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The culinary world has its own set of trends: how food is sourced, how food is made,
how it is presented, the restaurant environment, and the customer experience; these are
all part of culinary trends.
While we are all glad that 2020 is over, we now want to start brand new and fresh. That
includes the food we eat and how we experience our meals. Food trends typically change
as seasons change, however, the way we have lived and created culinary experiences
during a year of COVID shutdowns will definitely impact how we all go forward in 2021.
While restaurants have been hit harder than any other industry during the pandemic,
retail and grocery chains have done just fine because people are eating at home more
often. And the unexpected winner to emerge out of this homecooking shift has been
seafood.
“Seafood overall has seen a tremendous pandemic boost,” reports Anne-Marie Roerink,
founder and principal at research firm 210 Analytics. The biggest winners? Fresh lobster
sales increased almost 292%, crab is up 150.5%, clams are up 80.1% and snapper up
79.4%.
“In years past, the majority of seafood dollars were spent at restaurants (60%), but the
pandemic has prompted shoppers to experiment more with seafood at home and that
will benefit the category as a whole for years, if not generations, to come,” says Roerink.
The good news for seafood restaurants in 2021 is the opportunity they have to provide
some excitement for people who are tired of cooking and have been dealing with what
feels like Groundhog Day for over a year now. Their fatigue has created heightened
interest in more adventurous flavors. “People are exploring. There is palate exploration,
recipe exploration going on,” says Krishnakumar Davey, president of strategic analytics
at IRI.
When folks order restaurant foods now, “They want items they can’t easily make at
home, like sushi, lobster, shrimp tempura, lobster rolls and sandwiches,” says Kelley
Fechner, director of customer solutions at Datassential in Chicago.
The demand is there for creative, Instagramable specials designed to reel in pantry-
fatigued patrons seeking an excuse to put down their frying pans and enjoy can’t-miss,
can’t-make-at-home seafood dishes.
And with international travel quashed and Americans taking fewer long trips across the
country, the new domestic focus will be on creating interest in hyper-regional American
food. That means renewed interest in state-specific fish species from nearby waters.
What’s on the menu this year... seafood creativity...
Creativity is inventing, experimenting, growing, taking risks, breaking rules, making
mistakes, and having fun." ~ Mary Lou Cook
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Photo Credit Kcruts Photography
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