Paul Manning
Analyst · Baird
Okay. So, Matt, I'll kind of give you an overview for each of the groups. But let's start with Flavors to go directly to your question. So, yes, Flavors had 6%, 7% revenue growth. Most of that was volume. As we noted, it was only very moderately, say 1% price. So, therefore, there was a big volume move. A lot of that volume, majority of that volume was SNI, but there was volume in other pockets around the balance of the Flavor group. But principally, it was an SNI story. So, they had an absolutely spectacular revenue quarter in SNI. Lots of new wins, lots of good activity there, principally savory-related foods. The comparison for SNI was not as difficult. So, certainly, that had some benefit to us as well.
Now, where the leverage kind of comes into play here, right. So for 6% to 7% revenue, you'd sort of start to see something a little bit better than mid-single on profit. And you will as we get into the latter part of the year. But in the context of Q1, a lot of that selling was on these crops that had been grown in a previous crop year. So, all those things we heard about with energy and water, and fertilizers and agriculture, and land and labor, all those things were built into that crop. And so, that's the one we're selling right now.
Now, the good news is the next crop comes in later this year, and the cost situation on that is much improved. We won't know precisely how much, but the trends are quite positive because last crop 1 was probably among the most expensive we've ever seen period. And so, I would tell you that, that was largely the story on operating leverage in the Flavor group. As we kind of go into Q2, you'll see a little bit more of that. You know, you'll see very nice revenue growth.
Again, I'm feeling confident about that. But you won't quite see that operating leverage in Flavors yet. You'll start to see the operating leverage in Flavors in the back half of the year as the traditional flavors continue to accelerate and as we start selling the new crop at the lower cost position. So, yes, when you draw it up, volume growth should generate operating profit leverage, and it will for the year. But in any one quarter, we could be contending with the more expensive inventory.
Going over to the Color group, I had kind of mentioned on the last call that given how much you hold inventory, so there's generally a lag between when you start seeing operating leverage from your volume growth, and that tends to be about a quarter to 2 quarters, depending on the business unit here. So, you see Colors was down in Q1, low single-digit revenue, low single-digit profit. That's actually a positive sign because we had been, as you saw in 2023, for that low single-digit revenue, even minus mid-single digit revenue, we were seeing well into the minus double-digits on operating profit.
So, you're seeing the inflection point now in Q1. So, therefore, as we get into say Q2 and beyond for the Color group, I think you'll start to see that leverage very, very nicely play out in the Color group. So, I think, you'll be very, very happy with how that progresses. So, it'll progress a bit faster than Color, but that's principally just based on this inventory component associated with those agricultural products.
So, I think, big picture, as the year kind of normalizes and it is normalized, you're going to start to see that more traditional mid-single digit revenue leading to high single-digit EBITDA growth. And we're very, very confident that we'll be at that type of pace as the year moves on here.