Powder or Liquid: Choosing the Right Food Colour for Your Bakery
After forty-eight years of supplying food colours to bakeries, biscuit manufacturers and ice cream units across Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharashtra, we have answered this question more times than we can count. Powder, or liquid? The answer depends on what you are making — and getting it right is the difference between a vibrant cake and a watery, faded one.
This guide walks through when to use each form, which brands suit which applications, and the practical reasons behind the choice. If you run a bakery, biscuit unit, ice cream shop or confectionery, this should save you some experimentation.
When to use powder food colours
Powder colours are concentrated dry pigment. They give intense, saturated colour without adding moisture to your recipe — which makes them the right choice for:
- Dry mixes — premixes, dry sugar coatings, powdered flavour bases
- Doughs that mustn't get wetter — biscuit doughs, certain Indian sweets where moisture balance matters
- Maximum colour saturation — deep reds, vivid oranges, intense yellows in cream-filled biscuits or jam centres
- Long shelf life — powders keep for years if stored airtight away from humidity
The dominant powder brands in our shop are Ajanta, MSK Lion and MSK Three Star, with IFF Colours in tin packs for premium applications. MSK Lion is the workhorse of Hyderabad's bakery trade — supplied in 200×100g cartons, 40×500g packs and 25kg bulk bags. Kesari yellow, lemon yellow, orange red, raspberry red, tomato red, chocolate brown — every daily colour a bakery needs.
When to use liquid food colours
Liquid colours are pre-dissolved pigment in a glycerine or water base. They mix evenly into wet recipes without leaving streaks or unmixed flecks. Use them for:
- Cake batters and sponges — even colour distribution from the first stir
- Ice cream and kulfi mixes — disperses into chilled liquids cleanly
- Soft icings, fondants and frostings — where dissolving powder would cause speckling
- Syrups, drinks and sherbets — water-based applications
The MSK Three Star "LC" liquid range — Blue LC, Green LC, Orange Red LC, Raspberry Red LC, Rose Pink LC, Tomato Red LC — comes in 30×500ml and 120×100ml packs. Convenient sizes for daily bakery use.
Five practical tips from the shop
- Start with less than you think you need. Modern food colours — especially MSK Lion powders — are very concentrated. A pinch goes a long way.
- Buy a dedicated red. Don't try to make deep red from orange. The hue won't be right for jam fillings, rose syrups or red velvet.
- Mix powders with a little hot water first to make a paste before adding to batter. Prevents speckling.
- Wipe up liquid spills immediately. Liquid colours can stain stainless steel surfaces if left for hours.
- For biscuit doughs, always use powder. Liquid changes hydration and affects how the biscuit bakes and snaps.
Storage matters
Powder food colours need a cool, dry, sealed environment — humidity makes them clump. Liquid colours should be stored at room temperature, away from direct sunlight, and shaken before use, since pigments can settle over time.
If you're not sure, ask us
We are happy to talk through which colour and which form fits what you are making. Call us on +91 91000 42418 or drop into the shop in Begum Bazar. We have samples, we know which brands suit which applications, and forty-eight years in the trade has not made the conversation any less interesting.