Regina Leader-Post

The sudden collapse of coconut oil as a superfood.

- By Caitlin Dewey

Coconut oil - the favored superfood of the Paleo set - is losing its crown to butter, ghee and other trendy fats.

Sales of the oil plummeted last year, according to new data from market research firm SPINS, which tracks the health and wellness sector. Coconut oil initially attracted adherents with promises that it boosts immunity and aids in weight loss. But its popularity waned as questions emerged about those claims and the product’s effect on blood cholestero­l.

Trend-watchers say this is hardly the first time they’ve watched a much-hyped health food crash and burn: Culinary history is littered with so-called “superfoods” that never quite caught on long-term. But coconut oil, which enjoyed a burst of popularity between 2011 and 2015, may prove a singular lesson to consumers and food companies vying for sales in the multibilli­on-dollar health food industry.

“You see these things go in and out of favor so quickly,” said Lynn Dornblaser, director of innovation and insights at market-research firm Mintel. “To me it really drives home the idea that quite often these [superfoods] are built on fads and consumer whims.”

There is no one definition for a superfood, Dornblaser and other analysts point out: Marketers have slapped the term on a fantastic range of presumptiv­ely healthy foods, from agave nectar and goji berries to kale and quinoa.

But while some so-called “superfoods” do have impressive, wellproven health benefits, and are widely endorsed by nutritioni­sts, others are fads sparked by one or two isolated studies, or championed by celebrity dieters.

Take coconut oil. Until recently, it existed on the fringes of the American diet, utilized largely by vegan bakers as a butter substitute following the mid-90s revolt against saturated fat. But the oil became more popular as researcher­s began second-guessing those blanket prohibitio­ns - and as a generation of dieters uncovered earlier, promising studies on the health benefits of medium-chain fatty acids.

Between January 2011 and January 2013, U.S. searches for coconut oil more than doubled, Google trend data shows. Meanwhile, major food companies scrambled to get in on the trend, producing coconut-oil versions of Pam Cooking Spray and Crisco.

In 2015, the apparent peak of coconut oil mania, Americans bought $229 million of the stuff. But that peak was short-lived.

Nutritioni­sts and researcher­s began to question the science behind some of coconut oil’s more extravagan­t claims - such as the idea that it accelerate­s weight loss by boosting metabolism. Meanwhile, manufactur­ers - sensing new demand for alternativ­e oils - ramped up production of avocado oil, algae oil, animal fats and specialty butters.

By the time the American Heart Associatio­n officially denounced coconut oil in June 2017 - the product has too much saturated fat, AHA said - sales were already beginning to fall, according to SPINS. Over the course of 2017, coconut oil retail sales dropped $52 million, or 24.3 percent.

“There’s been a leveling off of sorts,” said Kimberly Kawa, a retail analyst at SPINS. “There was a coconut craze several years ago. Now we’re seeing [sales] come back down again.”

The reversal has surprised some analysts, who believed coconut oil had all the makings of a pantry staple: It’s versatile, after all, and it fits the nutritiona­l zeitgeist of an era when many consumers are rethinking the healthfuln­ess of dietary fats.

But that’s not enough to transform a superfood “craze” into a stable, long-term trend, said Charles Banks, the co-founder of thefoodpeo­ple, a global food trends consultanc­y based in the U.K. Forecastin­g which health foods will make that leap has become a big business, particular­ly as more consumers prioritize nutrition.

Among the foods that have made the jump from fad to staple: kale, blueberrie­s, dark chocolate, avocados, green tea and ancient grains.

Among the ones that have not: wheat germ, acai, pomegranat­e and goji berries.

According to Banks, the staying power of a superfood depends not only on current buzz, but on long-term, macro changes in eating patterns, the number of competing products on the market - and, most importantl­y, the quality of the science used to support the superfood’s purported benefits. While marketers still throw the term “superfood” around, consumers have grown skeptical, Banks said.

“Products like coconut oil, which consumers don’t quite understand or trust when it comes to health credential­s, are inevitably going to suffer in a ‘facts-first’ world,” he added, “at least until their health benefits are unequivoca­lly proven.”

Some analysts aren’t ruling out the possibilit­y that coconut oil will experience just such a turnaround. Marie Molde, an analyst at the restaurant market research firm Datassenti­al, said she expects sales will pick up again as researcher­s learn more about saturated fats. Her firm uses a model to predict food adoption trends, and it’s unusual for a food to get this far in the trend cycle and then fall back, she said.

Until then, however, Molde and other analysts are on the lookout for the next big, enduring superfood. She is personally betting on spirulina, a high-protein algae powder.

With any luck, spirulina will one day surpass even the heights of the coconut oil craze.

“There’s a huge health halo around it,” Molde said. “We see this as the next big thing.”

 ?? (ANDREW SCRIVANI/THE NEW YORK TIMES) ?? Coconut oil, once thought to be terribly unhealthy, has recently had a makeover from scientists and vegans who are helping the popularity of this nutty, vanilla-like flavored oil.
(ANDREW SCRIVANI/THE NEW YORK TIMES) Coconut oil, once thought to be terribly unhealthy, has recently had a makeover from scientists and vegans who are helping the popularity of this nutty, vanilla-like flavored oil.

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