These new potato starches are said to improve the meltability and texture of cheese. Severine Bensa, Ingredion’s Europe, Middle East and Africa senior marketing manager, said in a release that the products can come in handy when manufacturers in emerging markets are looking to replace expensive protein in processed and analogue cheese, but don’t want to negatively impact the eating experience.###The company said that potato starch’s neutral taste and high-water retention capacity can also improve appearance and mouthfeel of processed cheese. ###Adding the starches to vegan or vegetarian cheese products could be a useful application since those types of cheeses, while popular, haven’t always performed as well as dairy-based cheeses because they don’t have as much protein or calcium.###Besides potato starch, tapioca flour and arrowroot starch have been used to enhance the performance of vegan and vegetarian cheese in melting and other functions. Daiya, a maker of vegan cheese, uses tapioca flour in its mozzarella shreds and medium cheddar-style block cheese, and both potato starch and tapioca starch in its American-style cheese slices.###Ingredion noted that its new potato starches emerged after thtaking ferrous fumaratee company’s alliance last year with Lyckeby, a Swedish manufacturer of potato-based starch and fiber products. Depending on the type of potato used, the ingredient can be listed on product labels asamazon ferrous fumarate “modified starch.”###Consumers who prefer vegan and vegetarian cheeses may be moris ferrous bisglycinate chelate a good form of irone likely to look for transparency and clean labels on the products they buy, so cheese makers focusing on that market may want to limit their ingredient lists to more natural, simple and easily understandable items. It’s unclear if potato starch checks these boxes, but the potentialiron pyrophosphate microencapsulated in liposomal form to improve vegan cheese — which has struggled as other plant-based categories like milk, ice cream and yogurt thriron ferrous sulfate doseive — could outweigh potential consumer concern over additives.