I was actually trying to say that since this is an Ngene forum, I can answer questions on the use of Ngene but not provide general information on how to design stated choice experiments (although we sometime do here on this forum, I hope you understand we cannot answer all such more general questions). In your case, I think you have to decide on what is the choice you would like your consumers to make? Is it the choice between these products (labelled alternatives), or would you like to investigate attributes of each product and vary them (unlabelled alternatives) in order to capture trade-offs between these attributes. Do you really want to let consumers make a choice between porridge, bread and beer? (but perhaps I do not quite understand your study, I also do not know what sorghum is, I am merely a simple transport planner
).
Another option is to use scenarios (nesting), for example something like
U(productA) = b1 * product[0,1,2] + ... /
U(productB) = b1 * product[product] + ... /
U(none) = 0
where 0 is porridge, 1 is bread, and 2 is beer. So you state a certain scenario "Suppose you would like to purchase bread", and then show ProductA and Product B (both being bread) with varying levels. But perhaps this is not what you want, perhaps you want to be able to compute market shares for certain products, in which you will need labelled alternatives. This is up to you to decide based on experimental design theory and I am afraid I cannot help you with.
Regards,
Michiel