Post on 13-Apr-2018
transcript
SFA's Trendspotters' Top Trends for 2018
Author:
Denise Purcell
Source:
Specialty Food News
Categories:
Industry Operations; Foodservice; Suppliers; Retailers
From algae to activated charcoal, here is what we’ll be seeing in the coming year, according to the Specialty Food
Association’s Trendspotter Panel.
Macro trends like sustainability and wellness, combined with consumers’ demand for convenience and flavor
adventure, are converging in the 2018 trends the panel has identified.
The Panel:
Kenneth Blanchette, director of sourcing, FreshDirect
Jonathan Deutsch, Ph.D., professor of culinary arts and food sciences, Drexel University
Kara Nielsen, vice president, trends and marketing, CCD Innovation
Perla Nieves & Alysis Vasquez, owners, Midnight Market
Alison Tozzi Liu, publications, communications, and marketing manager, James Beard Foundation
Elly Truesdell, global senior coordinator of local brands, product innovation, and development, Whole Foods Market
Here is a look at the top 10 trends:
1. Plant-based foods. Plant-based options are proliferating many categories beyond meat substitutes.
Segments like cheese and frozen desserts are enjoying growth in plant-based subcategories. As for meat
alternatives, algae is winning fans as the next superfood as it’s sustainable and offers two times the protein
as meat. 2018 will bring more plant-based convenience foods too, says Vasquez. As people become more
health conscious and concerned with how food is sourced, they’re veering away from traditional on-the-go
snacks. The food industry is recognizing the need for healthy, plant-based food to be convenient and in line
with busy schedules, she adds.
2. Upcycled products. As consumers become more aware of how much food is wasted in the U.S. – upwards
of 30 to 40 percent of the country’s food supply – upcycled products made of ingredients and scraps that
would have otherwise been discarded, will hold bigger appeal. We’re already seeing pressed juice made
from imperfect fruit, chips made from fruit pulp, and snack bars made from spent grain from the beermaking
process. Expect more to hit the market in the coming year, says Nieves.
3. Filipino cuisine. Often overshadowed by other Asian cuisines, the foods of the Philippines have not yet
captured a broad U.S. audience the way Thai and Vietnamese have previously. That’s shifting, maybe
prompted by a recent embrace of Korean food. American palates have become more sophisticated and
attuned to the complex flavors and bitter or sour notes of Filipino dishes. Chefs and tastemakers are taking
to this cuisine that infuses Asian and Latin flavors, and #filipinofoodmovement, founded in 2012 to create
awareness and appreciation of Filipino culinary arts, is a growing force, notes Vasquez.
4. Alt-Sweet. With sugar topping the list of dietary watch-outs, consumers continue to look to alternative
sweeteners for lower glycemic impact, fewer added-sugar calories, and intriguing sweet flavors as well as
sustainable footprints. Syrups made from dates, sorghum, and even yacon and sun root will join monk fruit
on the market as emerging options for sweet, says Nielsen.
5. Goth food. Possibly a reaction to 2017’s deluge of rainbow and unicorn foods, black is the new black.
Activated charcoal—produced by heating coconut shells to extremely high temperatures until they are
carbonized—is gaining superfood status for its reported detoxifying attributes and is being used as a
surprising twist in everything from pizza crust to lemonade to ice cream. We’ll see it spread in the coming
year. “The goth spin on common food will make an appearance in 2018 without a doubt,” says Nieves.
6. Product labeling 2.0. More is more when it comes to product labeling. Consumers will be seeking greater
on-label visibility into the farms, ingredient sources, and supply chain of each item in their shopping basket.
GMO transparency is among the most prioritized details, but shoppers want new depths of information
across the spectrum, including Fair Trade certification, responsible production, and no animal testing, says
Truesdell. Sourcing has become the buzz word for the next generation of food adventurers and retailers,
agrees Blanchette.
7. Root to stem. Between nose-to-tail butchery and reducing food waste, a few forces are combining to inspire
root-to-stem cooking—utilizing the entire fruit or vegetable, including things like stems or leaves that are less
commonly eaten. Foodservice recipes like pickled watermelon rinds, beet-green pesto, or broccoli-stem slaw
are introducing consumers to new flavors and textures from old favorites, says Truesdell, and produce
“butchers” are a growing fixture at retail. Expect to see new product development among packaged foods
too.
8. Cannabis cuisine. As more states legalize recreational marijuana, the varieties of pot-enhanced food and
beverages will increase. Look out for continued interest and acceptance in a host of snacks, treats, and
beverages with a little something extra, says Nielsen.
9. A (deeper) feast from the Middle East. Foods like hummus, pita, and falafel were easy entry points, but
now consumers are ready to explore the deep traditions, regional differences, and classic ingredients of
Middle Eastern cultures, with Persian, Israeli, Moroccan, Syrian, and Lebanese influences rising to the top,
says Truesdell. Spices like harissa, cardamom, and za’atar are showing up on mainstream menus, as well
as dishes like shakshuka and grilled haloumi. Ethnic exploration is a rallying cry for more flavor, more spice,
more food experience, says Blanchette.
10. The rise of traditional bread. “Although we've seen the explosion of gluten-free in the last few years, the
traditional side of bakery has also been elevated by the same sourcing and fine-tuned production processes
we see with proteins and vegetables,” says Blanchette. Bakers are using local grains, milling the day before
baking, and incorporating long proofing times, re-inventing what good bread means. “Bread has become all
or nothing,” adds Deutsch. “either high-end and artisan or low-carb and high-protein.”
Bonus …
The Trendspotter Panel says we’ll be seeing even more:
cricket flour and non-grain sustainable proteins; fermented foods; cocktail mixers and bitters for home use; savory
flavors where one would expect sweet; pasture-raised animals for welfare, better health, and taste; bananas
transformed into milks, snacks, frozen desserts, and flours and baking mixes
Emerging trends on the radar….
Eating for beauty with products like collagen-infused foods; moringa as the new superfood; mushrooms (extracts,
powdered, or whole) as a functional ingredient in everything from chocolate to lattes.