Among the top foods predicted to post strong growth over the next four years are cultured butter, hard seltzer, turmeric, and Tajin seasoning, according to Datassential. Kombucha, matcha, and ancient grains also are projected to gain continued momentum.
 
The Chicago-based market research firm uses a suite of tools, including artificial intelligence and a robust menu database, to uncover emerging ingredients and monitor ongoing trends in the restaurant and retail landscape. Food trends are influenced by economics, demographic shifts, technological advances, lifestyle shifts, wellness, policy, and trade, said Mike Kostyo, senior managing editor and trendologist at Datassential.
 
“We start from this 30,000-foot view of what’s happening in the country, in the world, what’s going to impact the food industry as a whole,” Kostyo said during a presentation at the Winter Fancy Food Show on January 20 in San Francisco.
 
A trend’s trajectory may be tracked on a four-stage cycle: inception, adoption, proliferation, and ubiquity. Dessert flavors on a menu adoption cycle range from black pepper, avocado, and yuzu in the inception phase to chocolate, caramel, and peanut butter in the ubiquity phase.
 
“The 1950s were all about ubiquity… It was kind of that steak-and-potato period,” Kostyo said. “During the ‘80s we started to move a little bit further in the menu adoption cycle… We started to see cooler stuff proliferating in the landscape.
 
“Today adoption is really the sweet spot for the industry. For a lot of our clients who say, ‘I want to put something cool and trendy on the menu,’ it tends to be from the adoption stage of the menu adoption cycle. This has been the innovation engine for the past few years.”
 
He cited such examples as gochujang, cold-brew coffee, farro, and tahini. Dessert flavors in the adoption stage include sweet potato, Greek yogurt, ginger, and bacon.
 
“We are seeing people start to play in the inception stage of the menu adoption cycle that aren’t necessarily that really cool, forward-thinking, high-end chef in the city,” he noted. “It’s things like Arby’s doing the venison sandwich.”
 
Trends are moving from inception to ubiquity more quickly than ever, as a result of demographic changes, urbanization, and mobile technology, he said.
 
“It used to take about a dozen years to move through this menu adoption cycle,” Kostyo said. “Now we’re moving to about half that. It’s about six to eight years right now that it takes for something to move from inception all the way to ubiquity.”
 
Flavors and ingredients in the inception or adoption stages generate excitement, while those in proliferation and ubiquity are familiar and favored by consumers.
 
“The two most important metrics when we’re creating a menu item or a new retail product are uniqueness … have you seen this anywhere else before? … and purchase intent … do you want to buy this item?” Kostyo said. “High uniqueness plus high purchase intent is like the holy grail of a product. That’s safe experimentation. It’s mixing together an ingredient or a format that most consumers know — pizza, sandwiches, burgers, chips — and including something in the earlier part of the menu adoption cycle to make it a little bit more unique.”
 
A Japanese-inspired, panko-breaded, steamed egg sandwich offered for a limited time at Shake Shack demonstrated high uniqueness but low purchase intent in consumer survey data. A T-bone steak, conversely, scored high in purchase intent but low in uniqueness.
 
An example of a menu item with high uniqueness and high purchase intent comes from Cracker Barrel Old Country Store. The Lebanon, Tennessee-based dining chain’s Campfire Meals feature glazed chicken or beef with corn on the cob, red skin potatoes, and carrots wrapped in tin foil. The concept offers both novelty and familiar appeal, Kostyo said.
 
“This is safe experimentation in a nutshell,” Kostyo said.
 
Several factors, such as support from a restaurant or retail brand or a tie-in to a larger trend, may propel a food or flavor forward. An ingredient that is versatile or ripe for reinvention also is more likely to gain traction. Consider cauliflower as an example.
 
“We see it in pizza crust, in cauliflower rice, we see roasted cauliflower steaks on the menu, we see cauliflower ‘wings’ doused in hot sauce,” Kostyo said. “There was a need for an ingredient that could do that at a time when plant-based was growing.”
 
Products and brands that tap into health, sustainability, or authenticity are positioned to succeed in the marketplace, Kostyo said. 80 percent of consumers said they want retailers to offer more foods and beverages with functional benefits, and 82 percent of consumers said they bought a consumer packaged goods brand for the first time because it aligned with their personal values, according to Datassential.
 
“What’s the future of healthy?” Kostyo said. “Personalized nutrition. It’s not just customization on a large level … it’s to me specifically that a brand or restaurant is actually creating food for my particular tastes and nutrition and health profile.”