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trends

January 4, 2021

Ketotarian, Mushrooms and Innovation Among Kroger’s 2021 Food Trend Predictions

Grocery giant, Kroger provided its food trends recap of 2020 and predictions for 2021 over the weekend. And while the list is definitely a PR move, it does provide a little insight into where the retailer thinks food is headed over the coming year.

But before we get into Kroger’s predictions, let’s take a quick look back at what foods trended at the retailer over 2020. Kroger compiled its results from year-over-year sales growth across Kroger’s business including its roughly 2,800 retail stores as well as pickup, delivery and ship. Based on that, these foods were the big winners of 2020:

  • Zero-Calorie Soft Drinks
  • Four-Cheese Mexican Blend Shredded Cheese
  • Flavored Potato Chips (Hot & Spicy, Regional Flavors & Meal-Inspired Varieties)
  • Sauvignon Blanc Wine
  • Heavy Whipping Cream
  • Fresh Burger Patties
  • Artisan Breads & Restaurant-Style Buns
  • Bulk Individual Coffee Pods (96-Count)
  • Party-Size Bags of Variety Chocolate
  • Black Forest Ham

Snacks. Cheese. Wine. Kroger’s list does seem to accurately reflect our collective mood during the pandemic year, when most of us were locking down and not leaving the house. Perhaps what’s more interesting, however, is what’s not on that list: Plant-based foods. Or plants of any kind, really.

This lack of plant-based burgers is in contrast with larger data showing that sales of plant-based meat (Beyond Burgers, Impossible Burgers, etc.) skyrocketed during the pandemic. The animal-based meat supply chain was strained as people panic-shopped, and ethical concerns over meat processing were raised as meat packing facilities became COVID hotspots.

That there were no plant-based foods on Kroger’s list could be a function of the type of shoppers the store gets, or that the growth in plant-based foods wasn’t enough when compared with the other foods. Snack foods, in particular made a comeback during the pandemic as we all tried to find comfort where we could.

Comfort food is actually a trend that Kroger sees continuing into 2021, writing that “Easy-to-prepare comfort foods are on the rise as consumers look to balance convenience and quick preparation times with flavorful meal options.”

While plant-based foods may have been absent from Kroger’s 2020 trends list, the retailer predicts that a “ketotarian” diet will become more popular this year. As Kroger explains, a ketotarian diet is “a plant-based spin on traditional keto guidelines. Consumers can expect to find a growing selection of these plant-based, high-protein foods on grocery shelves in the year ahead.”

While we’re talking about plants, Kroger also predicts that mushrooms will play a bigger role in our diets this year, writing “Consumers should expect to see mushrooms play a starring role in a variety of new products in 2021, including blended plant-based proteins, condiments, spices, seasonings and more.” We’ve actually been watching this mushroom mania play out over the past year here at The Spoon as mushrooms and mycelium kept popping up as the backbone for new types of proteins including cuts of plant-based meat.

One of Kroger’s 2021 predictions is also near and dear to our Spoon hearts: Innovation in the fresh food aisle. Kroger said to look out for in-store hydroponic farms and plant-based coatings like Apeel that extend the shelf-life of produce among the new technologies to look out for.

A trend that Kroger didn’t mention was food-as-medicine, a space which the retailer has been a leader in. We probably shouldn’t tie this list too much into overall business strategy for the company, but it’s noticeable, given everything that is on the list.

Whether or not it’s a PR stunt, Kroger’s predictions actually seem pretty reasonable, though I wish they had predicted a few more robots, especially since they are building out all those automated warehouses.

March 7, 2018

Services that Combine Flavor and AI Are a New Food Tech Trend

Artificial Intelligence is making its way into our food system in a big way. It’s on dairy farms monitoring milk quality, in restaurants powering food-running and burger-flipping robots, and even in the kitchen, walking you through a recipe in the guise of a voice assistant or chatbot.

Lately, we’ve noticed AI playing another role in what we eat: this time in flavor development. We’ve rounded up 5 startups merging AI and flavor to help restaurants and consumers create more sophisticated dishes, teach home cooks how to make dinner, and reduce friction for food R&D.

Foodpairing

Foodpairing is a platform which uses machine learning and data analysis to create a sensory map detailing which foods taste good together. Since roughly 80% of taste actually comes from smell, they base their findings on the aromas of each ingredient. The Foodpairing Inspire Tool allows their customers—mostly professional chefs and bartenders looking to create innovative, unexpected dishes no one has tasted before, but also home cooks—to discover pairings of the more than 2,500 ingredients in their database. It markets itself as having pretty wide applications, powering everything from smart kitchen apps, e-grocery, personalized recipe and drink recommenders, and mHealth.

PlantJammer

This app (which is currently available exclusively on their website) grew out of an ex-consultant’s desire to teach himself how to improvise in the kitchen. Using flavor mapping technology similar to Foodpairing’s—both are based around aromas and use machine learning—the platform allows users to select complimentary ingredients based on what they have in their kitchen. Once the selection is complete, the algorithm generates a custom recipe. The Copenhagen-based startup hopes to use their AI-driven platform to promote plant-based cooking and reduce food waste.

dishq

Self-described “food AI company” dishq uses customer data, machine learning, and food science research to predict consumer taste preferences. They translate their findings into APIs to help their clients, which range from food delivery platforms to corporate cafeterias, provide tailored food suggestions to their customers and outline emerging food trends. As co-founder Kishan Vasani told the Spoon, dishq offers “taste analytics as a service,” allowing companies to react quickly to food trends as they are happening.

FlavorWiki at work quantifying data to report on top food trends.

FlavorWiki

FlavorWiki uses analytics to measure consumer taste and dietary preferences. They aim to unlock new applications for taste data across the food system. While they market themselves to a wide audience—everyone from major food companies to moms with picky kids—their taste-profiling technology is chiefly aimed at retailers. By creating self-described “taste archetypes,” FoodWiki hopes to help clients like CPG companies cut down on R&D costs for new products, reducing the pricey trial and error stage. If you’re curious about how exactly the FlavorWiki system works—and where it hopes to go—give our podcast with their CEO and Head of Product Daniel Proz a listen.

Gastrograph

Gastrograph is another company using AI to help food & beverage producers streamline new product development. Their technology maps the flavor preferences of individual consumers and also predicts broader consumer reception to new taste profiles. Gastrograph hopes to help create only slam-dunk food products by using machine learning and predictive algorithms—no more costly duds. If you want to hear more about this AI-driven food tech company, check out our podcast with Gastrograph CEO Jason Cohen.

For food startups and CPG developers struggling to differentiate themselves from their competitors, services that use AI to predict and develop delicious, memorable foods would be a useful investment. If flavor/AI companies can deliver on their promises—to cut R&D costs, to help chefs and home cooks create tasty recipes, and to predict emerging food trends—they could be that extra something that spells success for emerging companies, or for big food giants whose current products are starting to feel stale. Flavor/AI technology could also play a huge role in predictive restaurant ordering or grocery delivery, both of which Amazon has in the pipeline.

The bottom line for food industry folks, if you don’t have a taste for AI, you’d better develop one—and soon.

P.S. The CEO’s of Dishq and Foodpairing will be speaking at SKS Europe in June! Register today to hear them talk about how AI will change the way we buy & eat food. 

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