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Survey: What’s Hot, What’s Not on Restaurant Menus

R&I offers an exclusive look at The National Restaurant Association’s just-released menu-trend data.

By Staff -- Restaurants & Institutions, 11/28/2007


On the Fence
The jury’s still out on these ingredients, which found similar percentages of chefs voting on both sides of the hot-or-not spectrum.
Hot
Passé
Tartare/carpaccio
40%
41%
Gourmet pizza
43%
39%
Middle Eastern cuisine
40%
43%
Mexican/Tex-Mex/ Southwest entrée salad
40%
39%
Flavored liquors
39%
37%
Wasabi

37%

38%
Mexican/Tex-Mex appetizers
36%
36%

Biggest Declines
% ranking as hot in 2007
% ranking as hot in 2006
Bottled water
49%
75%
Focaccia
42%
61%
Fresh herbs
48%
67%
Whole-grain bread
56%
70%
Espresso/specialty coffees
58%
71%
Pan-seared items
55%
68%

Top 10 Perennial Favorites
  1. Berries
  2. Asparagus
  3. Chicken
  4. Onions
  5. Tomatoes
  6. Beef
  7. Italian cuisine
  8. Rice
  9. Ice cream
  10. Iced tea

Source: NRA’s “What’s Hot and What’s Not” chef survey.

Bite-size desserts, small plates, locally grown produce and organic products are the latest red-hot food items, while low-carb dough, tofu, chai and foie gras are cooling off on menus according to the National Restaurant Association’s second annual “What’s Hot and What’s Not” chef survey.

The NRA study, which asked 1,282 American Culinary Federation members to rate nearly 200 menu items as “hot,” “passé” or “perennial favorites,” illustrates how consumers’ demands for control over their dining experiences, knowledge about the foods they eat and specialty, premium products are shaping the future of foodservice.

“The restaurant industry has been and always will be a consumer driven business,” says Hudson Riehle, NRA’s senior vice president of research. “The advantage that professionally trained chefs have is that they can lead consumers to experiment with new flavor and taste combinations and consequently, incorporate that into their mainstream behavior. What’s changed dramatically over last couple decades is the rapidity with which these trends are assimilated.”

Chefs rank the Top 10 “hot” items for 2007 as follows:

  1. Bite-size desserts
  2. Locally grown produce
  3. Organic produce
  4. Small plates/tapas/mezze
  5. Specialty sandwiches
  6. Craft/artisan/microbrew beer
  7. Sustainable seafood
  8. Grass-fed items
  9. Energy drink cocktails
  10. Salts (e.g. sea, smoked, colored, kosher)

“If you were to look at the typical American restaurant menu from 20 years ago and then go through the 194 items [in the survey], in many instances they would appear nowhere on those menus,” says Riehle, crediting the perpetual menu evolution to the restaurant industry’s pattern of year-over-year growth as well as the broader availability of new and different ingredients.

“Because the industry continues to post real sales gains year after year and the proportion of the food dollar allocated to the away-from-home market continues to grow, it allows substantial diversification not only within restaurant concepts but on restaurant menus,” he says.

By delving deeper into the comprehensive menu-item ratings, several overlying themes emerge:

Trend: Small is (still) big. Bite-size desserts once again garner the top spot on chefs’ lists of what’s hot, and dishes categorized as small plates, tapas or mezze also ranked in the Top 5.

Why? Consumers want more control over their dining experiences, and that includes portion sizes. Small plates let diners build meals and snacks at their discretion—and share and sample as they please—while downscaled desserts allow them to indulge without overdoing.

Trend: Every ingredient has a story. Chefs cite locally grown and organic produce as the second- and third-hottest ingredients. Sustainably raised and grass-fed products also make the top 10, with free-range items not far behind.

Why? Diners increasingly are interested in how and where foods are grown, raised and produced, and they want to feel that they’re making responsible choices. The feel-good factor plays a key role here, as consumers are ever more eager to support practices that are kinder to the environment and more humane to animals.

Trend: Ethnic flavors are going places. Global influences abound on chefs’ hot lists, with top-rated cuisines including Latin American, Mediterranean, Thai, Pan Asian, Cuban, Spanish and Caribbean.

Why? Consumers are learning that ethnic cuisines often have the bold, assertive flavors they crave. Moreover, seeing an exotic ingredient or two woven into recognizable menu items adds cachet and makes diners feel adventurous.

Trend: Specialty alcohol’s shaking things up. Eight of the Top 25 hot menu items are on the beverage side: craft beer, energy-drink cocktails, martinis, mojitos, artisan liquors, organic wine and specialty beers.

Why? Credit the theory of trickle-down menu development. Instead of the big ideas heading from fine-dining to more-casual restaurants, they’re moving from the kitchen to the bar. Diners are demanding more choices and higher-grade options not just from what they eat but also what they drink.

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