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Reformulation of RTC Foods in India

FFCE

Reformulation of RTC Foods in India

The Indian Ready-to-Cook (RTC) foods industry has undergone a sea change in the past decade. What was dominated by basic necessities like instant poha, idli/dosa mixes and parathas frozen earlier now witnesses today’s consumer specifically looking for far more varied, health-oriented, and gourmet options. The recent scenario of the Indian food industry is longer characterised by primitive packaging designs and ill-reformulations. It is driven by innovation. They’re now fueled by RTC innovations, everything from rajma chawal and chole chawal meal bowls to air-fried samosas, millet khichdi, quinoa upma, and protein-filled kebabs, all easy and nutritious. But with this changing scenario comes technical challenges in formulation, processing, stability, flavor protection, and clean-label acceptance.

+And that’s exactly where Frontline Food Consultants and Engineers (FFCE) shines, as a strategic partner to brands wishing to make their mark in this fast-growing category.

RTC Foods in India: A Market on the Move

Growth Drivers:

  • Urban lifestyles hectic, dual-income households
    • Increasing Gen Z and millennial population
    • Increasing consumer demand for regional, comfort, and healthier foods in convenient forms.

The New Focus:

  • From mere mixes and breads → to complete meals, healthful snacks, protein-based choices.
    • From mere convenience → to convenience + nutrition + taste

Expansion from Basic to Complex Meals

Earlier, the RTC variants were limited to products such as upma mix, instant poha, and frozen chapati. But now, the ready-to-cook biryani kits, rajma chawal, dal makhani, amritsari chole, kadhi chawal, and even pasta arrabbiata like options are emerging and thriving well.

FFCE’s Role:

  • Recipe breakdown, batch standardization
  • Cooking time optimization (5–8 mins prep goal)
  • Spice paste stabilization, freeze/thaw integrity
  • Ensuring texture retention in grains and legumes

2. Rise of Ethnic and Street-Style RTC Snacks

Earlier, only plain frozen samosas or spring rolls were available as snack options under the RTC category, which limited customer conversions and was devoid of novelty. However, today, options like Paneer tikka samosas, kathi rolls, mom’s-style cutlets, dilli chaat patties, and even dabeli puffs are widely available. Quick commerce platforms have a major role to play in this rising demand.

Technical Needs:

  • Pre-frying or par-frying to optimize reheat performance
  • Moisture barrier coatings to retain crunch
  • Crust and core balance in frozen-to-fry formats
  • The Modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) or vacuum packaging

FFCE’s Support:

  • Frying oil management and moisture optimization
  • Packaging film compatibility for RTC snacks
  • Air fryer and oven-ready compatibility testing

3. Millet and Plant-Based Innovations

There’s a surge in demand for:

  • Millet upma, ragi dosa, bajra khichdi
  • Plant-based RTC kebabs, soya chaap, jackfruit biryani

Challenges:

  • Hydration ratios and binding in non-wheat flours
  • Anti-nutritional factors in millets
  • Bitterness and beany flavors in plant proteins
  • Maintaining structure during cooking and freezing

FFCE offers:

  • Pre-gelatinized millet base development
  • Protein blending (pea, soy, lentil) for better structure
  • Sensory optimization and clean-label masking

4. Clean Label & Health-Centric RTC Reformulation

Today’s consumer reads labels. They want:

  • No MSG, no preservatives
  • Low oil, high protein, low-carb, high-fiber options
  • Diabetic-friendly or heart-friendly RTC foods

Formulation Focus:

  • Natural preservatives like vinegar, rosemary extract, etc. are some of the possible additives which can be utilized.
  • Pure emulsifiers, stabilizers such as the guar gum, xanthan gum, citrus fiber, other fibers such as inulin etc are getting increasingly popular.
  • Cutting down on sodium content without losing flavor.

FFCE’s Expertise:

  • Nutritional modeling for protein, fat, carbs
  • Additive replacement with natural counterparts
  • Pilot batch testing and shelf-life simulation

RTC Processing

Key processing technologies include:

ProcessPurposeFFCE’s Involvement
BlanchingPre-treatment for vegetables/pulsesTime-temp optimization to retain texture
Flash Freezing/ IQFPreserve RTC items like tikkis, parathas, samosasIQF design, freezer capacity planning
Retort ProcessingFor gravies and rice dishes (chole, rajma, dal)Retort pouch design, process validation
ExtrusionFor snacks or protein-rich blendsTwin screw extruder selection, die design
MAP/ Vacuum PackagingExtend shelf life for pre-fried snacks, doughsPackaging selection, gas mix compatibility

How FFCE Supports RTC Brands in India

With vast experience across ready-to-eat, ready-to-cook, and frozen categories, FFCE provides:

Product Formulation and R&D

  • Custom recipes for target prep times (3–8 minutes)
  • Standardizing spice blends, batters, sauces
  • Rehydration ratio calibration for RTC mixes

Shelf Life Optimization

  • Natural preservation, packaging integrity, thermal processing
  • Microbial and sensory testing for refrigerated/frozen formats

Packaging & Equipment

  • Selection of laminated pouches, retort pouches, MAP trays
  • Support for semi-automatic and fully automatic RTC lines
  • Layout planning for freezing tunnels, retort units, cooking kettles

Turnkey Projects

  • Plant setup for frozen or ambient RTC lines
  • Integration of cooking, mixing, cooling, filling and packing
  • Cost optimization and vendor tie-ups

The Rising RTC Trends in India

  • High-Protein Bowls: Dal+quinoa, Chickpea+foxtail millet
  • Frozen Fusion Snacks: Paneer cheese bombs, Veg pizza kachori
  • Ayurvedic & Functional RTC Meals: Triphala khichdi, Ashwagandha laddoos
  • Chef-Curated DIY Kits: RTC biryani with garnishing sachets

FFCE works with clients to co-create innovative RTC concepts that blend authenticity, speed, and nutrition.

Conclusion

The RTC category in India is no longer an afterthought—it’s a strategic growth driver in the packaged food industry. Reformulation is the need of the hour, as consumers demand more from their convenience foods—more variety, better nutrition, and authentic taste.

At Frontline Food Consultants and Engineers (FFCE), we offer holistic support—from recipe design and pilot trials to plant setup and regulatory compliance—empowering food brands to lead the RTC revolution with innovation and confidence.

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