Someone Online Asked “What Modern Food Trend Can You Not Wait To Die?” And 35 People Delivered
Interview With AuthorSome trends are well on the way to revolutionizing certain things in our world. But for every great one, there are a few that are ridiculous and annoying, simply begging you to ask the question, “Why?”
In this topic, food is no exception. From the things done in private kitchens to whole restaurant models, there are plenty of modern food-related trends that many can’t wait to disappear, so when one Redditor asked people to share theirs, they didn’t hold back. Check out what they said below!
More info: Reddit
This post may include affiliate links.
If I'm on a website I'm only there to look at your menu. I'm not interested in starting an order before I've looked at the menu. No, I don't want to give you my zip code. Just give me your menu and some food pictures.
While these modern food trends have undeniably spread worldwide, if you’re looking for the whole experience, resort towns are the place to be. As Bored Panda found out by reaching out to u/Prestigious-Humor872, also known as Alex, this is precisely the kind of place he resides in.
Alex is a proud 28-year-old father from Michigan, USA. He works as an accountant and enjoys reading, sports, traveling, and spending time with his family. The OP is no food critic or restaurant expert, which is precisely why his opinion matters. After all, he’s a part of the target audience for all those places.
Online recipes that I have to scroll for five minutes to find the recipe. I do not care, dear author, about how you discovered this meal or how my family will feel about it. I just need to know how long to roast the damn chicken
The ubiquitous "jump to recipe" button. It amazes me that so many people act as though it's not there.
Load More Replies...There's a reason for this! Recipes are not protected by copyright (under US law), but creative writing is; so people will attach stories to their recipes so that they are considered a piece of creative writing, and thus will be protected by copyright laws.
And also because certain key words will get your page to the top of Google’s search results. My husband writes product texts - he has to get creative to force some of those words in there for the same reason 😅
Load More Replies...This complaint is so old and whiny and wrong that it's actually been banned on the reddit cooking sub. Everyone thinks it's an original complaint, and that they're being funny; "I don't care about your great-aunt Gertie's apple orchard". Har har har. Maybe instead of whining about how tired your poor finger gets scrolling through someone's free website and the content they worked really hard to produce, you could visit one of the literally thousands of recipe sites that aren't blogs or - and hear me out here - buy a cookbook. I don't look at art and complain that it should just be a list of the colors they used.
I get that, but just put the recipe first, my favourite cookbooks have stories attached to them, but usually they come later or are on a different page.
Load More Replies...I looked at an online recipe that looked really good, but I refused to save it. The top and bottom of the site were filled with so many ads that all I could read was about a 2 1/2" strip in the middle of the monitor. In addition, there was the usual junk about how the recipe made the author feel, a video showing how it was made, and even instructions on how to cook it even though they hadn't listed any ingredients yet. I decided I wasn't going to scroll through all that every time I wanted to cook this dish.
Screencap/print screen/screenshot/snipping tool comes in handy for that.
Load More Replies...These 'stories' are actually there for a reason. A recipe can't be copyrighted by itself. They are not considered "original works of authorship". So only by including those stories can people prevent big companies from copying their recipe and selling it as part of a book, which would Also give that big company copyright of their recipe.
Not really, it is for SEOs and Google Indexing. Otherwise the page isn't going to get any traffic
Load More Replies...That's all there for copyright reasons. You can't claim to have a definitive way of roasting a chicken but you can claim rights on your little stories! My advice is get a cookery book that has entertaining stories in it. Looking at you Two Chubby Cubs!
Then don't go to the site. They are providing a service. If you don't like it, vote with your feet. But please shut the REDACTED up about the inhumanity of having to read something. REDACTED off!
I need the temp. Too many of the recipes are devoid of cooking temps.
Same with so many YouTube videos. The title is an interesting subject but then they go through loads of history and background that's usually not directly related to what you clicked on to watch.
Right!!! A very brief description is ok, but save the 5 page short story for AFTER the recipe! Does anyone actually care to read that cr*p?
Because people who search up a recipe want to see how to cook it, not have to wade through the author's life story.
Load More Replies...Its not, but people come looking for a recipe, not a life story. Authors adding their life stories/stories on how they discovered this recipe before the actual recipe is needless fluff that shouldn't be there.
Load More Replies...As someone who uses online recipes: 1) no one has written those stories since about 2015, and 2) you’re the one who wants to get a recipe from someone without paying them actual money
To answer your statements. 1) Even if articles like this haven't been a thing in nearly a decade, which is debatable to begin with, it is still something people still have to deal with today. 2) There is always the possibility that when people do this with an online recipe, they get a portion of ad revenue either by clicks, or by time spent scrolling on the article. If ever you see ads or pop-ups, then the page is monetized, and the creator is getting paid. And assuming it's done by time spent on the page, having needless fluff at the beginning pointlessly increases the time you spend on the article.
Load More Replies...Tipping for food I’m picking up at a counter. What am I tipping for? And if that tip is necessary for the employees to make a living, the restaurant just needs to pay their employees a higher wage and charge whatever they need to charge for the food in order to do so. But I’m tired of being asked to tip for every single thing.
If I'm at a restaurant and paying for food before I've eaten it, I'm not tipping.
OP’s town, contradictory to what’s usual for its size, has an extensive food scene. He says that over the past few years, he has noticed way too many recurring themes, with new restaurants opening up around every corner and old ones making changes to catch up.
The curiosity about whether things look the same in other parts of the world inspired Alex to start this Reddit thread. The post exploded with nearly 8,000 upvotes and over 9,000 comments, which shows that he’s definitely not in the minority regarding opinion about these movements. “I was very surprised,” the author said. “I never thought I would capture the internet’s attention like this.”
Calling a slight alteration to a recipe a "hack".
Adding parmesan cheese to your grilled cheese sandwich is not a "hack". It's a minor recipe change.
Restaurants serving food on cutting boards, shovels, paper, shells, or anything that is not an actual plate
I recall as long ago as the 1970s that 'pub food' in the UK was usually served in a basket. It was a thing, differentiated pub food from restaurants, usually much more basic. The 'basket' was always lined with greaseproof paper, so did not need washing up like proper plates, so I always assumed this was just to cut down on the need for kitchen space and costs.
When asked what is the modern food trend that he himself can’t wait to end, the OP had a clear answer: “‘Gastropub’ trend and their tendency to market their foods as ‘artisan’ or ‘craft’ with an ‘abandoned warehouse’ themed interior.” He said that while this doesn’t necessarily mean that the food there is bad, his restaurant experiences tend to be less and less memorable with each night out, and the overused buzzwords on the menu just top it all off.
To add a little extra to the answer, Alex told us that he’s also getting tired of the popularity of Brussels sprouts, but as he said himself, “That may be because my wife loves them, and I eat them every time I’m out.”
Food trucks that charge the same price as a premium restaurant but serve half the size on a floppy plate that I have to stand up to eat
The stupid food wasting trends on YouTube and TikTok etc.
We were also curious about where exactly these movements come from, so we did some more digging. According to BlueCart, many factors influence the food trends, but a couple that stand out the most are health fads and pop culture.
The article explains that in fine dining, it is usually chefs who create these trends that are later mimicked by other restauranteurs. However, sometimes, there are also certain food consultants who help the restaurants develop these new items for their menus.
Any TikTok/IG trend that makes life more difficult for fast-food workers with overly complex orders or ordering stuff not on the menu or trying to “one up” each others orders etc
"Can you see that on the menu? If not, fűck right off and stop being a cűnt"
“Detox” foods. Just eat food and let your liver do its damn job.
Escoffier further tells us that it’s not always the taste that is the determining factor in creating these food trends. Sometimes, it is more focused on what people see and hear around them. For example, cupcakes were brought back and became one of the main things that come to people’s minds when they think of American culture, all because they were widely featured on the TV show “Sex in the City.”
The article also mentions that many other variables are at play, ranging from money and marketing to something known as food politics. According to them, there is even one person at Whole Foods, the Head Global Cheese and Specialty Product Buyer, who can change entire markets, all based on her preferences that day.
The videos of people making food in sinks. Gross.
Sweets on top of sweets. A milkshake with a donut, lollipop, and cupcake attached.
So, in the end, while modern food trends aim to please an average consumer, the target group rarely has a say in the invention process. It is unusual to see any kind of survey of what you’d prefer to find on the menu or what the place you eat at should look like. Instead, the restaurants assume what they think the general public will like and mimic it to avoid getting left behind. But thankfully, you don’t need to be an expert to have your opinion heard online.
Can you relate to any of these answers? What are the modern food trends that you dislike? Come down below to the comments and share that with us!
Graphic designy menus that try to be creative but end up confusing. Also pdf-only menus. I'd prefer a physical one
High Fructose Corn Syrup being in seemingly *every* commonplace food in America (almost said the ridiculous amounts of sugar in general, which I still hate, but I think is a bit less reasonable to expect). Sugar is a *huge* part of why unhealthy food is so addictive and unhealthy in America, and I think most people have become conditioned to expect high sugar in most things. We need to roll back that idea...
Making all fast food buildings look like cookie-cutter beige/grey boxes. They all used to have their own distinct personalities
A local pizzaria did this too. Everytime I pass it I feel like they should be selling floor tiles or industrial textiles. I have zero interest in buying food from them because their place looks so off-putting for food
Food that's designed to be "food p**n" with way too many toppings thrown on it purely for the shock value.
I just want a good, simple burger with a tasty patty. I don't want a Flamin' Hot B******e Destroyer 3000 with three types of meat, three types of cheese, and three types of sauce on it.
The ASMR food videos.
People filming themselves eating the food and smacking loudly into the MIC.
Back in the day, oxtails and flank steaks were cheap cuts of meat. They are expensive as hell now. I’m just waiting for Vienna sausages to be turned into ironic hipster food.
Pretty soon Alpo Canned Dog Food Meatloaf will take TikTok by storm.
I'm a chef, and even I'm tired of the twelve course menu, where each course is two bites.
I think we can all agree that, at this point, everyone just wants a nice sandwich. Right?
Making food instagramable. It's 80% looks 20% edible
I swear most of these recipes on social media is tasteless cause I don't trust their "omg, so goodd".
Fancy restaurants that say they serve “street tacos” and proceed to charge $18 for three.
I just went to a restaurant, not a fast food place, a sit-down restaurant where you have to scan the QR code for the menu, then a screen pops up where you have to place your own order.
No one comes to the table to answer questions, nothing. You place your order, a person comes by and throws your drinks at you. Then they swing by a while later and throw your food at you. That’s all you see of them.
You pay your bill on your phone, and are still expected to tip.
Deconstructed food. I did not pay you lots of money, so I get to essentially cook/make my own food.
Dump meals.
Wash your goddamn plates so I don’t have to scrub the table!
I just had dinner with my grandson, who ordered the Cajun style steamed crab dish. He was served a rimmed cookie sheet and a huge clear bag of seafood boil including vegetables, with a pair of scissors. The gimmick is to cut the bag from the bottom and slosh the whole mess into the pan, then dig in. It was a disgusting mess (to me) but he had a blast eating it. The table was a disaster.
2 ingredient desserts (with 7 "optional" ingredients that appear once you read the actual recipe)
Also, 5 of those seven are not things you'd normally have in your kitchen.
Hamburgers getting taller and taller. Like dude, what use is a 7 inch tall burger if I cant take a bite of it?
Content creators squeezing and scraping the food. Looking directly into the camera, taking a ginormous bite, rolling their eyes, and going "MMMMMM OMGSOYUMMYGUYS" with their mouth full.
Why is everyone complaining about watching TikTok videos? You are aware that you can skip them?
Every Frito Lay product does not need to be Flamin' Hot with Lime
I used to like Fritos and Doritos, back before anyone messed with them and they were just in their original form, made with their original ingredients. They were a highlight of my school lunch. But, even as a kid, I could NEVER eat spicy hot food, as my stomach would severely punish me for it. So, to all the “creatives” at all the longstanding traditional snack foods companies, let me say this, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!” Leave well enough alone, or at least leave the original untouched, so there’s something for the rest of us to eat. I’m 62, btw.
Well, restaurant trend. I am sick of polished concrete floors, exposed brick and pipes and ordering at a counter. Can we bring back a nicer dining room, please?
Exposed brick walls can be nice in the right settings. Just my opinion though.
Truffle flavor everything. Real truffle can be wonderful but in moderation. Truffle oils in everything. Enough!
Okay, so hear me out. Truffle flavored potato chips, good right? Okay, now I'm starving
I don't think it's going anywhere, but putting bacon in/on EVERYTHING. I feel like there was this explosion around 2010 where bacon was just everywhere. I vividly remember Denny's having like a bacon celebration month that featured a maple bacon sundae. The world never went back.
Not food specifically, but related.
I loathe first bite reactions on gif recipes/ instagram pages.
Note: this post originally had 40 images. It’s been shortened to the top 35 images based on user votes.
Any dish being prepared on a TV cooking show that needs tweezers to create the right image on the plate. Just throw it all on, FFS, it doesn't taste any different with all your fancy stacking and arranging, which lasts about one second until you hit it with a knife and fork anyway.
People complaining about Tik Toks. I never complain about it because I don't have it and don't care about it. Problem solved.
They are literally answering the question though? "What food trend do you want to die?" That is the whole point of the listicle?
Load More Replies...Recipe blogs. I just want the recipe, not pages and pages of drivel about how how your grandmother's apple trees gave the best apples, or how you spend Sunday, or how you went fossicking with a picnic and found sharks teeth. Some sites have a "jump to recipe" button, which is good, but those that don't, I hate having to scroll through reams and reams of pointless dribblings and word salad.
This is just one of the reasons I don't read recipe blogs or make any blog recipes. The other reasons? Bloggers frequently steal recipes from other sources and present them as their own. They are more likely to contain mistakes. The recipes aren't tested. The "reviews" frequently consist of their fans saying how great all their recipes are while admitting they haven't actually made the recipe they're supposedly reviewing. I'll stick with Serious Eats and Cook's Illustrated recipes and eliminate all those issues!
Load More Replies...Went out yesterday for a birthday lunch, five of us,, we got a real menu, there was a specials board with a couple of extra dishes for each course, the standard menu had about eight or nine meals per course, it was clear what you could have, you could have a maximum of four courses. It was all locally sourced, it was all fairly straight forward and uncomplicated food, it was all cooked perfectly, the staff were attentive but not intrusive, they were relaxed and didn’t look stressed. A genuinely enjoyable experience. It’s just not that difficult to do good food in a decent establishment.
Some of these experiences are common anoyances (Not having physical menues), some are american only (s**t loads of process sugar, and tip culture), and a few were specific to the editor's personal algorythm and no one else. (weird social media trends).
The vegan craze, I get the lifestyle choice but honestly food preferences should be made by each person. I'm a vegetarian and I get food shamed for using dairy... its just stupid. And on that seed/nut/grain milk... its not milk!
what vegan craze? I've got about 5000 people in my phone book and personally have met four.
Load More Replies...The trend of stacking everything in one pile. Eg. Bottom layer of mash, next layer of veg, next layer of another veg and then main on top. I end up separating it all. As God intended
funny I do the opposite. I chop everything up and mix it.
Load More Replies...MUFFINS ARE NOT CUPCAKES, AND VISA VERSA!! Who the hell started this thing where they are calling cupcakes muffins!? I bought a muffin premix, and it only had enough for 12 cupcakes! Muffins are different and it's driving me insane.
The idea of it is not flaming hot with piles of scotch bonnet peppers then it is not good. I don't want jalapeño peppers on every dish. I don't want jalapeño peppers on ANY dish.
Everyone is complaining about these influencers. The simple solution is to stop watching them. Not only will this improve your day but it will kill their revenue stream.
Putting the word crack in a recipe name. Like crack chicken, or Christmas crack candy. Because it's supposedly soooo addicting. WTF honestly!
Any dish being prepared on a TV cooking show that needs tweezers to create the right image on the plate. Just throw it all on, FFS, it doesn't taste any different with all your fancy stacking and arranging, which lasts about one second until you hit it with a knife and fork anyway.
People complaining about Tik Toks. I never complain about it because I don't have it and don't care about it. Problem solved.
They are literally answering the question though? "What food trend do you want to die?" That is the whole point of the listicle?
Load More Replies...Recipe blogs. I just want the recipe, not pages and pages of drivel about how how your grandmother's apple trees gave the best apples, or how you spend Sunday, or how you went fossicking with a picnic and found sharks teeth. Some sites have a "jump to recipe" button, which is good, but those that don't, I hate having to scroll through reams and reams of pointless dribblings and word salad.
This is just one of the reasons I don't read recipe blogs or make any blog recipes. The other reasons? Bloggers frequently steal recipes from other sources and present them as their own. They are more likely to contain mistakes. The recipes aren't tested. The "reviews" frequently consist of their fans saying how great all their recipes are while admitting they haven't actually made the recipe they're supposedly reviewing. I'll stick with Serious Eats and Cook's Illustrated recipes and eliminate all those issues!
Load More Replies...Went out yesterday for a birthday lunch, five of us,, we got a real menu, there was a specials board with a couple of extra dishes for each course, the standard menu had about eight or nine meals per course, it was clear what you could have, you could have a maximum of four courses. It was all locally sourced, it was all fairly straight forward and uncomplicated food, it was all cooked perfectly, the staff were attentive but not intrusive, they were relaxed and didn’t look stressed. A genuinely enjoyable experience. It’s just not that difficult to do good food in a decent establishment.
Some of these experiences are common anoyances (Not having physical menues), some are american only (s**t loads of process sugar, and tip culture), and a few were specific to the editor's personal algorythm and no one else. (weird social media trends).
The vegan craze, I get the lifestyle choice but honestly food preferences should be made by each person. I'm a vegetarian and I get food shamed for using dairy... its just stupid. And on that seed/nut/grain milk... its not milk!
what vegan craze? I've got about 5000 people in my phone book and personally have met four.
Load More Replies...The trend of stacking everything in one pile. Eg. Bottom layer of mash, next layer of veg, next layer of another veg and then main on top. I end up separating it all. As God intended
funny I do the opposite. I chop everything up and mix it.
Load More Replies...MUFFINS ARE NOT CUPCAKES, AND VISA VERSA!! Who the hell started this thing where they are calling cupcakes muffins!? I bought a muffin premix, and it only had enough for 12 cupcakes! Muffins are different and it's driving me insane.
The idea of it is not flaming hot with piles of scotch bonnet peppers then it is not good. I don't want jalapeño peppers on every dish. I don't want jalapeño peppers on ANY dish.
Everyone is complaining about these influencers. The simple solution is to stop watching them. Not only will this improve your day but it will kill their revenue stream.
Putting the word crack in a recipe name. Like crack chicken, or Christmas crack candy. Because it's supposedly soooo addicting. WTF honestly!