Natural Colors & Pigments

Clean Label Brown Shade Development

A clean-label brown shade development guide covering Maillard reaction, caramel-like notes, natural pigments, pH, heat, sugars, proteins, safety tradeoffs and color stability.

Clean Label Brown Shade Development
Technical review by FSTDESKLast reviewed: May 11, 2026. Rewritten as a specific technical review using the sources listed below.

Brown is not one chemistry

Clean-label brown shade development can come from Maillard reaction products, caramelization, cocoa or coffee solids, roasted grain, malt, fruit concentrates, vegetable extracts, natural pigments, enzymatic browning or compounded natural colors. These pathways do not behave the same. Some create flavor and color together; some provide color with minimal flavor; some are pH-sensitive; some fade with light or oxygen; some may increase process contaminants if overheated. The first decision is whether the product needs true roasted flavor, visual brown shade, or both.

The Maillard reaction is a major route for brown color and roasted flavor. It involves reducing sugars and amino compounds and is influenced by temperature, time, pH, water activity, reactant type and matrix. Open-access reviews describe both benefits and disadvantages: desirable melanoidins and roasted notes can form, but excessive heating can generate unwanted compounds and nutritional changes. Clean label does not mean uncontrolled browning is automatically better.

Formulation levers

Reducing sugar type matters. Glucose, fructose, lactose and maltose do not brown identically. Protein or amino-acid source matters because different amino groups form different aroma and color pathways. pH controls reaction rate: mildly alkaline conditions accelerate Maillard browning, while acidic systems may slow it and favor different pigment behavior. Water activity is also central; very wet systems dilute reactants, while very dry systems restrict mobility. Many baked and cooked systems brown most actively in an intermediate moisture range.

Clean-label formulators often use fruit concentrates, malt extracts, roasted flours, cocoa powder, coffee, carob, vegetable extracts or yeast-derived ingredients. Each brings taste, label implications and stability behavior. A date concentrate may add sweetness and fruit notes. Malt can add cereal and roasted notes. Cocoa creates brown shade but also bitterness and allergen-free claim considerations depending on facility. The brown system must fit the product's flavor identity.

Natural pigment risks

Natural pigments can support brown or warm shades, but they are sensitive to pH, oxygen, light, heat, metals and matrix composition. Anthocyanins shift color with pH; carotenoids oxidize and isomerize; chlorophylls degrade and can become olive-brown; betalains are heat and pH sensitive. Reviews on natural pigment stability show that encapsulation, copigmentation, antioxidant protection and packaging can improve performance, but no pigment is universally stable.

Brown shade also changes during shelf life. A sauce may darken during storage because Maillard reactions continue slowly. A dairy product may show non-enzymatic browning or discoloration. A bakery filling may fade if natural color is exposed to light. The development plan should include both initial color and stored color.

Process control

Process levers include cook temperature, residence time, solids, pH, evaporation rate, shear, oxygen exposure and cooling speed. If brown shade is generated in-process, the endpoint should be measured by color values, sensory notes and safety limits rather than subjective "looks brown enough." If shade is added as a natural color, the process should protect it from heat and oxygen when possible.

A clean-label brown system must also avoid misleading claims. If color comes from roasted sugar or caramel-like ingredients, the label and product identity should be reviewed. If the ingredient contributes color primarily, regulatory classification may differ by market. Technical success and label compliance must be checked together.

Release tests

Release tests should include color measurement such as L*a*b*, visual standard, pH, solids, sensory roast/caramel notes, bitterness, stored color, light exposure and heat-abuse stability. For high-heat systems, include relevant process-contaminant risk assessment. The aim is a brown shade that is repeatable, label-consistent, stable and aligned with flavor. Clean-label color is only successful when it looks natural, tastes intentional and survives the product's real shelf life.

Color communication should be aligned with the ingredient role. If a roasted ingredient is added for flavor and color, the label story is different from adding a pigment mainly for shade. The development record should say why the ingredient is present, how much color it contributes and whether it changes flavor identity.

Shade matching

Shade matching should use instrumental color and human evaluation. L*a*b* values help control lightness, redness and yellowness, but consumers judge color in the actual package and serving condition. A brown sauce in a glass jar, a baked crust, a dairy dessert and a meat glaze are viewed under different backgrounds and expectations. Match against a real product standard, not only a lab swatch.

Flavor limits should be set with the color target. A darker Maillard shade may bring bitter, burnt or sulfur notes. A fruit-based brown shade may bring acidity or dried-fruit flavor. A cocoa-based shade may bring bitterness and allergen or claim implications. The best shade is not the darkest; it is the one that supports product identity.

Shelf-life color plan

Stored color should be measured at the beginning, middle and end of shelf life under target and mild-abuse conditions. Natural brown systems can darken, fade, shift red/yellow balance or develop haze. Packaging light barrier and oxygen control may be as important as the color ingredient. If the shade is created by heat during production, retain process data with the color result so drift can be traced.

For export or multi-plant production, create a color standard that can travel. Use instrument limits, photographs and sensory descriptors. A phrase such as "golden brown" is not enough for consistent production across sites.

FAQ

What creates brown color in clean-label foods?

Brown color may come from Maillard reactions, caramelization, roasted ingredients, cocoa/coffee, fruit concentrates, natural pigments or enzymatic browning.

Why is Maillard browning not always safe to maximize?

Excessive browning can create harsh flavors, nutritional losses and unwanted compounds, so time, temperature, pH and water activity need control.

Sources