What Are the Top Food Trends for 2021?
For the sixth consecutive year, Whole Foods Market has released its predictions of food trends for the coming year. The grocer seeks input from its team members, including growers, buyers, and culinary experts.
-
-
1 of 9
Fruit And Veggie Jerky
Jerky isn’t just for meat lovers anymore. Now all kinds of produce from mushrooms to jackfruit are being served jerky-style, providing a new, shelf-stable way to enjoy fruits and veggies. The produce is dried at the peak of freshness to preserve nutrients and yumminess. If that’s not enough, suppliers are literally spicing things up with finishes of chili, salt, ginger, and cacao drizzle.
-
2 of 9
Epic Breakfast Every Day
With more people working from home, the most important meal is getting the attention it deserves, not just on weekends, but every day. There’s a whole new lineup of innovative products tailored to people paying more attention to what they eat in the morning. America’s favorite breakfast beverage — orange juice — should find its place on the table.
-
3 of 9
Well-Being Is Served
The lines are blurring between the supplement and grocery aisles, and that trend will accelerate in 2021. That means superfoods, probiotics, broths, and sauerkrauts. Suppliers are incorporating functional ingredients like vitamin C, mushrooms, and adaptogens to foster a calm headspace and support the immune system. In the age of COVID-19, people want this pronto.
-
4 of 9
Food Basics On Fire
With more time in the kitchen, home chefs are looking for hot, new takes on pantry staples. Pasta, sauces, spices — the basics will never be boring again. Get ready for reimagined classics like hearts of palm pasta, applewood-smoked salt, and “meaty” vegan soup.
-
5 of 9
Coffee Beyond The Mug
The love affair between humans and coffee burns way beyond a brewed pot of joe. That’s right, java is giving a jolt to all kinds of food. You can now get your coffee fix in the form of coffee-flavored bars and granolas, smoothie boosters, and booze, even coffee yogurt for those looking to crank up that breakfast parfait.
Photo courtesy of Ligature Coffee
-
6 of 9
Baby Food, All Grown Up
Thanks to some inspired culinary innovation, parents have never had a wider or richer range of ingredients to choose from. We’re talking portable, on-the-go squeeze pouches full of rhubarb, rosemary, purple carrots, and omega-3-rich flaxseeds. Little eaters, big flavors.
-
7 of 9
Upcycled Foods
Peels and stems have come a long way from the compost bin. We’re seeing a huge rise in packaged products that use neglected and underused parts of an ingredient as a path to reducing food waste. Upcycled foods, made from ingredients that would have otherwise been food waste, help to maximize the energy used to produce, transport, and prepare that ingredient. Dig in, do good.
-
8 of 9
Oil Change
Slide over, olive oil. There’s a different crop of oils coming for that place in the skillet or salad dressing. At-home chefs are branching out with oils that each add their own unique flavor and properties. Walnut and pumpkin seed oils lend a delicious nutty flavor, while sunflower seed oil is hitting the shelves in a bunch of new products and is versatile enough to use at high temps or in salad dressing.
-
9 of 9
The Mighty Chickpea
You can chickpea anything. Yep, the time has come to think beyond hummus and falafel, and even chickpea pasta. Rich in fiber and plant-based protein, chickpeas are the new cauliflower — popping up in products like chickpea tofu, chickpea flour and even chickpea cereal.
Illustration by Wally Edwards
View all
Fruit And Veggie Jerky
Epic Breakfast Every Day
Well-Being Is Served
Food Basics On Fire
Coffee Beyond The Mug
Baby Food, All Grown Up
Upcycled Foods
Oil Change
The Mighty Chickpea
Specialty crop growers should take notice to see if there are opportunities to be found on this list.
Will health, wellness, and a passion for cooking at home dominate in 2021? Scroll through the photo gallery above to see what Whole Foods predicts.