‘Naked’ Cheetos and Doritos ditch iconic colours in health push
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The offerings do not have any added colours, leaving them a natural pale yellow instead of the bright hues for which the brands are known.
PHOTO: CHEETOS/INSTAGRAM
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A new line of Cheetos and Doritos will not leave anyone’s fingers orange.
PepsiCo is introducing “naked” versions of its popular snacks that strip out artificial dyes as part of its push to boost healthier options. The offerings – marketed as “Simply NKD” – do not have any added colours, leaving them a natural pale yellow instead of the bright hues for which the brands are known.
The snacks are designed to taste the same as the original, but with a novel appearance that the company is betting will interest consumers, according to Ms Rachel Ferdinando, chief executive of PepsiCo Foods US.
“It wasn’t based on consumer data or trends,” she said. “No insight would ever suggest removing colour from Doritos or Cheetos because these are fan favourites.”
Food companies have been swopping synthetic dyes for natural colours amid pressure from US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and the “Make America Healthy Again” movement he leads.
PepsiCo already has a Simply line that includes Doritos and Cheetos without artificial dyes, but they are in slightly different flavours from the original versions. The NKD line tries to replicate the same flavour of the traditional snacks, but without any added colouring.
PepsiCo is also facing an activist investor campaign by Elliott Investment Management, which has built a US$4 billion (S$5.2 billion) stake in the company. Elliott has called on PepsiCo to review and streamline its snacks portfolio and divest underperforming assets.
Many of PepsiCo’s most popular snacks fall outside the growing category of “better-for-you” foods, though the company has expanded its healthier offerings, including Sabra hummus and Siete grain-free chips.
In its most recent quarter, the company reported a 4 per cent drop in volume in its North American food division. Shares of PepsiCo are down 5 per cent for the year, compared with a 16 per cent rise in the S&P 500.
For fans of the original Doritos and Cheetos, which are still being made, these versions will be quite a change when they arrive in US stores by Dec 1.
The NKD Flamin’ Hot Cheetos are a pale yellow that leave a white dust on fingers, unlike the deep orangey-red of traditional spicy Cheetos. Similarly, a NKD Nacho Cheese Dorito looks like a traditional corn chip and leaves no orangey smudge.
The original Flamin’ Hot Cheetos mixed with the new “naked” version that does not use any added food colouring.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
PepsiCo tested the NKD line with expert tasters trying the chips under special red lights that prevented them from seeing the colour of the chip.
“If you close your eyes, you have the same crunch, the same flavour,” Ms Ferdinando said.
Companies have had at times to backtrack after softening their products’ colours. General Mills put artificial colouring back into its Trix cereal in 2017 after consumers complained about its naturally coloured version. The company in 2025 said it would remove synthetic dyes from all US cereals.
PepsiCo also saw little enthusiasm for Crystal Pepsi, a clear cola launched in the early 1990s and discontinued soon after.
Colour shapes how consumers perceive food before eating it, said Ms Renee Leber, a food scientist at the Institute of Food Technologists. For example, people often view a lighter-coloured strawberry ice cream as not being as intensely flavoured as one that is a deeper red, she said.
“If you keep the flavour the same, but you adjust the appearance, it can impact the perception of freshness for people,” Ms Leber said.
But Ms Ferdinando said people are increasingly seeking transparency around what is in their food.
“We see that consumers’ preferences are moving towards fewer ingredients, more alternative options, so we don’t see it as a risk,” she said.
PepsiCo developed the chips in about eight weeks, according to Ms Ferdinando.
The company has been moving swiftly to broadly overhaul its portfolio and offer more options for health-conscious consumers, including products with more protein and “clean labels” with shorter ingredient lists. BLOOMBERG

