USA | Rubix Foods, a culinary innovation specialist in providing flavour and functional ingredients for restaurants, announces the release of The NEXT Flavor Report.
This first-of-its-kind flavour insights report combines proprietary data, third-party research and exclusive findings from the Rubix NEXT Flavor Network—a collective of three influential taste-making social media creators with Gen Z audiences—to unveil the flavour trends that will shape restaurant menus in 2025.
A key focus of the report was based on Gen Z preferences for spice and dressings. When provided with an open-ended question, 21 percent of Gen Z said ranch dressingwas overrated. The flavour was mentioned nearly two times more than the next closest flavour.
Ranch dressing is a familiar favourite that offers plenty of room for creativity. Forty-three percent of survey respondents told Rubix they wanted to see more variations of the flavour, and two of the three flavours Rubix taste-tested with Gen Z at in-person sampling were variations of ranch dressings. When asked, 92 percent of taste testers said they would go to a restaurant specifically for those sauces.
In response to "What food/beverage do you want to be turned into a sauce," one in five Gen Z replied, "Pickle." Only two percent of respondents in Rubix's influencer flavour polls said pickles were "overrated," suggesting the flavour hasn't yet peaked.
The food and beverage industry is faced with this demand, yet there are very few pickle-flavoured sauces available in the current market. Pickles are also rising in the snacking category thanks to the viral Chamoy, which is all the more reason for QSRs to pay attention.
Gen Z is the least likely generation to let cost be a consideration when it comes to sweets, meaning their purchase intent is primarily driven by cravings.
Sweet heat (or 'swicy') led the way this year, but Rubix's proprietary research found that Gen Z craves sweet and salty ('swalty') five percent more than craving swicy. This aligns with anticipated flavour trends, with swalty projected to grow by 32 percent by 2028, compared to swicy's 10 percent growth.
With "little treat culture" reflecting a rise in snacking, swalty combos will be what drives this generation to restaurants in 2025.
"Understanding Gen Z is one thing, but adapting to this generation's evolving and experimental palate is critical for restaurants to drive meaningful traffic," said Shannon O'Shields, vice president of marketing at Rubix Foods.
"On top of partaking in little treat culture and being exposed to diverse tastes, they are the generation most excited to try new food + beverage items and are quick to share what they love with social media. The goal is that this data gives restaurants the courage to innovate and try something new with their flavour offerings, ultimately meeting the demands of this influential group."
In July, Rubix's NEXT Flavor Network engaged their combined Gen Z audience of 2.6M social followers through Instagram polls posing questions that aimed to identify gaps in the current flavour offerings at QSRs. After garnering more than 45,000 unique responses, the NEXT Flavor Network took to the streets outside of Lollapalooza to get Gen Z's opinion on three new flavours: Pizza Ranch, Chimichurri Ranch and Asian Aloha. The NEXT Flavor Report analysed these authentic consumer reactions and distils them into the insights restaurants need to stay ahead of emerging flavour trends and create products that resonate with Gen Z.
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