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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, June 12, 2004

Sales extremely sweet for 'diet candy'

By Dave Carpenter
Associated Press

CHICAGO — Call it Candy Lite.

Albanese Confectionery Group is repackaging its World Best Gummi Bears as World's Best Zeros with a label boasting "0 Fat-0 Sugar-0 Net Carbs." It is one of many new products on the market this year that will come with a health pitch of some kind.

Associated Press

Long viewed as a slightly naughty self-indulgence, candy is getting a makeover as companies try to concoct sweets that are a little healthier.

From low-carb to low-cal to sugar-free to "guilt-free," many of the estimated 1,400 new products on the market this year come with a health pitch of some kind. And the array of soon-to-be-released offerings on display at this week's All Candy Expo, North America's largest candy trade show, shows the pro-health movement is just getting rolling.

Tinkering with treats is part of the low-carb boom being served up by the U.S. food industry in response to the growing popularity of the Atkins and South Beach diets. Candy makers also are eager to avoid any repercussions from rising obesity among children, although the National Confectioners Association trade group contends kids' candy consumption hasn't increased.

So far the strategy appears to be working. Sales of "diet candy," the industry's feel-good term for sugar-free and reduced-carb sweets, soared 90 percent to more than $273 million last year as overweight Americans fretted more about nutrition and health. And supermarket shelves are being stocked regularly with new low-carb goodies, likely ensuring the fad won't fade any time soon.

"There's no doubt that the buzz in the industry right now is really health-conscious candy," said Barry Sokol of Sorbee International, a Philadelphia-based company that touted its new sugar-free products at the All Candy Expo. "This low-carb craze is beyond going through the roof."

Sugar-lovers, relax — it's not all about health. Low-carb or sugar-free items still comprise just a fraction of the $24 billion-a-year confectionery industry. And gobs of teeth-tingling sugar candies still commanded attention at the three-day trade show, which ended Thursday.

Debut items included jumbo-sized Smarties, one-pound chocolate wreaths and chili-pepper flavored candy called Diablo Ignited Sours. In the ever-popular gross-out category, there were Mean Green Blow Pops that turn your tongue green and Brain Drain Liquid Candy, which maker Kandy Kastle promotes as feeling like "brains rolling around in your mouth."

But the focus on sour and "extreme" tastes that influenced new products a year or two ago has shifted to a more healthful approach featuring low-carb fudge and licorice, sugar-free jellybeans, calcium-fortified wafers and a whey protein diet bar.

Hershey Foods is sinking a bigger investment into the new trend with the introduction of 1 Gram Sugar Carb Bars after recording first-year sales of $12 million for its line of sugar-free Reese's Peanut Butter Cups and Hershey's chocolate bars.

Smaller companies are also following suit.

Improved technology has made it easier for companies to replace sugar than was the case with fat during the low-fat craze of the 1990s.