home > Food > Food Facts

So 2012: Value, Mini-Bites Trending


Virginia Schreiber

by Brandi Katherine Herrera
February 22, 2012

In Mississippi and around the country, 2011 was the year of the artisan eater. Folks skeptical of government and globalization turned their attention away from big banks and toward a growing rural nostalgia and self-reliance. For the first time in more than 40 years, pickling and preserving re-emerged as household standbys, "heirloom" produce entered the mainstream lexicon and we saw a steady rise in urban farming. Vegetable gardens, backyard chickens and beekeeping became common sights in cities and suburbs across the United States.

The growing popularity of voluntary simplicity—in which practicing individuals aim to reduce commercial consumption and become more self-reliant—also seems unmistakably tied to our collective concerns about the environment and sustainability. It's just not responsible anymore to consume food shipped halfway around the world before it ends up on your dinner plate when you can easily grow it on your windowsill and front porch, or in the backyard.

Kara Neilson, "trendologist" at the Center for Culinary Development in San Francisco, argues that while some food trends seem completely arbitrary, if they meet a consumer need in some way, they become in demand. "I always find it interesting what people are calling trends and try to match it up with what I see," Neilson said in an interview with chow.com. "Like with mini-desserts: We've been talking about them for a long time, but what is it about minis again, and why do we crave them? What's pushing the mini trend of 2011 versus the mini trend of 2009? ... Sometimes it's portion control; this time, it seems more about price points."

Food trends in 2012 most likely will pick up where they left off last year, by placing value in upholding food-production standards with an emphasis on hand-crafted, artisan, small-batch and locally sourced ingredients sold at small-scale markets. Shops no longer just sell food—they sell a story. Provenance and transparency will continue to play important roles in relating to consumers where an animal comes from and how it's raised, or how a particular food was grown and processed.

Savvy foodies will continue to sharpen their knives (meat preservation and DIY butchery, anyone?), honing the time-honored methods our grandmothers would have considered mere cook's essentials. We'll also see a rise in family-friendly fine dining, communal eateries and Scandinavian comfort food. We'll go one step further with wine packaging, where bulk will replace the box, and craft beers won't just be available in cans but will graduate to 16 ounces of micro-brewed bliss.

Sushi bars and Thai restaurants will make way for Filipino and Korean eateries. Micro-mini desserts will make a big show over the already diminutive cupcake trend—a response perhaps to the "Alice in Wonderland Effect," whereby small quantities of alluring foods evoke childhood and abundance.

For more mouth-watering treats and tasty eats, chow down over at our Food Blog and the JFP Bite Club Facebook page, and follow the aroma on Twitter. Be sure to bring your appetite!

THEN AND NOW
 
Here's a look at the kinds of things we began eating and drinking in 2011 and what's in store for 2012:
 
2011
• Aged cocktails
• Boxed wine
• Bourbon
• Cupcakes
• Molecular gastronomy
• Tasting menus
• Southern cuisine
• Austrian and Hungarian comfort food
• Sushi
• Artisanal cheddar
• Preserves and pickled vegetables
• DIY and boutique butchery
• Processed school lunches
• Beef and lamb tongue
 
2012
• Spritzers and carbonated cocktails
• Bulk wine
• Canned craft beers
• Micro-mini desserts
• Gastropubs and Nouveau diners
• Family-friendly fine dining
• Communal-style meals
• Peruvian
• Filipino
• Scandinavian comfort food
• Artisanal Gouda
• Charcuterie
• "Let's Move!" campaign school lunches

 
posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 02/22/12 at 07:11 PM. [printer version]    Share |

COMMENTS

You are not logged in. To post a comment, you must be a registered user and logged in. Click here to register or click here to log in.

Log in to JFP using Facebook

:: recentcomments

May 25, 2012 | 02:20 PM
JRA Says Ugly Garage Ramp Must Go
justjess: Not a problem and for sure, not a priority. In an ecomomy where people are concerned about the State's infrastructure (unstable bridges, sreets in desperate need of repair ...
May 25, 2012 | 02:17 PM
BREAKING: JPS Agrees to Overhaul Discipline Policies, Settles Lawsuit
lizwaibel: Also today, the US Dept. of Education released a resource document that says restraint or seclusion does not reduce the occurrence of ...
May 25, 2012 | 09:32 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
notmuch: I'm not sure where the "@" came from, but I think golden eagle's response was directed to me, so I will respond one more time. First, the inclusion of the word "facts" and the phrase ...
May 25, 2012 | 08:01 AM
[Dish] Cobby Williams, Young Gun
Queen601: That first question is classic! LOL
May 24, 2012 | 09:34 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: @notmuch, here are some facts about voter fraud, straight from the Brennan Center's website: Fraud by individual voters is both irrational and extremely rare. Most citizens who ...
May 24, 2012 | 07:14 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
notmuch: Oh, I have hundreds of those right-wing sites, and I couldn't say which ones are more "partisan"--they all include those pesky facts. Yes, when dead voters and multiple voters under ...
May 24, 2012 | 07:11 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
justjess: @ golden eagle. Thanks for the spell check. I didn't just spell assassination wrong ONE time, I did it over and over. LOL! You are right on the mark; I was trying to use the word ...
May 24, 2012 | 06:46 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: I don't think you could've found a more partisan right-wing site than the Daily Caller. The fact of the matter is that the right is using this issue not as a means of improving ...
May 24, 2012 | 06:10 PM
[Dish] Cobby Williams, Young Gun
trusip: WOW! was this a real interview or a joke?
May 24, 2012 | 05:00 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
notmuch: I don't think you could have found a more liberal example of a "non-partisan" site, but even so, their evidence seems to consist of 250 carefully chosen instances in one area of ...
May 24, 2012 | 04:48 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: Rather than using ideological websites to support your argument, I'll use the non-partisan Brennan Center for Justice. Really good site.
May 24, 2012 | 04:30 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
notmuch: I might be missing something here, but I am a little confused by Golden Eagle's points: "the fact is that voter fraud is extremely rare"--so it is of no consequence that some ...
May 24, 2012 | 11:26 AM
Nick Hanauer's 'Controversial' TED Talk -- Tax the Rich?
RobbieR: TED is an elite academic conference.
May 24, 2012 | 10:18 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
DonnaLadd: No, Darryl, no one blocked you. Stop being paranoid. We just typically open comments in moderation during non-office hours. To me, a bozo isn't someone who disagrees with me. It's ...
May 24, 2012 | 06:18 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Darryl: That's funny that you blocked my last comment...

100 recent comments »

 


click to view "flip" version of this week's print issue

 

Guests online: 184
Logged-in members: 1
Anonymous members: 0
Elapsed time: 0.6799
The most number of visitors ever was 1961 at once on 03/27/2012
currently online: BigBobSliz

 

© Jackson Free Press, Inc. - portions of code by CC with EE. User agreement and privacy statement.
phone: 601-362-6121 (ext 11 sales, ext 16 editorial, ext 17 publisher)
fax: 601-510-9019 * P.O. Box 5067 * Jackson, MS * 39296