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Written by By Donna Shaw   
With a ban on trans fats imminent in Canada, and a functional food market growing faster than the conventional food market, the time is right for the baking industry to develop new baking products that provide a healthier nutrient profile. So the question "should we change?" now becomes "how can we change?" According to professor Alejandro Marangoni at the University of Guelph, and the team at CoaGel Corporation, the answer is easier than you might think. The skinny on a Canadian-made fat substitute

With a ban on trans fats imminent in Canada, and a functional food market growing faster than the conventional food market, the time is right for the baking industry to develop new baking products that provide a healthier nutrient profile. So the question "should we change?" now becomes "how can we change?" According to professor Alejandro Marangoni at the University of Guelph, and the team at CoaGel Corporation, the answer is easier than you might think.

Marangoni is the creator of Coavel, an emulsified, water and vegetable oil baking margarine that debuted in the Bakers Journal January/February 2007 issue. Since that time, Prof. Alejandro Marangoni and CoaGel Corporation vice-president, Steve Bernet, along with a team of talented baking scientists, have reformulated dozens of typical baking products for companies in Canada, the U.S. and the U.K.

If you are considering entering the functional food market, here's some new information on an alternative to trans and saturated fats that could provide a boost for your buns and a catch to your cakes.

What It Is

Coavel is simply a mixture of water, vegetable oil (for example, soybean, canola or other locally produced vegetable oils) and a monoglyceride emulsifier. These are common ingredients currently found in many of the foods we consume, however it is not the ingredients, but the process by which they come together that gives this fat its unique properties. As a result of the emulsification process, the fat droplets are microencapsulated into what is referred to as "nanospheres." These nanospheres hold on to the water; in fact, microscopically, the water is actually held in layers. The increased water content of the fat is responsible for not only the reduced calorie density, but also for the increased shelf life of products made with it.

Basically a shortening alternative, Coavel has roughly half the calories of ordinary shortening, margarine and baking fats. From a health claim perspective, baking products made with Coavel are low in saturated fat, trans fat free and provide a source of omega-3 fatty acids.

As reported earlier this year in Soft Matter, a journal of the Royal Society of Chemistry, the microencapsulation of the oil in Coavel also regulates the release of fats and fatty acids into the body, which in turn controls the amount of insulin produced after a meal. Previous research suggests that a diet high in fat is associated with insulin resistance - the definition of Type 2 Diabetes and a strong contributor to cardiovascular disease; therefore, strategies to control the release of fat in the diet show promise in the prevention of this serious condition.

For bakeries looking for a way to ride the new wave of functional foods, Coavel represents another method for improving the nutrient profile of the foods we love to eat. Consumers are demanding healthier food choices, and given the health problems associated with consuming too much of the wrong fat, the time for products such as this has come.

Donna Shaw is a food and nutrition marketing professional with a focus on the communication and promotion of functional foods to the growing number of health-conscious consumers. She has a B.Sc. in Nutrition, an MBA in Agribusiness and over 20 years of health-care marketing experience. Donna can be reached at by e-mail at: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .