In the first of her posts on food innovation in celebration of World Food Day this Kat indulges her foodie tendencies and mulls over the fascinating field of food inventions.
It may come as a surprise
to some that it is possible to patent food products and methods of food manufacture. Provided the product or method is new, non-obvious and has a technical effect, it is perfectly possible
that it is patentable subject matter. Successfully
changing the characteristics of a food product can represent a significant technical achievement and years of investment in research
and development. However, protecting a product using trade secrets (in the manner of the KFC fried chicken recipe) does not prevent someone else independently developing an equivalent food product or recipe. Many food companies have thus turned to patents for IP protection.
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EP3243392: Pasta shape |
Potentially patentable food tech includes new and non-obvious ingredients and additives, processes for producing ingredients, ingredient combinations and cooking devices and methods. To give a small and random sample, food tech patents and applications
have claimed, for example, a pasta shape (EP3243392), a method of stir-frying (EP1842433), a device for cooking pancakes (EP2810561), an ouzo cocktail (EP1099752) and low calorie chocolate (EP3305088)
.
So what are the key areas of food tech innovation? Food innovation is not restricted to improving known products. A particularly fascinating area of research is the development of completely new ingredients and product types. Reducing one's consumption of animal products is currently vogue, whether for health, environmental or ethical reasons. The provision of meat substitutes and other animal product substitutes is also an established area of patentable food tech, from Quorn to the more recent "Impossible Burger" (the veggie burger for meat lovers).
Meat substitutes
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Fusarium venenatum |
Quorn, perhaps the most famous meat substitute product, was
launched in 1985 by Marlow Foods Ltd (a
collaboration between ICI and Rank Hovis McDougall). Quorn is a corn
mycoprotein refined from fermented fusarium
venenatum fungus. Over the decades, ownership of the Quorn business and its associated IP have passed between various multinationals (AstraZenca, Premier Foods), and is now in the hands of Monde Nissin.
The original Quorn patents, directed to the core technology
(EP0123434),
expired nearly a decade ago. However, over the years, the
various owners of Quorn have built up an impressive patent portfolio directed
to derivative products and processes. Patent protection of Quorn has undoubtedly
helped to maintain its position as a market leading meat substitute.
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Impossible Burger |
A more recent entrant
to the field of meat substitutes is Californian-based Impossible Foods. The mission statement
of Impossible Foods is to deliver plant-based food products with all the “meatiness” of real meat. The lead product, The Impossible Burger is reportedly “amazing, but just
a tad too soft and mushy” (BBC
Goodfood review). The “plant meat” is produced by supplementing the plant
based ingredients with recombinant heme, a ubiquitous protein found abundantly
in animal muscle. Impossible Foods has a number of granted European Patents directed
to meat substitutes comprising a number of meat-associated organic compounds such
as heme (EP3345484,
EP2943072),“wherein
a taste and smell of meat is given to the meat substitute during the cooking
process”. They have also branched out into other animal based product,
including plant-based cheese (EP2731451).
Egg substitutes
Moving
from product to ingredient, a holy grail of food ingredient substitutes could be
considered a true functional analog of egg. As an ingredient, eggs possess almost magical properties. Their complex multi-protein composition facilitates a staggering array of complex chemical transformations, including coagulation/gelation (e.g. custard, cakes), foaming (e.g. meringue, soufflé) and emulsification (mayonnaise, gelato). Eggs are also often key for providing flavour, texture (bread), colour (bread), and extending shelf-life. However, eggs have notoriously high levels of cholesterol and can harbor deadly bacteria.
Patented egg substitutes
date back decades. See for example US4120986, granted in the late 1970s and directed towards a process of preparing a whole egg replacement. However no particular egg substitutes has yet had run-away commercial success.
Pending European patent application EP3324756 is directed to a dry egg-less composition that contains fat and a polymer system that forms a cross-linked structure upon the addition of water, and gelatinases on cooking. In the words of the description this “allows the egg substitute composition to be cooked like a natural egg, e.g., scrambled, formed into an omelet, used in a batter, or used as a binder between two different foods (e.g. as a binder for attaching breading or the like to the surface of a food)”.
Specific egg-less products have also been developed. Hampton Creek's
accepted European application, for example, is direct at eggless mayonnaise (EP2773223). The “mayonnaise”, as specified by claim 1, comprises yellow pea flour and modified starch.
A hurdle to innovation in the "eggless" field is undoubtedly the broad array of prior art that can be cited by a Patent Examiner. Cooks have been trying for centuries to find replacements for eggs. To be patentable, any use of conventional protein products must be shown by the applicant to be a non-obvious substitution.
Thus, in the field of food tech, the non-obvious bar to patentability can be difficult, but not impossible, hurdle to overcome. As demonstrated by the Impossible Burger, a truly innovative food product can be readily protected.
In her next post to celebrate World Food Day, this Kat will focus on this year's World Food Day theme, #Zerohunger, and explore the latest developments in food and agritech aimed at tackling global food shortage. Stay tuned!
Author: Rose Hughes
Very interesting post!
ReplyDeleteI must say I was sceptical as to the novelty of the pasta shape, as it seems is the EPO. I wonder if anything will be granted.
As to the aniseed cocktail, what made it inventive?
Little known fact:
ReplyDelete(later) German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer filed in 1918 patent applications internationally for "Improvements in the Composition and Manufacture of Sausage Meat and the like.", see e.g. GB131402
https://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/biblio?locale=de_EP&CC=GB&NR=131402
Re Inventiveness of the cocktail: According to an English translation of the German description: "Surprisingly, it has been found that this cocktail obtained in this way has a very rounded, mild fruity taste that meets the taste of many". The EPO Examiner did not raise an inventive step objection, or ask for evidence of the technical effect.
ReplyDeleteBeing a patent attorney as well as a hobby chef, I did a few years ago some research about patentability of recipes to write a paper and did not only find the story about Adenauer but also a decision of the German Federal Court of Justice (highest court in these matters in Germany) entitled "soup recipe" from 1965 (Ia ZB 210/63). Applicant tried to patent a soup recipe, prior art as amongst others a famous German standard cook book. Hilarious! While the FCJ found that there was no inventive step, the decision has an official head-note that is quite promising and, as far as I know, the most recent case law in the matter:
ReplyDeleteProgress and inventiveness of a new technical process can also be based on the fact that the process product causes a special aesthetic effect.
If a cooking recipe contains only information on the starting materials and their treatment, then it is sufficiently determined as a (food) technical manufacturing process, even if special flavor properties are claimed to justify progress and inventiveness.
Slight deviations in flavor are usually not patentable progress.