Skip to main content

MISC.: Guess the Next Food Trend, Round 2

A couple of weeks ago, I predicted the next food trend, after cupcakes, and natural frozen yogurts would be donuts.

Now this morning, I read about Fritelli's Donuts and Coffee in Beverly Hills, which has over 40 flavors of donut to choose from, including "lemon poppy, green apple fritter, pumpkin, and Vermont maple," and not only that, but "they use real fruit and fine chocolate in their fillings and glazes."

Okay, now let's quote from my previous post, regarding the kind of donut shop I envisioned: "You make these in exotic flavors with fresh ingredients infusing your icings and glazes."

So, it's not a trend yet. But I was one step ahead of at least one shop. And if it catches on, and suddenly there are gourmet donut and coffee shops everywhere, then I will offer my services out as food trend consultant. I already have some other ideas.

On the other hand, if it fizzles away quietly, then I will retire, never to bother anyone with food trend speculation again.

Comments

I bet your last name is Fritelli!!!

You've snookered us into believing you were in no way associated with that shop of evil fried donoughty pleasures! I'm on to your shameful scheme to promote your side business!!! You want us to run out and buy your sinfully delicious wads of greasy goodness as if you innocently predicted their arrival from the smoke of a burning bush!

Hey, speaking of a burning Bush, let me update your foreign readers on the outcome of our elections... :)
KT said…
I WISH my last name was Fritelli. Then as long as I had some calorie-burning metabolistic cola, I would be set for life.
Jeremy said…
honestly, KT, I finally have a guess on the next huge food trend.

It's whole grain, srouted, sustainable versions of old favorites. Like a deep fried donut, but the batter is sprouted multi-grain, the oil is from organic soy beans, and . . .

okay, I'm wrong already.

Nostradamus signing out.
KT said…
Nice try buddy ... have you ever seen a vegan donut?

I like to eat healthy, but donuts are not about healthy. I eat healthy so that I can sometimes eat donuts.
KT said…
Ew! Maybe I should take it off ... when you put it that way, it sounds gross.
Jeremy said…
Wait! now I've got it for sure.

PURE FLAVORS. No bullshit. Like a lump of sugar taken from sugar cane, given to you in a pixie-stick, with no sensation but "sweet." OR a whole vanilla bean, just by itself. Yeah, that's the ticket!

Okay, I'll be serious fo ra sec -- nobody has ever LOST money betting on the stupidity (or at least silliness) of the populace at large. All of the last few big crazes seem to be upper-classish versions of old favorites for the masses that rich folk probably think they are too healthy or too classy for. So they jazz it up. An acceptable donut (Krispy Creme), yogurt (pinkberry), cream puff (beard papa), cupcake (everywhere).

So -- fresh-served potato chips? Hot-off-the deep fryer (or whatever) pork rinds? Little, tiny custom bowls of chili made with Kobe Beef instead of ground round?

C'mon, I'm onto something here. BELIEVE IT!
KT said…
Pure flavors is already a trend - that's part of the whole molecular gastronomy thing with the spheres and the spritzes, a lot of that is all about bursts of pure flavor.

I would laugh so hard if someone gave me a vanilla bean to eat. Thanks for the stick, but I'm not a dog.

But I do think that a gourmet junk food shop would be awesome. Most chefs have at least one thing in their repertoire that fits that description, so why not a whole restaurant?
KT said…
Pure flavors is already a trend - that's part of the whole molecular gastronomy thing with the spheres and the spritzes, a lot of that is all about bursts of pure flavor.

I would laugh so hard if someone gave me a vanilla bean to eat. Thanks for the stick, but I'm not a dog.

But I do think that a gourmet junk food shop would be awesome. Most chefs have at least one thing in their repertoire that fits that description, so why not a whole restaurant?
Jeremy said…
not the molecular thing; IU just think it'd be funny to be given rock candy on a stick and charged $40 for the "purity of sugar" flavor. I think the vanilla bean example captured my joke a little better.
KT said…
No, I get it ... I am just being difficult. I can't help it. I'll buy you a vanilla bean next time we're out to make up for it.
Jeremy said…
maybe a cinnamon stick?

(I know, I know, don't push your luck, jer)
KT said…
Well, I was gonna buy you one of the EXPENSIVE vanilla bean pods, but since you'll settle for a cinnamon stick ...
La Vida Dulce said…
Earlier this year I would have said those pate au choux puffs from "Beard Papa" filled with whipped cream are the next food trend. Now I'm betting on the French macaron. Practially no fat, cute little bite size, low in sugar, pretty colors, and the perfect foundation for about a gazillion exotic flavor combinations. I just found a recipe for Dark Chocolate Earl Grey Macarons. But I swear, I'll take a freshly made donut any day!
Anonymous said…
I would LOVE if macarons became a new food trend. I would especially love it if bakeries would start opening that had new flavors each season, like in France.
Colleen Cuisine said…
that's so funny... I totally read that Daily Candy article and thought about your post. prophetic!

Popular posts from this blog

RESTAURANT: Ristorante Belvedere, Monterosso al Mare, Italy

We started off our second-to-last day in the Cinque Terre by taking the train to Vernazza for breakfast: There was supposed to be a market that day, but since the weather was threatening, there were only a few meager stalls, mostly selling non-food items. We had our breakfast and walked around the village a bit. Vernazza used to have a river flowing all the way through it, but now the river has been shunted underground at a certain point. If you walk to the top of town you can see it, along with some ducks and geese that hang out there to get fed by whoever comes along. J. and I then went to sit and have an espresso and wait for the train to Corniglia, the only town we hadn't yet visited. Corniglia is home to the local nude beach (which we skipped) and is the highest of the towns, elevation-wise. We had to walk up a buttload of steps to get there. Look at me go: That's actually me going down (a lot faster than I came up), but I did come up them as well. There is a bus that ta...

ABOUT THIS BLOG

I've been evaluating my blog and have realized that, while I have lots of nifty posts, I don't really have a good overall explanation of what exactly this blog is all about, and what one can expect to find here. So I'm creating this post and will link to it in the sidebar for anyone who's interested. I am not a professional chef. I have not been cooking for years. I am not an expert who is going to make beautiful and amazing and complicated dishes to "wow" you. I am, in fact, quite the opposite. I am a total beginner. I've always lived in places with miniscule kitchens and concerned myself with schoolwork and studying and working and not paid the least bit of attention to what I was eating every day. And that's what this blog is all about. It's about me learning where my food comes from, how to make it properly, and how to enjoy it to the utmost. It's no fun to learn by myself, so I started the blog to keep track of what I learn, kind of like a...

INFO+RECIPE: Isaac Brock: Rock Musician, Chef

MODEST MOUSE Modest Mouse is not my favorite band. It is one of those bands that everyone around me loves and I am overwhelmingly indifferent to. I can think of one song of theirs that I like. I saw them live one time and came away with the impression that I like the music, the vocals just leave a lot to be desired. That vocalist is Isaac Brock. Isaac Brock has never come off as a nice person to me, when reading his interviews about music. I'd basically written him off as a bad vocalist, and arrogant twat. Then, I read an interview with him in the Believer . The interview was not about music, it was about food, and cooking. And I was shocked. It was like I was reading about a whole different person. A person I liked and wanted to know. A person like me. I discovered that he was born a mere two days before me. If astrology has anything to say about it, then he probably IS a person like me. Not quite the same ... that two days mak...