The 10 most popular pizza toppings
Let the great pizza debate begin!
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
Let the great pizza debate begin!
Photo by Franzi Meyer on Unsplash As our readers know, The Food Channel spends a lot of time tracking food trends throughout the year. If you missed it, be sure and see our Top Ten Food Trends for 2024. So, what’s happened since we did that report? …
As our readers know, The Food Channel spends a lot of time tracking food trends throughout the year. If you missed it, be sure and see our Top Ten Food Trends for 2024. So, what’s happened since we did that report?
These are just a few of the things we see moving around when it comes to food. The open discussions and sharing are the healthiest we’ve seen in a while, without rancor or one-upmanship. Let us know if you see something we should be tracking!
Chips and dip are important:
It can be a chain, a mom and pop, or a local legend-there’s enough variety in restaurant choices to find favorites nearly everywhere! Here’s a quick update of some our recent encounters that we loved enough to recommend. First, if you find yourself …
It can be a chain, a mom and pop, or a local legend–there’s enough variety in restaurant choices to find favorites nearly everywhere! Here’s a quick update of some our recent encounters that we loved enough to recommend.
First, if you find yourself in Galveston, Texas, visit Gaido’s Restaurant along the seawall. We have this restaurant on repeat, and always get some version of their crab-stuffed shrimp.
Indulge in an appetizer from Gaido’s, too, like the breaded onion rings, above.
We mentioned chain restaurants, so First Watch gives you an opportunity to find one of the more than 500 locations across 29 states. We love their seasonal menu items, and this delicious sugar-rimmed drink was from their Fall line-up.
While Gaido’s is a local institution, Mama’s on the Hill, in St. Louis, Missouri, is all that and more to the people of St. Louis. It’s a family-owned restaurant that serves great pasta in an area where great Italian food is supreme. Try their Tortellini a la Pappa, with prosciutto and a creamy garlic Parmesan sauce.
Finally, we come to a homegrown favorite and a twist on avocado toast, found at JW’s Kitchen in Southwest Missouri. It’s in a trendy area called Farmer’s Park, and it lives up to the promise with a fresh version of Neighbor’s Mill bakery’s multi-grain bread, topped with pickled onions, egg, radishes, and lots more. Great for brunch or any time of day, particularly when paired with one of their fresh juices, like the combo of beet, cranberry, and more pictured in the background.
Restaurants are doing one of three things right now: innovating, recovering, or closing. Go support your local favorites and prevent that last from happening!
Here’s how to get free pancakes today!
Did you know Tuesday, February 13 2024 is National Pancake Day?
I didn’t, but now I’m really glad I learned it. Because thanks to the good folks at IHOP (that’s the International House of Pancakes to you) are giving away pancakes on that day, and we all love free food, especially pancakes.
So how can you do it? We’re here to help.
Per the chain, on Tuesday, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., you can get a free short stack, one per guest. That’s three buttermilk pancakes, free, for dine-in-guests only. Also, you can pair the free pancakes with $1 donations to help support Feeding America.
That’s it! Go enjoy the day with some free pancakes!
Go get a free cheeseburger at Wendy’s during Super Bowl week!
Where’s the beef?
The answer this week is: At Wendy’s … and it’s free.
From now until Monday, February 12, the chain is giving away a free “Dave’s Single” — a quarter-pounder with cheese — with any purchase using the Wendy’s app.
[gambcom-standard rankid=”3011″ ]
Why pick this week to do it? It’s because Wendy’s ran the famous “Where’s the Beef?” ad during Super Bowl 18 all the way back in 1984 — that’s right, it’s the 40th anniversary! And how nice of them to celebrate with us with free food.
There you have it. Go get a free cheeseburger at Wendy’s, and enjoy the now-classic Super Bowl commercial 40 years later:
What’s your go-to jar of peanut butter?
Ligonberry pancake from Egg N’ Joe in Scottsdale, AZ. Ligonberries are not just for Europeans or Scandinavians anymore. The uniquely tart fruit is gaining attention for its antioxidant properties as well as its flavor. It’s time for our usual Food …
It’s time for our usual Food Trends report…but, of course, there is nothing usual about how we look at food.
The Food Channel keeps an eye on trends throughout the year, using a mix of data analysis, industry knowledge, analysis of consumer behavior, scientific advances, and global travel experience. We watch with the best as consumers order, prepare, eat and share their personal food tidbits.
If you’ve followed our reports, you know that we work hard to define the behavior that comes out of an observation. It’s not so much the food or the flavor as it is what is driving people to talk about it, buy it, interact with it. With all that said, here’s a look at what we see ahead.
1. Fresh Spices. 2024 is the year you’ll clean out your spice rack. The past decade has brought us a plethora of new spices—flavors and combinations that were never really accessible before. Black Truffle Parmesan Seasoning. Ceylon Cacao Chili Powder. Umami spice, and the flavor of the year from McCormick, Tamarind & Pasilla Chile Naturally Flavored Seasoning. Then there are the staples that 25 years ago weren’t common in most American kitchens, like cumin and cardamom. And if we start talking about salts, we may never end!
Part of this trend is the movement toward using spices such as cinnamon for their potential health benefits. The rest of it is simply a way to move flavor forward. So, make room for some new staples, and—while you are at it—clean out expired spices. While many hold their flavor, if they no longer smell like they should, are cakey, or they aren’t properly sealed, toss them and treat yourself to new ones.
Along with this will come new understanding about how to season food properly—watch for some self-help videos talking specifically about this. People are asking for it.
2. Heritage Recipes. Old Recipes are making a comeback. It’s funny how those secret family recipes have a way of popping up every decade or so. We’re seeing SO much on social media where people are sharing recipes from old cookbooks, or letting loose of their grandmother’s secret sauce recipe. TikTok has contributed to this trend, perhaps because old recipes offer an unending source of new content. No matter the cause, this is bringing some good recipes back to the forefront, particularly as home cooks add their own flair as they update the ingredient list and simplify the instructions.
3. How and When We Eat. There is a burgeoning afternoon evolution of coffee shop-like opportunities for remote workers. We’re seeing life extend beyond the coffee shop into charcuterie and cheese shops, and small plates that don’t require a happy hour to go along with them. Undoubtedly, this is a natural move as we incorporate the lessons of the Covid pandemic into the new realities of worklife. Buffets went out during the Covid pandemic, but are back in a smaller scale. One of the latest adaptations is the “carousel” approach, with a mix of made-to-order items and table service. Mirabella’s Table in Arkansas, where Walmart’s headquarters mean new ideas hit the area quickly, used this approach for its Christmas Eve menu. A fresh omelet station was set up where you could order what you wanted; same with a prime rib station where you could select an end cut or rarer slice. Meanwhile, offerings included baramundi, salmon, shrimp scampi, lemon ricotta pancakes, bobka French toast, seasonal tarts (pictured above) and a whole lot more. All the fun of a buffet with shareable portions brought to the table in all-you-can-eat style.
4. Playing With Our Coffee. Speaking of coffee shops, it seems something new with coffee comes up every year. Cold brew, pour over, you name it. This year it’s the addition of lemonade. Coffee Lemonade is now a thing, perhaps because citrus is being lauded for its own health benefits—but maybe just because it’s a flavor combo that seems a bit out there. Try it, though, particularly with an iced version like our Starbucks-inspired recipe, here. And, while we’re on the subject of lemonade-style beverages, we’ve become a fan of Freckleberry Teahouse in Galveston, Tx. They offer a Butterfly Pea Tea that is smooth going down, and presumably loaded with the antioxidant benefits of the peaberry. It’s also fun and insta-worthy, since the tea changes color when mixed with lemon. Oh, and First Watch has a seasonal drink called a Purple Haze, with lemon, sugar, butterfly pea flower tea and lavender. Thankfully, having a little fun with your food is always on trend.
If you want to know a little more about the peaberry, we found a good primer, here:
And, if you want to try making Coffee Lemonade at home, check out this Starbuck’s recipe.
5. Passive Kitchens. It’s back to the 70s with a new concentration on energy efficiency—but now it’s under the term “passive houses,” and it’s hitting the kitchen big time. New designer kitchens are all about natural light, sustainable materials, and lower utility costs. Kitchens are being re-engineered and, while most of us won’t be remodeling any time soon, homes of the future won’t just have utilitarian kitchens. They will be spaces where creativity reigns in both design and home chef-friendly functionality.
6. AI-Generated Cooking Prompts. We’re not saying that AI can replace recipe development. We’re certainly not saying that AI can take over your kitchen. At least not yet. But AI can write a recipe. We don’t know who ends up owning the copyright, or how many permutations may eventually be created…and, as far as we know, no one is out there testing the recipes. But, ask ChatGPT, as we did, to put together a few ingredients and see what you get. For years, culinary artists have asked for a way to easily review the ingredients in their pantry and come up with something to eat. Here you are, in 2024.
We gave a simple command: Write a recipe using chocolate chips and cinnamon. We can’t say it’s not similar to a hundred muffin recipes in our cookbook archives, but it was quick research and a doable recipe. See the recipe, here.
7. The Electronic Experience. The trends so far are leaning heavily toward home cooking again this year—another outcome of Covid. However, restaurants are recovering from the onslaught of having to recreate themselves for delivery and outdoor dining, and are once again paying attention to their back-end technology. They’ve discovered that the newest part of an exemplary dining experience is one that includes seamless payment and the use of the latest apps. The problem is that there are a bunch of possibilities now—Square, Toast, MyCheck, to name just a few. While Square seems to have a good share of the mom and pop market, we expect to see more of this sorted out as consumers demand a good experience from start to finish.
One additional note on this: We’re seeing a lot of frustration over customer service, so along with an evolution in electronics, we see a revolution in employee training gearing up.
8. Retirement Food. The latest wave of Baby Boomer retirements is doing what pundits have predicted for years: made senior facilities wake up to what people really want. Institutional food is being replaced by chef-created menus and on-site restaurants. These retirees are not into traditional dayparts, either. They like elevenses, high tea, extended coffeebreaks, workout menus, and—dare we say it—flavor and texture that is hard to achieve when you are serving hundreds at a time. Boomers are still a sizeable and influential category, even if it appears GenX is creating all the newest trends. It’s still Boomers who have expendable cash to travel and try new things. So, seniors and food is a category worth watching.
9. Appliance Cooking. We’re always asked about a piece of equipment when we do our trends report, so here’s one for 2024: the rice cooker. Those who want them have air fryers, but rice cookers offer a small appliance that doesn’t have to sit on the countertop. Recipe books such as “I Love My Rice Cooker” are popularizing some unexpected uses of the appliance and bringing new interest to meals. Hint: We recommend the Root Beer Beef Shortribs recipe.
10. The Olympics of Food. The 2024 Summer Olympics are in Paris starting in July, which brings a whole new level of culinary interest to the world. Combine this with the renewed interest in European travel and you have something worth paying attention to. While the focus will be on sports, we expect new interest in crepes, croissants, and escargot.
BONUS
In addition, here are some individual food items we’re watching for 2024:
See a few of our previous trend reports by searching the site for “trends.”
What cuisines were at the top of the food charts in 2023?
None for me this Christmas, thanks.