Schouten extends plant protein range with new fillet

Schouten has launched a new plant-based fillet built around proprietary fibre technology, adding a supply-ready format aimed at private-label, foodservice, and industrial applications.


IN Brief:

  • Schouten has introduced a 95g plant-based fillet using a proprietary fibre structure.
  • The company says the format reduces processing intensity and can lower environmental impact.
  • The new line is positioned for hot use, chilled marinated applications, and private-label scale.

Schouten Europe has added a new plant-based fillet to its portfolio, using a proprietary fibre structure designed to deliver a firmer, meat-like texture while reducing the level of processing required in manufacture.

The Dutch producer said the 95g fillet combines high protein and fibre content with a light, chicken-style appearance and a format suited to both hot applications and chilled marinated use. The shape is created using 3D shaping technology, and the product can also be enriched with iron and vitamin B12.

Schouten has framed the development partly around processing efficiency. Conventional texturisation routes in meat alternatives can carry higher energy demand and may depend on ingredients produced outside Europe. The company said its internal analysis indicates the new fibre approach could reduce environmental impact by around 10% to 30%, depending on formulation and supply-chain configuration.

That combination of texture, process simplification, and adaptable end use gives the launch a wider industrial relevance than a single SKU update. Schouten supplies mainly under private label and says it already serves customers in more than 50 countries, so new formats are not just product-development exercises; they are route-to-market decisions that affect ingredient sourcing, manufacturing runs, and customer-specific formulation work.

In a category still wrestling with cost, texture, and repeat purchase, the commercial test will be whether fibre-based structures can move from innovation language into stable, scalable supply. Schouten is clearly betting that less processing and broader application flexibility will help push that transition along.


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