spectacle (without having to light anything on fire)  and flavor-suspension: instead of a balanced but homogenous cocktail, flavors actually  intermittently burst in the mouth—a timely innovation in an era of exploratory  cocktail deconstruction.
And it’s not just under-resourced chefs who win when  spherification goes commercial. Mixologists might have a new ally behind the  bar with Monin’s La Perle de Monin (alginate spherified syrups). Suspend  flavors like Cassis, Caraçao Bleu, and Green Banana in your next cocktail and  you’ll get the benefits of spectacle (without having to light anything on fire)  and flavor-suspension: instead of a balanced but homogenous cocktail, flavors actually  intermittently burst in the mouth—a timely innovation in an era of exploratory  cocktail deconstruction. 
Products and Purveyors and Packaging, Oh My!
   Chefs may have been in short supply at the event, but most  of the products at SIAL showcased a market of changing public expectations—chefs  take heed. After all, if you can get spherified truffle juice at home, you’re  likely to expect more dining out. Products at SIAL were like barometers of  changing tastes. Soléou’s Viva 4 BIO Oil was one of them. It’s a mix of four  organic oils (olive, roasted sesame, rapeseed, and sunflower) in a 75%  cardboard container that protects the oil from light and spoilage, meaning less  waste. And, naturally, the container is 100% biodegradable. A product like this  only emerges in a market where sustainability and health are seriously prominent  concerns. SIAL’s ever-expanding Health-Nutrition   Village should be another  hint; conscientious consumption—with gourmet contours—is here to stay.
Chefs may have been in short supply at the event, but most  of the products at SIAL showcased a market of changing public expectations—chefs  take heed. After all, if you can get spherified truffle juice at home, you’re  likely to expect more dining out. Products at SIAL were like barometers of  changing tastes. Soléou’s Viva 4 BIO Oil was one of them. It’s a mix of four  organic oils (olive, roasted sesame, rapeseed, and sunflower) in a 75%  cardboard container that protects the oil from light and spoilage, meaning less  waste. And, naturally, the container is 100% biodegradable. A product like this  only emerges in a market where sustainability and health are seriously prominent  concerns. SIAL’s ever-expanding Health-Nutrition   Village should be another  hint; conscientious consumption—with gourmet contours—is here to stay.
SIAL products largely indicated a renewed emphasis on quality and craftsmanship. La Tourangelle has been hand-crafting high quality nut oils for a century and a half (and counting) and their showing at SIAL was correspondingly authoritative, making pure, bold flavors like Huile de Pistache and Huile de Pépins de Courge (pumpkin seed oil) as accessible to home cooks as food service pros. Purveyor of gourmet heavy-hitters like foie gras and fresh truffle, Provence-based Plantin, brought some of its truffle-infused salts and honeys to SIAL, along with its aromatic, nuanced black and white truffle oils.
Eating Up Internationalism
  Among SIAL’s 106 countries exhibiting, a few really stood  out. When we weren’t milling around the myriad products and demos on SIAL’s  Culinary Innovations Stage, we were sampling from SIAL’s international pantry. After  a luxuriously long visit to take in the excitement at Food & Wine from Spain, we stopped by the Flanders  booth and were immediately impressed by the variety and quality of the  preserved fruits of Aldia (no surprise, they’re self-professed “Masters in  Fruit”). And naturally we were among the throngs at New Zealand’s booth, where this trailblazer in New World gastronomy was showcasing its pristine proteins  to a carnivorously-giddy crowd.
Among SIAL’s 106 countries exhibiting, a few really stood  out. When we weren’t milling around the myriad products and demos on SIAL’s  Culinary Innovations Stage, we were sampling from SIAL’s international pantry. After  a luxuriously long visit to take in the excitement at Food & Wine from Spain, we stopped by the Flanders  booth and were immediately impressed by the variety and quality of the  preserved fruits of Aldia (no surprise, they’re self-professed “Masters in  Fruit”). And naturally we were among the throngs at New Zealand’s booth, where this trailblazer in New World gastronomy was showcasing its pristine proteins  to a carnivorously-giddy crowd.
Proteins everywhere were on strong display. Prosciutto de Parma hung several of its aged beauties to entice attendees (it worked) while Casaponsa dangled its sesame-crusted salami like a fish lure (with much the same effect). And for those of us not entirely porked-out (which was all of us) Canada Pork was there with a characteristically mouth-watering showing of its products. No doubt SIAL was as great for carnivores as it was horrible for pigs everywhere.
The Takeaway: Coffee, Tea, and Trends
   This is a small, fractional sampling of some of the products  and innovations we encountered at SIAL. 215,000 feet is a lot of space to  cover, especially when so many exhibitions, not to mention La Cuisine de SIAL,  require serious time and attention (and eating). But among many of the products  we saw, a few were more than viably professional, potential game-changers in  service practices for hotels and restaurants looking to increase profit between  service hours.
This is a small, fractional sampling of some of the products  and innovations we encountered at SIAL. 215,000 feet is a lot of space to  cover, especially when so many exhibitions, not to mention La Cuisine de SIAL,  require serious time and attention (and eating). But among many of the products  we saw, a few were more than viably professional, potential game-changers in  service practices for hotels and restaurants looking to increase profit between  service hours. 
Profit margin-friendly products like Harney & Sons Teas are as high quality as they come (“designed for upscale foodservice operations), so it’s no surprise we went a little crazier for tea than we normally do, especially for the Dragon Pearl Jasmine. Smart buyers and managers might incorporate them into a brunch menu—or, for a larger chunk of change between lunch and dinner service, a high tea menu. And if F&B managers walking by SIAL’s Culinary Innovations stage happened to see Rudy Dupuy at France’s Malongo Espresso booth, creating miniature works of art on top of cappuccino foam (we’re talking bear tracks and flowers on your cappuccino), they might be inspired return to the razzle-dazzle service of yesteryear, before one-touch machinery ripped artistry away from the craft of the barista.
 Sure, SIAL is mostly the rightful province of  large-scale producers, grocery buyers, purveyors, R&D specialists,  marketing pro’s, and even the titans of agribusiness. But it can be of some use  to the back and front of house. When observed as a whole, SIAL is like a mosaic  representation of the direction of trends, production, and consumer appetites  writ large. Whether it’s one of the many products SIAL recognizes as a  trailblazer in trends or an innovation in packaging that transforms the shelf  life (or quality) of a mass-consumption product, SIAL reverberates throughout  the industry. And with 46 years and 23 shows under its belt, it’s becoming a  tradition the Global Food Marketplace shouldn’t live without.
Sure, SIAL is mostly the rightful province of  large-scale producers, grocery buyers, purveyors, R&D specialists,  marketing pro’s, and even the titans of agribusiness. But it can be of some use  to the back and front of house. When observed as a whole, SIAL is like a mosaic  representation of the direction of trends, production, and consumer appetites  writ large. Whether it’s one of the many products SIAL recognizes as a  trailblazer in trends or an innovation in packaging that transforms the shelf  life (or quality) of a mass-consumption product, SIAL reverberates throughout  the industry. And with 46 years and 23 shows under its belt, it’s becoming a  tradition the Global Food Marketplace shouldn’t live without. 






