Israeli-Grown Vanilla Aims To Disrupt The Industry

Vanilla is a paradox. One of the world’s most popular flavors is among the least studied.

That’s why Oren Zilberman, CEO of the Israeli startup Vanilla Vida, sees the largely, uncharted territory of the great bean as a “blue ocean opportunity.”


“Our vision is to be the major producer of premium-quality vanilla,” Zilberman said. “We hope to take a 15 percent market share of the entire industry.”

With the industry generating upwards of $3 billion annually and growing, claiming significant market share is a bold quest.

Vanilla Vida has developed proprietary greenhouse methods to control how and when the valued orchid blooms.

The company delivers what it describes as a dramatically better bean positioned to disrupt the industry.

By leveraging technology at every stage from growth to product, Zilberman believes the company’s end-to-end innovation will springboard it into the global flavor market.

“Vanilla Vida is an A-to-Z company, growing, processing and selling product,” Zilberman said.

Employees, investors and advisory board in June at the launch of what Vanilla Vida considers the “most advanced R&D facility for vanilla research world over.” CEO Oren Zilberman is fifth from right. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)

Zilberman’s strategy, shared by his Vanilla Vida co-founders, Chief Operating Officer Shlomo Kadosh and Chief Technology Officer Raz Krizevski, is manifold.

Advanced technology and metabolic solutions improve flavor profiles and boost production of superior beans to create a more stable supply chain during challenging climate change.

With the tagline “Natural Vanilla for All,” Vanilla Vida also operates joint ventures with established Israeli farmers to cultivate and cure that product using proprietary methods.

Oren Zilberman displays green newly harvested beans compared with the brown cured product ready for shipment. One kilogram (2.2 pounds) sells for $250. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)

The goal is to disrupt the industry by driving down wholesale costs and drawing buyers among large-scale B2B customers who, in turn, provide essential ingredients to manufacturers of consumer goods.

This will also help reduce dependence on synthetic vanillin produced from petrochemical raw materials.

The smell that everyone loves

The potential is exponential.

The market currently generates more than $3 billion annually in global sales of dried vanilla beans and another $20 billion in applications of vanilla extract in foods and beverages. A lesser segment is devoted to perfume and children’s medicine incorporating natural ingredients.

To meet that demand, the industry produces about 2,500 to 3,000 tons of dried vanilla beans a year, compared with 41,000 tons of artificial vanillin, which commands a much lower price and therefore constitutes about 95 percent of current consumption of what many consider the beloved flavor.

“The smell that everyone loves so much is not coming from the natural ingredient,” said Zilberman. “Maple is the same: You have synthetic and natural. But maybe it’s a 50-50 percent split of the market versus 95 percent synthetic vanillin to 5 percent natural vanilla. That’s crazy.”

Only the pure bean is packed with what chefs call “caviar,” those tiny flecks contained within the skinny, wrinkled, moist dark beans.

“Natural vanillin you can find only in vanilla,” Zilberman said. “Using advanced metabolic solutions, Vanilla Vida can produce much more aroma, and especially vanillin levels, compared to our competitors.”

More beans, flavor and aroma

Grown in tropical environments, the high-grade bean typically requires intensive labor, hand pollination and a drying process of four to six months. All this typically occurs under poor quality controls in developing countries.

Compare that to Vanilla Vida. The company boasts it produces five times as much vanilla per square foot and yields 80 percent more concentrated vanilla aroma and flavor per bean. It does so with 20 percent less growth time and 85 percent shorter curing periods.

Trays of beans cure under carefully controlled humidity and temperature at the Vanilla Vida beta facility in Ashdod. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)

By shoring up supply, Zilberman hopes to convert about 25 percent of the current synthetic market to natural.

Its customer base is not Israeli but Belgian, French, German, Spanish, Swiss and American B2B flavor houses that specialize in extracting the crop, supporting manufacturer production of commercial items relying on vanilla.

Vanilla Vida matches current market prices of $250 a kilo (2.2 pounds). Yet, its more concentrated product means cost savings for customers.

Vanilla beans harvested in May. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)
Vanilla beans harvested in May. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)

“From the outside, our product looks like Madagascar beans,” Zilberman said. “But inside they contain much more aroma, so our customers can buy 20 or 30 percent less vanilla bean to get the same amount of extract.”

Because vanilla is a natural ingredient, it combines a lot of different aromas. “You have vanillin natural compound together with molecules of caramel and vinegar and chocolate flavor,” Zilberman said.

Without genetic engineering, Vanilla Vida can navigate the bean to “the sensory space to generate more blocks of chocolate vanilla or caramel vanilla flavor — tailor-made to customer need,” Zilberman said.

“When you eat vanilla ice cream, you actually smell it through your mouth and not only through the nose. Our mind converts the smell to taste.”

Seedling production facility in Yesod HaMaala. Vanilla Vida ships seedlings to different growing locations throughout Israel. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)
Seedling production facility in Yesod HaMaala. Vanilla Vida ships seedlings to different growing locations throughout Israel. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)

Zilberman, who earned an MBA at Israel’s Open University, grew up in Moshav Tzippori in the Galilee, where his father manages 1,700 acres of cattle, sheep, olives, corn and wheat.

Banking on growing global demand for natural quality ingredients, and protected by patents in the U.S., Europe and Israel, Zilberman is expanding operations by growing beans in Israel.

Vanilla Vida ships high-grade seedlings to growers near Haifa, Emek Hefer (in the Netanya region), Beit She’an, Beit Shemesh, Jerusalem and Kiryat Gat.

Vanilla Vida also grows beans in Yesod HaMaala in a climate-controlled, pesticide-free greenhouse, which Zilberman describes as one of the world’s largest and most innovative facilities. Production is currently about 50,000 seedlings per year; maximum is double that.

Vanilla Vida’s production facility at Yesod HaMaala in climate-controlled and pesticide-free. (Vanilla Vida/Bar Cohen)

“By going direct to farmers we get the bean at a fair price with no middleman,” Zilberman said. “And when you grow the beans in the right way and cure them in the right way, the final result is better than growing it in a poor way and curing it in the right way.”

Vanilla Vida also imports unprocessed beans from flat-leaf vanilla planifolia plants from Africa and India and, possibly, in the future from Indonesia, to process at home.

Zilberman devotes two days a week to Vanilla Vida’s R&D operations in Yesod HaMaala and three days to biotech in Ashdod. In early 2022, the Ashdod facility will relocate to the center of Israel, where it will expand to produce 20 times more than its 2021 production levels.

The company is also building more greenhouses on moshavim and kibbutzim, including at one of Israel’s leading kibbutzim, Ma’agen Michael, which is also an investor.

Vanilla Vida launched in late 2019 in collaboration with the Israeli Innovation Authority as part of The Kitchen FoodTech Hub, a seed investor and technology incubator owned by the StraussGroup.

Vanilla Vida employs 12 people and has raised more than $3 million from investors including Peakbridge’s FoodSparks fund and software and angel investor Michael Eisenberg. A Series A round is slated for 2021’s fourth quarter.

Strauss is considering incorporating Vanilla Vida’s ingredient into several product lines, said Amir Zaidman, The Kitchen’s vice president of business development.

“There are other crops that suffer from a broken supply chain and low quality,” Zaidman said. “Vanilla Vida is targeting those as well.”

The company’s plan is not to make a fast exit but to reach toward global operations in the U.S. and the EU.

“Our vision is to make Israel the largest player in the industry and build a new economic engine in agriculture,” Zilberman said.

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Israeli-grown Vanilla Is About To Disrupt The Industry appeared first on Israel21C.

Edited by Judith Isacoff and Bryan Wilkes



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