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How Will We Eat in 2021? 11 Predictions to Chew On - The New York Times

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Meal kits from your favorite restaurant, snacks that help you sleep and other ways the food world may respond in a year of big changes.

Predicting food trends is a dubious exercise in any year, but those who dabble in the dark art of culinary prognostication have never faced a landscape harder to read than 2021.

Most forecasters agree that the pandemic and the stumbling economy will not deliver a year of frivolous food or “breakout” cuisines. There will be no next-gen Salt Bae or CBD-infused poke bowl doughnut ramen tacos to be optimized for Instagram.

But innovation and a restaurant rebound will come, eventually. The most optimistic believe that the cork will pop out of the bottle by summer. “If we can ride the wave of what’s going to be a crappy winter, it’s going to be like the Roaring Twenties all over again,” said Andrew Freeman, whose hospitality marketing and public relations companies, AF&Co. and Carbonate, issue an annual trend forecast.

Others see a much slower transition, in which home cooking remains popular and cautious diners venture out into a radically different restaurant landscape than the one they left. Economically, there will be two worlds, each eating very differently than the other. Independent restaurants will likely remain in free fall, while chains like Domino’s and McDonald’s continue to profit. Diners who made it through the pandemic with jobs and health intact and are aching to spend money at restaurants. On the flip side are legions of Americans, including 2.3 million bar and restaurant workers, who remain unemployed or in a deep financial hole.

“It’s going to be ugly,” said Kara Nielsen, the food and drink director at WGSN, a global trend forecasting company.

It will also be interesting: Here are 11 developments that forecasters, market researchers and academics see catching fire in 2021:

Heather Anne Thomas

A year ago, meal kits had been left in the dust as consumers tired of strict subscription models, packaging waste and the amount of actual kitchen labor they required. Then the pandemic sent everyone back to the kitchen, and meal kits once again seemed like a good idea — so good that chefs got into the game. Diners, hungry for a taste of their favorite restaurants and willing to do what they could to keep them in business, made them a hit. These new kits range from a $475 roast-duck package (from Eleven Madison Park in New York) and a $159 mail-order goat shoulder for six (from Stephanie Izard of Girl & the Goat in Chicago) to less expensive options like the $21 double-stack burger for two (from H&F Burger in Atlanta) and a plethora of taco kits from Los Angeles. Can restaurant-meal subscription services be far behind?

Parker Michels-Boyce for The New York Times

Over the past several years, craft brewers have increasingly been putting their beers into aluminum cans, which are better for the environment than bottles and better for the beer. That shift went into overdrive this year, when breweries were no longer able to sell kegs in volume to bars and restaurants. Coupled with a nascent craze for wines and cocktails in cans, that led to a temporary can shortage. Cans now hold all kinds of beverages, including new drinks like hard kombucha and Breakfast Seltzer, which features a mix coffee and booze. The boom could fast-track can recycling and improve manufacturing.

Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Food forecasters always anoint a vegetable they expect to take off in the new year. It was chicory in 2017, and celtuce last year. In 2021, any vegetable will do. Health and immunity will continue to be major concerns, and foods and flavors that have a wellness halo should sell briskly, especially vegetables. Some grocery stores report that sales remain up by more than 30 percent over last year. “We’ve had an awakening about how our diets can impact our susceptibility to the disease,” said Jenny Zegler, associate director of food and drink for the global market research firm Mintel. “Once we have the space to open up and relax a bit in 2021, people can begin to say, ‘I am going to gain control over my diet again.’”

Alex Lau

This crustless cheesecake, baked in a very hot oven so the top caramelizes but the inside remains soft and jiggly, came out of San Sebastián, Spain, in the 1990s. Some elite American chefs started making versions, and two years ago it slipped into more mainstream food culture. Chefs in New York and San Francisco have dedicated themselves to perfecting the cheesecake; it is now a soft-serve flavor in Singapore and may become the birthday-cake or cookie butter flavor of 2021.

Pepsico.

The era of the energy drink is over. All the stress and anxiety of 2020 has created a new market for food and drinks that claim to promote relaxation and sleep. Companies are searching for “what they can add to their arsenal in addition to the weighted blanket and meditation app and hot tea,” Ms. Zegler said. Driftwell, from Pepsico, is water enhanced with magnesium and L-theanine, an amino acid that some studies show can relax the mind without drowsiness. Look for relaxing snacks, like Goodnight, a nighttime chocolate nibble with ingredients to help you sleep, and Nightfood, a bedtime ice cream with sleep-inducing minerals, digestive enzymes and less sugar.

Drew Anthony Smith for The New York Times

With international travel quashed and Americans taking fewer long trips across the country, the new domestic focus will feed an interest in hyper-regional American food. That means renewed interest in state-specific barbecue styles, locally made sodas and cheeses, fish species from nearby waters and sweet specialties like the chocolate-dipped peanut butter Ohio buckeye or Kentucky cream pull candy. (Corollary trend: the New Nostalgia, which has embraced modern takes on TV dinners, state-fair food to go, and restaurants like Big Kids in Chicago, which offers grown-up versions of fried bologna sandwiches and the Taco Bell Crunchwrap.

Joshua Bright for The New York Times

Building on a growing interest in products with natural (and fewer) ingredients, consumers will start to look for labels that go far beyond the government-required information to detail the product’s environmental and social impact. Companies owned by women and people of color are a selling point, as are products with small environmental footprints.

Kathy Willens/Associated Press

While months of home cooking and the recession have led to thriftier kitchens and a new appreciation for using vegetable trimmings and chicken carcasses, concern about packaging waste has largely been put on hold. Many shoppers have stopped using their own bags at the grocery store, and don’t think twice about heavily packaged, plastic-wrapped meal deliveries. “It’s all about safety and convenience,” said Amanda Topper, the associate director of foodservice for Mintel. She and others, however, expect concern about waste and interest in compostable or reusable containers to rise once the threat from Covid-19 wanes.

Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press

The pandemic exposed the predatory pricing of some food delivery services and the economic damage they’ve done to restaurants that suddenly had to rely on bringing their food to customers for most of their income. This year will bring a realignment in food delivery as more restaurants develop their own systems for online ordering. The pickup experience will change, too: Restaurants will mix technology like apps that track diner preferences and arrival time with touches of hospitality to polish the curbside experience and improve the quality of the food.

That’s only the beginning, forecasters say. Not too far in the future, predictive technology and new ordering platforms filled with data from a wide array of restaurants will give birth to something as easy and intuitive to use as Netflix, said Michael Wystrach, a founder and the chief executive of Freshly, which delivers its own freshly made restaurant-quality meals. “That will be one of the largest tectonic shifts we’ve seen since fast food,” he said, “and maybe since frozen food.”

Jake Naughton for The New York Times

The pandemic spurred some fundamental changes in how we live and eat, and several of those are expected to become even bigger: online grocery shopping, plant-based eating, ghost kitchens, direct ordering from farms and local dairies, and acts of culinary self-reliance like bread baking, pickling and gardening. Home cooking isn’t going away, either. “Even once restaurants reopen, the amount of food that is cooked and prepared at home will be higher by 30 percent than it would have otherwise have,” said Keith Knopf, president and chief executive officer of Raley’s, which owns 126 grocery stores in California.

Todd Heisler/The New York Times

The past year will be remembered for a global health crisis, a crashing economy and the fight for racial equity. All of those converge in the immediate need to feed hungry people. The relief organization Feeding America estimates a record deficit of eight billion meals between now and June, and many food companies and restaurants have turned their attention to getting food to the people who need it. “Unfortunately,” Ms. Zegler said, “the situation is not going away.”

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How Will We Eat in 2021? 11 Predictions to Chew On - The New York Times
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