Post Malone Just Dropped. So Did We.
.png)
Every Foodgraph catalog release adds thousands of new products, including private label & retailer-exclusive products. Fresh product data helps you match more receipt data, monitor shelf health, and build better PDPs.
Our catalog doesn’t stop at front images. We also offer hero shots, brand extras and many more image types. Here are a few examples from our latest catalog.

New SKU Values for Better Matching
For all retailers in our catalog, SKU values are available for matching products to retailers, receipts, and POS data, such as a Target DPCI. Here's an example product with the SKU values of the retailers who offer it.

New Retailers Added
Foodgraph’s catalog has grown to include data from 19 sources, now including the private label products of these major retailers.
.png)
23,000+ Products Added
23,000+ packaged food products were added to our catalog on April 3. All clients gained access to the updated catalog on that date.
Many brands introduced new products in time for Easter, so we named this updated catalog, our 34th, as “Jellybeans.”
In total, 699,000+ products with fresh data and images are available now, up 11% just this year.

Next Catalog Update
We refresh our catalog continually. Our next major catalog is targeted for release on May 1, in advance of Mother’s Day.
Thank you for following our progress! If you would like more information, or to see a sample data set of new products added to our catalog this month, please reach out. I’d love to hear how we can support your work.

David Goodtree
Founder and CEO, Foodgraph
More to explore
Discover additional articles, updates, and perspectives.

Context Graph for CPG
David: What does “context” mean for data platforms?
Ophir: Ever since we started tackling the problem of messy, fractured product data, we found that domain knowledge is the key to making good decisions.
Context in AI goes beyond recording state data and decision traces. It must include the basis of the decision. For specific verticals — like CPG — the reasoning is usually embedded in industry-specific domain knowledge.
David: What does this mean in real life?
Ophir: A key aspect of our data platform is that industry knowledge is embedded in our logic. But the more expertise that we added, it became harder to manage, especially for performing QA.
This problem led us to add human-readable “context” right alongside the data results. This approach was powerful and efficient. It enabled agents, analysts, and developers to trace the chain of decisions for audit or validation.
Context is embedded vertically in our stack. Throughout our schema and processes, we can observe the entire "sausage-making" process, with natural language traces that lead clearly to the final outcomes.
David: Can you give some examples of domain knowledge about CPG products?
Ada: Sure, for example: How are units of measure correctly expressed in food versus non-food products? We see unexpected mutations all the time, such as made-up or foreign acronyms, even from “sources of truth” such as brand syndication and major retailers.
John: Another example: FDA regulations can be used to validate Nutrition Facts data. The FDA has strict requirements, which are codified in the Federal Register and have the force of law, but are often not applied on product description pages.
David: We see all the time how FDA regulations about food labeling, as expressed in the FD&C Act, are often violated on retail websites.
How do retailers get away with it? Because unlike food brands, grocers are not subject to federal oversight of product description pages.
Ophir: These are good examples of how we use domain knowledge to make decisions about normalizing, fixing, and enriching attribute values. While we don’t know about travel and automobiles, we do know CPG.
David: How does recording context help?

Ophir: Context is necessary to describe why decisions were made. It must be easily observable, auditable, and stored as first-class data.
David: Aren’t some data sources always reliable, so context about decision-making isn’t needed?
Ophir: Among the 47 sources we currently ingest, all have significant gaps and inaccuracies.
Ada: Some data sources have excellent quality, but only cover a subset of brands. Others, like syndicators, don’t have private label products. And long-tail SKUs are specific to each source, or not present at all.
John: Yes, and key attributes are often missing, such as images or net weight.
David: Sounds like a mess. How do we deal with it?
Ophir: We expect data chaos. Gaps and errors are the problems we solve for.
David: Aren't LLMs a reliable source of product data?
Ophir: Looking at generic AI results, they do a great job at synthesizing and generating data. But general LLMs don’t have vertical knowledge to classify with accuracy, correct errors, derive missing values, or adjudicate conflicts.
Ada: The answers from LLMs are only as good as the information they gather. We often see inaccurate results from general AI search and tools. Garbage in, garbage out still applies in the age of AI.
David: Is the answer to throw an army of human experts at the problems?
John: Human experts do have the knowledge, but an army of them is expensive and hard to manage. However, their knowledge can be embedded in vertical AI to create quality data at scale.
David: When did we start using context?
Ophir: We architected context from the beginning. We just didn’t call it a “Context Graph” because that term didn’t exist. Handling context as first-class data enables our systems and people to do their jobs better. We embed our expertise to improve quality and frequency, then capture how that expertise was used to create those better outcomes.
Ada: A simple example is knowing that cocktail mixers like tonic are non-alcoholic, even if retailers or brands list them in an alcohol category.
John: LLMs often get this classification wrong too. Humans like Ada never do 🙂.
David: These CPG nuances matter in lots of use cases, such as PDPs, digital analytics, nutrition and even price optimization.
Ophir: As our contexts grow, our learning compounds. The more we add to the graph, the more we are able to do better. Compare this context approach with hard-coded rules for addressing endless edge cases. That becomes unwieldy and doesn’t scale.
David: When does the Context Graph come into play?
Ophir: In our view, a Context Graph is systems of agents that enable autonomous decision-making across workflows. This full AI autonomy — when AI makes decisions across workflows — has not yet arrived. We see the benefits and the paths to get there, and we are working towards them.
David: Where are we on the journey to a Context Graph?
Ophir: The first requirement is having an AI Native system, with schemas and processes that are designed for context, not just state and observability. We re-architected our systems to be fully AI Native in 2024.
Second, we treat context data as “first class.” This means the "Why" data is of equal importance to all other data types.
Third, our agents already utilize context data to decide, store, observe, and audit decisions in discrete workflows.
We believe that the full concept of the Context Graph will be realized when systems of agents — not just specific services — can exercise autonomy across workflows with provable superiority.
David: Why not sacrifice quality to be more efficient?
Ada: Our value proposition is strongly rooted in quality data.
John: We aggressively lean into AI, but we won’t “ship it” if the results are not better or cause harm.
Ophir: We see a clear path to the Context Graph. We believe it describes how data businesses will scale in the age of AI, with quality and efficiency, grounded in domain knowledge.
David: Thank you, Ophir, John, & Ada. Glad to be on this journey with you!
For our first mention of the Context Graph, see our recent blog post The CPG Showdown: Love vs Strength.
For more on how context graphs are being discussed across the tech and venture communities, see What are context graphs by Simple.AI and Context graphs one month in by Foundation Capital.
For the original Context Graph idea, see AI's trillion-dollar opportunity: Context graphs, by Foundation Capital.
Thank you for following our progress. Send me a note with thoughts or questions. I’d love to hear how we can support your work.
Warm Regards,

David Goodtree
Founder and CEO, Foodgraph

CPG Showdown: Love vs Strength
February is an annual showdown among new seasonal food products, pitting love vs. strength.
- For romantics, Valentine’s Day ♥️ product introductions command top placement on the digital shelf and store endcaps.
- For health & wellness enthusiasts, interest in protein-rich products has reached an all-time high in 2026, driven by New Year’s resolutions for improved strength 💪🏼 and functional diets.
Welcome to Foodgraph’s newest catalog, packed with new products and updated attributes, across food and non-food categories. Our newest release (v48) includes 1,380,000+ products, up 119% in the past year.
Protein hits all-time high
Consumer interest in protein-enriched foods hit a 20-year high in the new year. Brands of all types continue to bulk up their products with protein-forward positioning. Across all food aisles, here are some of the newest 1,000 protein-titled food products in our latest catalog release.

Private label retailers are aggressively launching protein-centric offers.
- Kroger is betting big on protein going into the New Year with 110 “Simple Truth Protein” products -- such as bowls, chips, and infused waters.
- H-E-B rolled out “Protein Lifestyle” meals on December 31, focusing on convenience.
- Sprouts’ eCommerce storefront leads with Find Your Protein Routine, featuring hundreds of meat and plant-based items.
Big CPG innovates, but can’t keep up with demand.
- Danone’s high-protein yogurt brands Oikos and Activia cannot serve all the demand, with supply chain constraints blocking sales and stalling innovation.
- Barilla’s Protein+ product line is broadening its portfolio, but the company recognizes it’s not always first to launch new items in its category.
- DTC brands like 1440 Foods and Truvani -- a common channel for protein powders, bars, and supplements -- are now scoring shelf space at grocers Raley’s, Sprouts, and Walmart.
- Newer brands like Kola and Whey Good are grabbing slots when big CPG has gaps.
The FDA’s new Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2025-2030 moved protein to the top of the list, encouraging consumers to “Prioritize Protein Foods at Every Meal”.
Google searches for protein achieved “Peak Popularity” for the first time in 20 years, reaching the highest-level of interest relative to all Google search terms, including both AI and traditional methods. Here’s a snapshot using data from Google Trends:

Valentine’s Day 2026
New products for Valentine’s Day showcase how Foodgraph’s catalog is rich with opportunities to explore actual product trends and which brands are leading.

Dubai chocolate continues to skyrocket.
- 79 Dubai Chocolate products are now in circulation, up 500%+ since 12 in August, and up from zero products a year ago.
- Smaller brands dominate the shelf, such as BeeMax, Leonessa, and Nutty & Fruity.
Big CPG missed the start of the trend.
- Since the summer, Ghirardelli and Lindt caught up and launched new products in time for Christmas and Valentine’s Day.
- But Hershey’s doesn’t believe in Dubai Chocolate’s staying power, saying "Only 10,000 exist. Ever. This isn't going into regular production."
- Nestlé’s Damak brand already had chocolate/pistachio products, but hasn’t yet repositioned packaging to “Dubai Chocolate”, missing out on consumer awareness.
Pistachio health & beauty products have caught the Dubai wave.
- Pistachio -- a key ingredient in Dubai chocolate -- has taken the non-food aisles by storm.
- Body creams, candies, and perfumes -- with pistachio scents -- are in rotation now.
Foodgraph saw CPG’s embrace of this trend early.
- See our August blog for more info about Dubai Chocolate: School’s In. So Are 60,000+ New SKUs.
Ramping up data sources
Our newest release adds 17 new retailers to the catalog, now incorporating 47 data sources in total, up 235% in the past year.

All new sources include CPG products in food, plus alcohol, health & beauty, household, and pet.
To represent the national product assortment, our mix of sources includes retailers -- to capture the explosion of new private label products -- plus brand syndicators, wholesalers, and government.
Foodgraph News and Next Catalog
Welcome to our new Head of Sales Andrew Haney, who joins Foodgraph with deep industry experience across retail and CPG at Toluna, Profitero, Epsilon, and Nielsen. Please reach out to connect.
Our next major update arrives in March, with more products and fresh data for Easter, Passover, and St. Patrick’s Day.
Thank you for following our progress. Send me a note with thoughts or questions. I’d love to hear how we can support your work.
Warm Regards,

David Goodtree
Founder and CEO, Foodgraph

Beyond the Food Aisles
“Honey, did you get the scented candles at the supermarket?"
Grocery shopping in non-food aisles is seeing a renaissance in innovation and seasonal products.
Our newest catalog adds 130,000+ products, capturing a huge wave of innovation in health & beauty, household, pet, and more.
Foodgraph captures what’s on the shelf right now, free of hallucinations.
Private Label: More Than a Value Play
Major retailers are rolling out private label innovations in every aisle, capturing bigger margins and consumer loyalty.

Limited Availability, No Cooking Required
Seasonal and promotional offerings -- even in non-food aisles -- make grocery a destination year-round.

And, the numbers are impressive. Private label products in household grabbed 28% of unit volume as of September 2025, achieving 99% household penetration, according to Numerator. Other non-food categories are close behind.
A Year of Growth, in Every Category
Foodgraph’s v46 release includes 1,200,000+ products, up 92% year to date across all aisles.

Foodgraph's accelerating growth is driven by our nationwide data acquisition strategy, from large brands to the long tail, plus:
- private label’s rapid expansion in all categories
- eCommerce bursting with assortments that often exceed the in-store mix
- seasonal variants innovating with new flavors, scents, and packaging
Next Catalog
Our next major catalog update arrives in January, with more new products and fresh data in all aisles.
Thank you for following our progress. For more information, send me a note. I’d love to hear how we can support your work.
Warm Regards,

David Goodtree
Founder and CEO, Foodgraph
Get better CPG product data today.
Book a demo today to learn how Foodgraph can help.