25 Food Trends You’ll See Everywhere In 2024, According To Chefs & Experts

food trends 2024
25 Food Trends You’ll See Everywhere In 2024Alison Dominguez


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With 2023 coming to a close, we're looking into our crystal balls (or tea leaves or pasta-themed tarot decks) to predict what food and drinks will be trendy in 2024.

Much like the weather, we'll never be 100 percent sure of the full forecast of the year ahead, but isn't it fun just to guess? Plus, not to toot my own trend-harvesting skills, but trends that I wrote about last year are predicted to get way bigger this year, like ube, having a way higher spice tolerance, caviar "bumps," pickles, nostalgic dishes, and mocktail bars.

There are plenty of food trends we hope pick up speed in 2024 (or kindly fade away), and we know we'll never quite predict them all. Think of it this way: This year already gifted us things that were decidedly not on our 2023 bingo cards, like robot waiters and caffeinated lemonade lawsuits. Plus, Grimace made a comeback (and everyone was not okay with it, clearly).

So, are we really ready for 2024? Who knows. Just be sure to save some room for these food and drink trends.

Fancy Faux Fish

No, that's not tinned crab or tuna you're seeing here. It's Seed to Surf's plant-based tinned "snow crab" and "whitefish" made entirely from enoki mushrooms and celery root.

Consider this the delightful, eco-conscious lovechild of 2023's trend of Mushrooms Being Everywhere and the "treat yourself" little luxury of tinned fish, especially as consumers are reportedly flirting more and more with plant-based items. Mushroom crab cakes, anyone?

seed to surf
Seed to Surf

Galaxy Quest

Not all of us will be able to realize our space-travel dreams, so Torani Puremade Galaxy Syrup is bringing the experience back to earth as their 2024 flavor of the year. Torani says that since "47% of Americans reported that they did at least one 'space-related activity' in the last year, now is the perfect time for this flavor to have its moment in the spotlight."

As part of the development process, Torani conducted hours of market research and consulted with an astronomer to create a taste of space and the molecular structure of dust clouds. It apparently tastes like raspberries and dark rum.

torani galaxy syrup
Torani

Creste di Gallo Pasta

Elbows? So 1998. Bucatini? Big snooze. 2024 is reportedly all about a new pasta shape: Creste di Gallo.

Meaning "crest of the rooster" or "coxcomb" in Italian, the noodle resembles the ruffled crest on top of a rooster's head. In pasta form, these ridges and folds are prized for how well it holds sauce, and will remind you of another popular noodle shape, cascatelli.

creste di gallo pasta
La Tua Pasta

New Age Grocery Stores

One of the trends I'm most excited for? Grocery stores going way into the future.

Pop Up Grocer is the latest to make the chore of grocery shopping feel like an epicurean excursion. According to Aishwarya Iyer, founder of Brightland, "The consumer appetite for unique, high-quality products is reshaping the grocery landscape," leading to a wave of "Shoppy Shops" and shopping platforms for expertly foraged wild foods (as is the case of Foraged).

pop up grocer
Pop-Up Grocer

Cafe Core

As reported in Pinterest's infinitely-clickable Pinterest Predicts feature, Cafe Core will be a major trend you're likely to see in your own kitchen. In the world of Cafe Core, bar carts are out and elaborate home coffee bars are in. Think: home espresso machines, chalk art, and coffee-shop-cute mugs, glasses, and stirring spoons.

pinterest coffee core
Courtesy Pinterest

Dressed Up Noodles

As I noodled around the various trend reports, I noticed one trend that was on nearly all of them, including Whole Foods' report: upgrading your noodle game at home. Long gone are the days of simply just riffing with a packet of instant ramen, especially when you can try any of the fancier noodles at the grocery store, like A-Sha's Galaxy Noodles, OmSom's saucy noodles, and Momofuku's sweet and spicy noodles.

a sha noodles
A-Sha Noodles

Garleek

According to ButcherBox's Chef Ashley Lonsdale, 2024 will shine a spotlight on a new, hot vegetable: garleek, a cross between garlic and leeks that's created through responsible seed breeding. Lonsdale predicts that garleek will become more mainstream as consumers are keen to support these types of hybrid vegetables.

row 7 garleek
Row.7 Seed Co.

Walk-In Reservations

Anna Altieri, the Executive Culinary Director of Spiegelworld, has maybe my favorite prediction of them all: the return of walk-in reservations.

“Restaurants are realizing that while packing your books full months in advance could be more predictable, it removes the whimsical nature of dining," says Altieri. "I am loving the new restaurants that opt to leave a percentage of their tables open for the folks that just don't know they need spicy rigatoni 90 days ahead of time.” As a last-minute diner myself, I couldn't agree more.

fun lunch gathering
Luke Chan - Getty Images

Sleepy Drinks

Honk-choo, honk-choo, mi mi mi mi mi. Oh sorry, I just had one of a variety of sleep-centric drinks you can now stock at your house for beddy bye time (like Apothekary's Dream Team which features their "Chill the F* Out" powdered supplement or Som's canned sleep drinks).

Thanks to the popularity of the viral TikTok recipe for "sleepy girl mocktails,"trend forecasters are noting how consumers are more focused (focuzzzed?) than ever on maintaining proper sleep hygiene.

apothekary chill the f out
Apothekary

Tamarind

Yes, brands are hedging their own bets on what flavors will be big in 2024. As for spice maker McCormick, they're predicting one flavor to be the spice you turn to most next year: Tamarind.

You know (and likely love it) when it's stirred into your pad Thai or Indian curries, tamarind has a sweetness and a tang that makes it ideal for marinades and BBQ sauces and for classic drinks like a Mexican agua de tamarindo. Get you a spice that can do both!

mccormick culinary 2024 flavor of the year tamarind
McCormick

Elderflower Everywhere

Let's be real, if you were out at a bar or hanging around your friend's bar cart this summer, you were likely sipping a St. Germain spritz. The St. Germain spritz had us in a choke hold and it's starting a wave of plenty adding more elderflower elements to other drinks, according to Yelp's Food & Drink Trends Report.

st germain and spritz
St. Germain

Tequila (The Good Stuff, Though)

It's not news that the tequila section is a bit bloated lately. But what is new is how bars and spirits brands are noticing that people are getting more discerning when it comes to ordering their shots and tequila sodas.

“Consumers are seeking authenticity and quality in the spirit itself rather than being swayed by extravagant packaging or celebrity endorsements, says Carlos Soto, Founder and CEO of Nosotros Tequila & Mezcal.

mister tequila tasting gallery
Holger Leue - Getty Images

Third Culture Cuisine

Bringing nostalgia into the future is at the core of third culture cuisine, where first generation American chef's touch on the foods they grew up with alongside (or outside of) the cultures of their parents.

Sắp Sửa in Denver is a special example of how third culture cuisine is not just a passing trend, but a lasting rejection of the term "authentic" by merging American and Vietnamese foods to make something new (namely peanut short bread with Vietnamese-style coffee, a "Saigon 51" cocktail, and hamachi collar with coconut caramel).

hamachi crudo
Casey Wilson

Carbon Negativity

The only negativity we'll be allowing in 2024 is carbon negativity, especially as climate change is front of mind for many people. And thanks to brands like Air Company, there's now a carbon negative and impurity-fee vodka on the market that removes one pound of carbon dioxide from the air, per bottle. That vodka-soda of yours? It's saving the world (a little bit)? We're fans.

air vodka
Air Vodka

More (Way More) Mushrooms

Make room for mushrooms, because they will be everywhere in 2024. As shoppers and chefs are moving further away from alternative meats like Impossible and Beyond, they're focusing on putting the "plant" back in "plant-based" by using mushroom's savory-meaty capabilities, like Meati's line of mushroom-based jerky (pictured), cutlets, bites, and steaks.

meati jerky
Meati

Carajillos

Espresso martini? She's a bit played out. No, 2024 will be all about another coffee-based cocktail: the Carajillo (pictured here at Bar CDMX).

Think of it as a more simplified (and less fussy) espresso martini, as the Spanish-Mexican Carajillo only requires two ingredients (espresso or coffee and Licor 43). It's such a beloved drink you might see this flavor profile elsewhere (Kellogg's apparently makes Carajillo-flavored cereal).

carajillo cocktail
Wonho Frank Lee

Sparkly Syrups

2024, to me at least, feels like it'll have many examples of how social media is changing what we see IRL, namely Tiktok-friendly dishes and drinks. In this case, what has more of that "Oh my god I have to try it now"quality than something made with edible glitter and sparkles?

Mixing up glittery cocktails is just one way to use Runamok's Sparkle Syrup. It's also amazing on pancakes so you can feel like a sparkle-pony-unicorn-fairy pretty much any time of day (the dream).

runamok sparkle syrups
Runamok

Seacuterie Boards

Merging together the powerful pull of 2023's food media darlings (tinned fish and charcuterie boards), you'll get the newest snacking craze: seacuterie boards. And no, it's not just straight up fish fillets that you'll be finding on your boards, either. "Concepts like shellfish sausages, octopus salami, and swordfish ham are gaining popularity," says Stephen Toevs, Senior Director of Culinary, US and Canada, Marriott International.

canned food
Alvaro Fernández Echeverria / 500px - Getty Images

What's Out in 2024? Here's Our Wishlist

Here's Team Delish's list of trends we'd kindly like to lay to rest and never see again:
QR code menus
Cottage cheese
Serving pasta straight from a wheel of parm
Not tipping at least 20% at restaurants (we've already gone over this!)
"Functional" beverages that are mostly, well, snake oil
The "Girl —" trend naming convention (except "Girl Math," which rules)

customer scanning qr code, making a quick and easy contactless payment with her smartphone in a cafe
AsiaVision - Getty Images

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