Pulse, toast and tips - Andrew Coppolino's top food trends for 2016 - Action News
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Kitchener-WaterlooAnalysis

Pulse, toast and tips - Andrew Coppolino's top food trends for 2016

Could toast be the next big food trend in Waterloo Region this year? Food columnist Andrew Coppolino says it's hot.

Bye-bye bacon, hello veggies and lots of flavours

The UN has declared 2016 the year of the pulses. (Westend61/Getty Images)

There's a difference betweenfadsandtrends.Fads come andgo, but trends tend to stick around.

It's easy to talk about the year ahead and what might be a fad, ahot new menu item orrestaurant news for the upcoming year.However, determining trends is a bit harder: there aremany factors to consider and so many regional influences and differences.

Will toast pop up in Waterloo Region any time soon?- Andrew Coppolino

I've attempted to predict some 2016 trends that we might see in Waterloo Region by researchingindustry reports, reading chef surveys, digestingmedia releases from organizations such as Technomic, Mintel, Culinary Concierge, McCormick's, and Restaurants Canada, and eating some foods that may or may not have been tasty.

By the way: Bacon no longer seems to be the food factor it once was.

Climbing prices

This will certainly be a highlight of 2016: Not only are beef, pork and chicken prices climbing, but vegetable prices rose dramatically. Cauliflower is just one example the price jumped to $8 for a single head by year's end. A weak Canadian dollar is primarily responsible, and it means we will be paying about $345 more for our food in 2016, according to the annual report by the University of Guelph.

Vegetable,herb power

Regardless, vegetables like bok choy and other leafy greens from mustard greens and chard to dandelion are predictedto be popular in 2016. Toss into that mix a return to classic herbs like parsley and thyme and a re-discovery of more unusual ingredients such as lovage and chervil. The Jerusalem artichoke (or sunchoke) seems poised to be more popular, too. At the haute cuisine level of dining, Alain Ducasse, at his Parisian restaurant Alain Ducasse au Plaza Athne, has reduced the emphasis on red meat and is focusing on fish, vegetables and cereals (although it should be noted the restaurant has lost one of its three Michelin stars in the undertaking.)

Feeling a pulse

The United Nations has declared 2016 the International Year of Pulses that includes super-healthy and versatile peas, beans, chickpeas and lentils. They are high in fibre and high in protein. They can feed hordes of people and we all should be eating more of them. And they can be used in dozens of dishes.

Labour relations

The phrase "Fight for 15" is ringing out in the industry in the United States and has supporters in Canada, too. It is a movement to boost wages at low-paying jobs including restaurant jobs to a more reasonable level of a minimum wage of $15 per hour. The restaurant industry will also be facing a shortage of cooks, issues around tip sharing, and struggling with difficult working conditions and hours as well as the spectre of harassment and abuse in the workplace. Also, in December 2015 Ontario awareness was raisedand laws passedbanningrestaurant owners from taking a cut of the server's tip

Farm-to-table, local and healthy guts

Trends that have entrenched themselves in the industry over the past several years will likely continue: Locally produced foods, the farm-to-table philosophy, small (and sharing) plates, snack menus (such as at The Berlin, inKitchener), pickling and fermented foods. You can add to that list a new and growing interest in smoking food and a revival/update of the 1980scraze forhouse-made vinegars.

Deeper

If there is a trend that removes red meat's richness from the menu, something needs to be added in its place. Forecasts are for chefs to try deepening flavours by caramelizing, roasting, smoking and brleing ingredients to create a robust, full-bodied richness.

Sweeter

With processed sugars taking a bit of a health hit, the predictionsarefor more natural sweetener alternatives (although most undergo some sort of processing) like honey, agave and the ever-popular maple syrup.
Some restaurants in the United States offer a toast menu. Will the food trend come north of the border? (Jen Li/@eatrundesign)

A toast to toast?

Restaurants in the United States have featured "toast menus" these snacks are growing more popular and could be slathered with chicken liver pt, ricotta, tomato jam, roasted bone marrow and pickled anchovies. Will toast pop up in Waterloo Region any time soon? You never know.

Crafty beverages

Microbreweries will continue to flourish: Kitchener's Descendants Beer and Beverage Co. is slated to open this winter on Victoria Street at Lancaster Avenue. As well, locally-made spirits there's a distillery in Guelph and one in Elmira are gaining traction, too. From a mixology standpoint, the flavoursthey are being joined withinclude infused vinegars, seasonal ingredients, smoked ingredients and fresh herbs.

Worldwideflavour

Malay and Filipino foods will be on the rise. (There's a sign up for Sari Sari, a Filipino restaurant on Lancaster Avenue in Kitchener, but it was not open at the time this was being written). Otherwise, look for raita, sriracha-like hot sauces, soy sauces and chimichurri sauce a thick herb, oil and vinegar steak condiment hailing from Argentina that's absolutely delicious.

We'll check back in a year to see how this menu of 2016 prognostications played out.