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Hottest Food and Dining Trends for Restaurants and Hotels in 2012
publication date: Nov 4, 2011
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author/source: Michael Whiteman, BAUM+WHITEMAN LLC
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Hottest Food and Dining Trends for Restaurants and Hotels in 2012
Annual Hospitality Predictions from Baum+Whiteman International
Food and Restaurant Consultants
October 2011 - Baum+Whiteman says
it's
"into the wild" as chefs go foraging for new ingredients and customers
abandon
comfort food for intense mix-and-match global flavors.
Baum+Whiteman International
Food and Restaurant Consultants creates high-profile restaurants around
the
world for hotels, restaurant companies, major museums and other
consumer
destinations. Based in New York, their projects include the late
Windows on the
World and the magical Rainbow Room, Equinox in Singapore, and the
world's first
food courts. Their 12th annual
hospitality predictions follow ...
1 ... WHAT'S THAT CRUNCHING
SOUND? As the economy crawls
sideways, like blue crabs at the shore, mom-and-pop eateries will be
hit the
hardest. Each time a big national chain cuts its prices, or flings a
million
half-off coupons into the market via social networks, independent
restaurant
numbers will take a dive. Corporate players borrow money cheaply and
keep
growing, but mom and pop can't borrow at all, and after maxing out
their credit
cards at rapacious interest rates they'll increasingly throw in their
kitchen
towels. If the economy slides more, the last week of every month will
be a
killer for these places. With no turnaround in sight, the US could lose
8,000-10,000 restaurants in 2012, few of them belonging to chains.
2 ... THE WHOLE WORLD ON A
PLATE. Look for excitement at the
lower end of the market where devil-may-care entrepreneurs are piling
flavors
from all over the globe onto a single dish. Gastronomically, everything
goes. Bite into a sandwich of chipotle pork chop with burnt sugar
glaze,
carrot kimchee and tarragon mayonnaise, and your taste buds will
announce that
these flavors came from a global Mixmaster. This is what's emerging: A
multi-ethnic, multi-sensory dining experience where flavors clash on
purpose.
A multi-culti zucchini pizza dabbed with hummus and topped with crunchy
wasabi
peas is from nowhere geographically because it is from everywhere. We
can seal our southern border but it won't stop folks from stuffing
tacos and
tortillas with outlandish
things like octopus and feta cheese, or with barbecued chicken gizzards
and
sriracha slaw. And any day now, someone will stuff a porchetta with
bulgogi
seasonings. Cooking is at a crossroads ... where everything collides!
It's mostly happening at
eateries where food is cheap because the risk is low ... for both buyers
and
sellers. Your wallet can't get hurt by bibimbap burger from a food
truck if it
only costs four bucks, right? Or fried sushi filled with a
cheeseburger? The
banh mi, our Sandwich-of-the-Year in 2011, is now an object of much
tinkering around the
country; it is a feature on Steve El's new Asian ShopHouse prototype,
too.
Sandwiches are the big focus of this mix-match trend. There's an
over-the-top
thrill about a sandwich filled with a carnitas, sausage, jalapeno, an
egg over
easy, and a hot dog with cilantro aioli from roadside shack. The
wilder, the
better. After all, if your new car's parts come from around the world,
why
shouldn't your sandwich ingredients? Next up: Mexican tortas and
cemitas.
3 ... A WIDENING "FLAVOR GAP":
The menu items discussed above
contain ingredients and multi-ethnic combinations that are alien to
your local
Panera Bread or Pizza Hut or even Five Guys -- because chains'
financial stakes
are so high, they're compelled to serve the fewest number of items to
the greatest
number of people. Savvy independent operators (most of them young) use
this
growing "flavor gap" to differentiate themselves from more staid
corporate
competitors.
4 ... INSTEAD OF BREAD:
Stretching for even more differentiation, look for
sandwiches piled on things other than bread. Arepas, for example.
Flattened
tostones. Bao. Waffles. Rice cakes. Think of KFC's notorious Double
Down
calorie bomb... but with more inventive ingredients.
5 ... INNARDS AND ODD PARTS:
We said it last year ... and we're
saying it again: Tongue - lamb and beef -- and gizzards are hot.
They're moving
up from ethnic neighborhoods (think Mexican and Korean tacos)
and onto menus of upscale restaurants. Pigs' ears, too, on breakfast
dishes
right through the day to night-time bar snacks. In the year ahead, look
for
more "wobbly cuts" - such as tripe, and chicken livers that are
crunch-fried (a
great topping for Caesar salad), and even beef heart (but not brains,
yet) --
because customers are increasingly adventurous (photo, prior page, of
grilled beef heart carved rare from Mado in Chicago, by Cooking with
the Single
Guy). Even fancy places will discover that they can sell tongue tacos
at
the bar and izakaya-style gizzards on skewers, and pigs' ears and ox
tails will
show up on white tablecloths.
6 ... IN A PICKLE: House-made
vegetable and fruit pickles will appear on
more and more menus as chefs concoct ever more complex ways of making
these
preserves. They're important because they (A) enliven all those
ingredient-laden multi-culti sandwiches (see "The World on a Plate,"
above) and
(B) they provide a foil for intensely flavored organ meats (see
"Innards and
Odd Parts," above).They're not your grandmother's pickles -- chefs are
going
global with additions of Asian fish sauce, Mexican peppers, ginger,
yuzu,
smoked paprika, star anise. Some are selling bowls of their own pickled
products as individual menu items ... and there's a kimchee free-for-all,
since
there's no "authentic" recipe. Kimchee might be the ingredient of the
year.
7... AT LAST, KOREAN HITS THE
CHARTS: Thanks largely to food
trucks, Korean food has entered the American lexicon. Bulgogi, kimchee,
kalbi,
bibimbap are all the rage in Wednesday food sections, which means that
shelter
magazines will start running dumbed-down recipes in 2012 and we
wouldn't be
shocked to see Korean-inflected fried chicken appearing on some chain
menus.
Look for upscale places to serve items poached or braised in kimchee
broth
augmented with Asian and non-Asian flavors. You won't find red pepper
paste
(kochujang) in your supermarket's ethnic food sections next year, but
wait'll
2013. Reminder: Korean barbecue
comes with a barrage of pickled things, making them right on target
(see "In a
Pickle," above).
Since Koreans run most of the
country's sushi bars, expect lots of fusion recipes as they open
restaurants
beyond the bounds of Korea-towns. The government in Seoul reportedly is
footing
a very big bill for an upscale restaurant outside of New York's Korean
district
in order to promote the cuisine; they're several years too late. A
doozy recently
opened in New York's Tribeca, launching "modernist" Korean cuisine.
Bring lots
of money and a camera to Jung Sik, a transplant from Seoul (see Five
Senses
Pork photo, previous page, from Jung Sik)..
8... NO, EVERYONE'S NOT BROKE:
About a quarter of America's
population is still happily working and another large chunk has a bit
less -
but not nothing - to spend, and after deep psychological retrenchment
they'll
be returning to restaurant life. They're not burning money, but they're
still
having fun spending. And when they do, they're seeking fun, interesting
food
and a sense of adventure. From this, we see the following:
8 a ... COMFORT FOOD HITS THE
WALL: When the recession hit three
years ago, Americans gravitated to "crisis food": homey roast chicken,
soothing
meat loaf, voluptuous mac-and-cheese, unchallenging sushi, and the Holy
Cheeseburger. Now we're bored by gastro-nostalgia. Instead, we're
demanding new
taste thrills and culinary invention. Mac-and-cheese is being reworked
with
pork rillettes, or with chicharrones for crunch and braised pork necks
for
depth; or it is being stuffed into sandwiches along with fried chicken
or
chicken-fried steak. Classic fettuccine recipes are twisted with Asian
Bolognese; pasta carbonara, already much abused, now comes with
meatballs, with
snails and with chorizos ... and now shrimp-and- grits is getting worked
over.
There's no limit to what people will slap onto hamburgers (head cheese,
bone
marrow, pastrami-and-eggs, Cajun crawfish) as new entrants to the
"gourmet burger"
biz fall over themselves being creative. Sushi's getting stuffed with
mutli-culti ingredients. Plain old roast chicken's giving way to
goosed-up
fried renditions -- highly spicy, highly crisp Korean fried chicken
being the
most evident, but Latino flavors are being grafted on as well.
Guacamole is
being spiked with wasabi paste. Hummus comes in a dozen or more
flavors. And
meatloaf has taken a dive as customers opt for all manner of meatballs
at twice
the price.
8 b ... EARLY DRINKING, LATE NIGHT DINING: People making sales and
service calls, and supervisory
staff, are spending more time in their cars, so they're shifting social
times
to cocktails at four and dinner at ten. That's because they've only
chatted and
texted with colleagues also scattered on the highways, and 4 p.m is a
logical
time to rendezvous somewhere, unwind with a cocktail and maybe have
lunch that
was missed earlier. Hotels are big beneficiaries and they'll be
upscaling drink
lists, bar food (see below) and furnishings. Road warriors, and
late-working
desk jockeys get a second wind long after dark, congregating in better
restaurants' bars and hotels that are now revving up flavors and
presentations ...
but still pricing things so that they are "affordable luxuries" (see
"Round
Things" below).
8 c ... ROUND THINGS THAT GO
POP IN THE MOUTH: Kimchee-
and-parmesan-filled arancini (photo by Pablo76), fried goat cheese
balls, spherical falafel, meat balls of all kinds, bacalao croquettes,
crispy
oxtail risotto balls - all of them dropped briefly in the fryer and
served with
multi-ethnic sauces and dips - are becoming hot-hot sharable bar food.
They're
contemporary, drink-friendly finger food and no one seems to mind the
calories.
Also: mini sandwiches with banh mi flavors, Korean meatball sliders,
all sorts
of global chicken lollypops, ceviches, flatbreads from everywhere,
dishes with
fried green tomatoes (see "The World on a Plate," above). Next: Smart
chefs
explore the world of Japanese snacky things.
9 ... BEER GARDENS: Outdoor
or indoor/outdoor, beer gardens will boom
around the country, - especially from restaurants and breweries with
unused
backyards, oversized parking lots or available rooftops. The bigger the
better.
Good, cheap beer, often at five bucks a pop, and unchallenging food
like
pretzels, hot dogs and burgers, draw crowds seeking a fresh air
alternative to
indoor bars or lounges. Movable roofs and warmers
make them year-round businesses. Topping them all, there's Birreria, a
Batali/Bastianich 10,000 sq.ft. rooftop extravaganza in New York with
its own
microbrewery, wine from barrels, operable roof and terrific "alpine"
food.
10 ... WHEELS COME OFF FOOD
TRUCKS: Dozens of food truck
operators will open brick-and-mortar shops in 2012. Many will put their
vehicles on the block; others will attempt to run both businesses. The
reason
is clear: There's more money to be made in storefronts now that food
trucks -
pioneering in social media marketing -- prove that eccentric menus have
great
market potential, and after the trucks create strongly branded
identities that
attract customers and satisfy wary landlords. If they open two or three
storefronts, the trucks act as moving billboards. Only danger: They may
lose
menu focus in trying to keep their new places filled; then they become
like the
big chains.
11. CHOCOLATE DIRT: THE
FORAGERS ARE COMING! A few years
back, an unknown chef at restaurant Noma, in Copenhagen, created a
strange
series of tableaux on his dining room tables, using tree bark, pine
needles,
lichens and other things normally grazed by reindeer. So it was that in
2010
the Nordic forager Rene Redzepi (sounding much like an acid rock band)
displaced the Spanish chemistry wizzrd Fernan Adria (for whom he once
worked)
as the world's numero uno chef.
Molecular gastronomy hasn't
exactly evaporated, but now you might get trampled by dozens of upscale
chefs
rushing to harvest dinner from the underbrush and under rocks - or
assembling
dishes that looked like they might be untamed gardens.
In
the US, "wildcrafting" is largely, but not entirely, a West Coast
trend.
Forerunner Jeremy Fox composed beautiful plates at Ubuntu in Napa
several years
ago (salad on carta de musica by Chuck Eats, prior page); John Sedlar
at
Playa and Daniel Patterson at Coi, both in Los Angeles, and David Kinch
at
Manresa in Los Gatos are masters of the style. You'll find similar
efforts at
McCrady's in Charleston, and Toque in Montreal. Perhaps the most
"florid"
exemplar is Dominique Crenn at Atelier Crenn (subtitled "poetic
culinaria") in
San Francisco, with bonsai-like garden presentations (photo right from
Atelier Crenn).
These chefs' horticultural
foodscapes appear to have been assembled by gnomes with tweezers and
dental
instruments. They're sent to your table on slabs of slate, miniature
rock
slides, primordial wood shapes and thrown glass instead of plates.
Their dishes
come with lyrical names such as Ocean Creatures and Weeds, A Walk in
the Garden,
Into the Vegetable Garden, or Le Jardin d'Hiver.
Watch for these kinds of items
slipping onto upscale menus: White acorns; tips of fir needles; "dirt"
made of
dried and crumbled mushrooms, black olives, bulgur wheat, or sprouting
grains;
eucalyptus leaves, chickweed, wild ginger, wood sorrel, yarrow, and
sumac. Dirt
is so hot that Crenn cooks her potatoes in the stuff before washing
them clean.
Next up: Dessert assemblages growing out of chocolate "humus" (as in
dirt, not
as in chick peas).
Read more about this trend in
our Culinary Director Rozanne Gold's blog on the subject:
http://rozannegold.wordpress.com/2011/10/07/chocolatedirt-is-it-art-or-is-it-dinner/
12 ... JAPANESE CRAFT BEERS
will gain a following.. They're already is making
inroads on beer-centric menus and Asian-inflected restaurants and they
give
lots of local artisan brews a good run for their money.
13 ... FORGET SKYSCRAPER ARCHITECTURE. Chefs are shifting from
stacking food as high as possible to stringing
out ingredients in caterpillar-like lines along oblong or rectangular
plates.
This may looking like "dribble art" but at least it keeps the flavors
separated. Ceviches, tartars, sushi and sashimi primarily, with salads
as the
next frontier. At right, Korean steak tartare with Asian pear, quail
egg and
pine nuts from Dandi in New York (photo, Paul Goguen/Bloomberg)
14 ... PERU GAINS MOMENTUM:
Peru's food is cross-pollinated by Japanese, Spanish,
Chinese, Italian and Andean flavors and cooking techniques. It is the
source of
the world's most exciting ceviches and tiraditos (another raw fish
dish), and
it is where pisco sours come from (photo: halibut ceviche with mango
and tomato).
This past September saw many of the stellar chefs noted above -
Redzepi,
Patterson, Adria, along with Dan Barber (US), Michel Bras (France),
Massimo
Bottura (Italy), and star chef Gaston Acurio, a major promoter of self
and of
Peru - in Lima for a conference that put Peruvian cuisine and
ingredients into
the spotlight. Acurio in September opened La Mar Cebicheria in New
York,
following a success in San Francisco, where the food goes from high
note to
high note. Mo Chica in
LA and Limon in San Fran are creating their own Peruvian stirs. We
predict that
this is the next cuisine, so you need to know about causas, lomo
saltado,
aji amarillo, anticuchos, cuy (you know ... whole roast guinea pig, legs,
head and all) and tiraditos, along with vibrant, acidic fruits and
juices that go into their unique raw fish preparations. Better get to
Lima and
Cuzco before they're overrun by foodies! You can read more about Peru
and its
trendy food in our Culinary Director Rozanne Gold's article in the
Huffington
Post ...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rozanne-gold/food-trend-pop-goes-peru_b_982949.html
15 ... WRONG ON HAMBURGERS:
We predicted last year that "gourmet burgers" would
peak in 2011. But they haven't and we may be premature. Seems that a
new burger
chain launches every few weeks without regard for the growing density
of
competition. We think they'll outrun the available demand; they're
selling a
product that's available everywhere; creativity is running amok as
newcomers
strain for differentiation; and there's a low barrier to entry. We see
a
bubble. So wait'll next year.
16 ... THREE CAUTIONARY
TRENDS: (1) Misuse of words like
"artisan" and "heirloom" and "local" will pollute their meaning,
especially as
chains co-opt them for marketing slogans. Adding a whole grain to
factory bread
doesn't make it "artisan" and not all misshapen tomatoes are
"heirlooms" from
"local" growers. "Green" and "sustainable" are in this category, too.
(2)
There's a looming oversupply of farmers markets. (3) Too many chefs are
smoking
too many foods.
BUZZWORDS FOR 2012
Fresh sardines. Ultra-long dry
aging of meat. Uni. Yuzu. Tamarind. Ox tail, (see "Innards and Odd
Parts,"
above). Duck will make a comeback but not slathered with orange
marmalade.
Hand-made ricotta and burrata. Kalbi, bibimbap, bulgogi (bulgogi photo
right
from ifood tv). Huacatay (better look it up). Bone marrow. Flowers
re-appearing on dinner plates.
Hibiscus. Arepas. Coconut oil. Goat meat crosses the border from
ethnicnabes.
Shiso. Nordic cooking and ingredients. Upscale restaurants re-tenanting
shopping center food courts. Lamb ribs and belly. Bao. More entries
into the
tossed salad restaurant business, using ever better ingredients. Nduja.
Micro-distilleries. Bacalao. Large displays of exotic bitters on the
bar.
Crazier taco fillings migrating from food trucks to restaurants. Green
papaya.
Seaweed in non-Asian dishes.
Baum+Whiteman International
Restaurant Consultants creates high-profile restaurants around the
world for
hotels, restaurant companies, major museums and other consumer
destinations.
Based in New York, their projects include the late Windows on the World
and the
magical Rainbow Room, Equinox in Singapore, and the world's first food
courts.
They were
this year's lead speaker at the CIA's "World of Flavor" conference in
Napa and
have run trends seminars for Taj Hotels, Starwood Hotels,
Restaurant-Hospitality Magazine, Club Corporation of America, Hotels
Magazine,
Certified Angus Beef and Les Dames d'Escoffier.
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Contact:
Michael Whiteman
BAUM+WHITEMAN LLC
718 622 0200
mw@baumwhiteman
www.baumwhiteman.com
Baum+Whiteman International Food and Restaurant Consultants creates high-profile restaurants around the world for hotels, restaurant companies, major museums and other consumer destinations. Based in New York, their projects include the late Windows on the World and the magical Rainbow Room, Equinox in Singapore, and the world's first food courts.
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