Sunday, 15 December 2019

Industry forecast: Food trends in 2020

food trends
Whelk, seen here with garlic sauce, parsley and lemon, might be the next big thing. Photo credit: AS Food studio/shutterstock.com

Sea snails

Alex Atala of Sao Paulo’s D.O.M. says: “Seaweeds and [other] ingredients from the sea we don’t pay attention to – [such as] plankton, sea snail, anemone – will take prominence.”

Venison steak
Photo credit: hlphoto/shutterstock.com

Venison

Mark LaBrooy of Byron Bay’s Three Blue Ducks thinks wild-harvested ingredients such as deer, a non-indigenous species detrimental to the Australian native environment, will work their way onto menus, as they are “nutrient-dense and all-natural”.

loose tea leaves food trends
Photo credit: Yulia Gladysheva/shutterstock.com

Loose-leaf tea

Henrietta Lovell, London-based founder of Rare Tea Company, is seeing a turnaround in consumer habits, where people are switching from tea bags to loose-leaf tea. “Tea bags create unsustainable waste,” she says, “[but] a teapot can be passed down through generations, flooding your life with pleasure.”

SEE ALSO: Food trends: How “light” fine-dining is taking off

This article was originally published in the December 2019 issue of SilverKris magazine

The post Industry forecast: Food trends in 2020 appeared first on SilverKris.



from SilverKris

No comments:

Post a Comment