5 fusion chocolate bars that are adopting savory flavors

27 oct. 2023

Chocolate
Hype & Trend Signal
Artisans
Retail
Cross-category
Foodservice
Bakery
Patisserie
Trend
Hospitality
Trend Updates

Tomato & Maqaw Pepper, Salted Egg Cereal, Black Truffle might sound like snippets from a restaurant menu, but is actually a list of some chocolate bar flavors by the Singaporean brand Fossa. Consumers today are more and more open to experiment with new flavors. 66% of people in our 2023 global Taste Tomorrow consumer survey say they want to try new flavors or a combination of tastes which are unusual at first, versus 60% of people in 2021. 

Explore 6 chocolate brands that are catering to this desire by developing sweet and savory chocolate bars.

Heat meets sweet

We’ve reported on the ‘swicy’ trend – sweet and spicy – in patisserie and chocolate before. Because the rich and complex flavors of cocoa harmonize well with spicy ingredients, we’ve seen loads of product releases such as chocolate bars with pink pepper for a surprising burst of heat or truffles with chili for a warming quality.  Any ingredient or food product derived from the pepper family is suitable, from pink peppercorns to gochujang or ghost peppers for the true adventurers. Because spiciness is not a taste, but a sensorial experience, adding chili to chocolate makes for an extra-layered eating experience.

There’s more than caramel sea salt

Now we’re turning our attention towards ‘swalty’ – sweet and salty – chocolate. Swalty or sweet and savory chocolate has of course been popularized by salted caramel and sea salt-flavored chocolate products, but now the horizon is expanding. Inspiration is drawn from all over the culinary world, using different spice blends in chocolate or incorporating the flavors of well-known dishes. Since this trend is geared towards culinary daredevils, the sky is the limit. Chocolatiers are pushing the boundaries with the most crazy and outspoken flavors. 

Get inspired by these 5 examples of sweet and savory chocolate bars:

  1. Olives and bread

by Rózsavölgyi Csokoládé

The bean-to-bar chocolate makers at Rózsavölgyi Csokoládé from Budapest, Hungary have a track record of making rather unique additions to their chocolate. This Olives and Bread bar is no exception: 73% chocolate is flavored with roasted olives, toasted bread and olive oil. Think of it as an appetizer turned into a sweet snack. 

2. Porcini

by Naïve

This dark chocolate with porcini mushrooms comes from The Forager Collection from chocolatier Domantas Uzpalis at Naïve. The flavors are complex, layered and intriguing. This bar contains 4% porcini, and the earthy, mushroom flavor is undeniable. ‘I collect the porcini in the wild and combine it with silky soft chocolate following a special technique which I developed myself’, says Domantas.

3. Ramen Bowl

by Alicja Confections

Alicja Confections sells postcard chocolate bars that can be sent through regular mail. They offer a subscription service too, so there’s a new flavor each month. ‘Every chocolate is a new, weird, interesting, funky, delicious flavor you won't normally find anywhere else’, they say about their collection. That’s no lie, proves their salty and sweet Ramen Bowl bar. The 33.6% milk chocolate is flavored with crushed-up ramen noodles, soup base and soy sauce. Funky indeed!

4. Mo's Dark Chocolate Bacon Bar

by Vosges Chocolate

Silky smooth dark chocolate paired with salty crunchy bacon from a beloved sustainable family farm in New Hampshire, that’s Mo's Dark Chocolate Bacon Bar from Vosges Chocolate. Do you think combining chocolate and meat is too out there? Consumer reviews come down to an average rating of 4,5 out of 5 stars. So there definitely is a market for this curious swalty combination of smoked bacon, chocolate and a sprinkling of smoked salt.

5. Satay Sauce

by Fossa Chocolate

The Satay Sauce bar by the Singaporean chocolate brand Fossa is inspired by the traveling satay hawkers that used to prepare skewered meat on a portable charcoal grill. The Tanzanian cacao is flavored with peanut praline and aromatic spices such as cumin, nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, anise, fennel seeds, peppercorn and sea salt.

Pastry chefs are exploring the flavor realm beyond sweet too

It’s not just chocolatiers that are crazy about fusion flavors. Pastry chefs around the world are experimenting with desserts that include vegetables and herbs. And we’re not talking about pumpkin or sweet potato… they’re using black garlic, fennel and radishes. Dive into the gastronomic green desserts trends.

Related Articles

Las 3 tendencias más relevantes en pastelería para 2024

Las 3 tendencias más relevantes en pastelería para 2024

Previsión de Taste Tomorrow: las 3 tendencias de pastelería más relevantes para 2024 para creadores de pastelería, repostería y alimentación.

Las 3 tendencias del chocolate más relevantes para 2024 América del Norte

Las 3 tendencias del chocolate más relevantes para 2024 América del Norte

Las 3 tendencias del chocolate más relevantes para 2024: la previsión definitiva del sector para chocolateros, pasteleros y fabricantes de alimentos.

Veg-based patisserie: these 4 factors drive its popularity

Veg-based patisserie increasingly popular | TasteTomorrow

The star of veg-based patisserie keeps rising. These 4 drivers make cakes and pies infused with veggies so popular all over the world.

Is algae the bakery and patisserie ingredient of the future?

Is algae the bakery and patisserie ingredient of the future?

There is a huge hype around micro algae as a potential food ingredient. Find out why algae are so promising and what its future applications in the bakery and patisserie industry are.