Comfort food as we know it is changing. Where once we saw comfort food as dishes that were familiar and safe, we’re making way for new recipes that reflect the heritage of the chef and the restaurant’s locale.
Through rich culinary storytelling and the chef’s genuine emotional connection to the dish, diners are presented with new and fresh food experiences that feel and taste special.
Think classic and rustic ancestral recipes to be shared and enjoyed to create the new comfort food like Chef Kenneth Cacho’s innovative lumpia filled with smoked wintermelon.
Words by
Lauren Kemp
History is full of lost culinary treasures Chefs, restaurateurs and recipe creators around the world are re-discovering local traditions, and reimagining dishes by looking to history for fresh ideas in an industry that increasingly demands authenticity. This, coupled with the demand for local, sustainable sourcing, means ingredients that had been resigned to the longlost past are back on our plates.
65% of operators believe this trend is set to grow in the future
Reimagining ingredients
These artifacts of tables past are reappearing and rebranding with impressive deftness. It’s now possible to get mead at music festivals, offal is being sold as a delicacy and honey has never left. Chefs are fermenting and pickling all sorts and combinations of vegetables, fruits, and spices.
New trends are wonderful and coupled with a historic relevance they’re even better. It was great when quinoa hit the scene, but it can be hard to import and water-intensive to grow. In seeking something that fulfills the quinoa demand in a local, sustainable way we can look back at what our great-great grandparents, and their friends were eating. Welcome back, ancient grains! Spelt and rye-based bread is more expensive than ever, farro is appearing all over the shop, pearl barley sounds exotic and does what quinoa does so well (making chickpeas look passé).
In the quest for originality, it might sound ironic to look to the past, but what better way to show a new ingredient, a fresh concept, or a sophisticated technique than to apply it to a classic. There’s a simple joy in being served a familiar dish in a bright new way; it’s the best of both worlds.
For Casual Independent Restaurants
Cost (€) per portion: 1-2
Batter
Pot Assembly
Mushroom Freekeh Duxelles
Side Dish Assembly
Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
Nutmeg Caramelized Onion
Mushroom Freekeh Duxelles
Lamb Shank
Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
Side Dish Assembly
Nutmeg Caramelized Onion
Pot Assembly
For Central Production Kitchens:
This recipe can be stored chilled and assembled. The baking part can be done to order
The Filipino folk song, “Bahay Kubo,” depicts a rural farm setting that grows local Filipino vegetables. Different techniques were used like smoking, grilling, roasting, to add complex flavors to the many different, versatile ways of filling the lumpia made with the 18 vegetables from the popular folk song. The different filling options are packed with vegetables of vibrant colors, flavors, textures, and nutrients with plant protein from tofu and peanuts.
Chef Kenneth Cacho, Philippines
For Casual Full-Service Restaurants
Cost (€) per portion: 1-2
A selection of filling ideas
Pickled Radish
For more fillings see Appendix.
A selection of garnishes
Peanut Powder
OR
Crispy Vermicelli and Seaweed
For more fillings see Appendix.
Serve with
Peanut Sauce
Assembly
Pickled Radish
Guisadong Gulay (Sautéed Vegetables)
Guinataan Gulay (Vegetables in Coconut Milk)
Tortang Talong (Eggplant Omelette)
For Central Production Kitchens:
This recipe can be stored chilled and assembled. The baking part can be done to order
Smoked Wintermelon
Peanut Sauce
Assembly (Lumpia/Spring Roll)
Stewed Tofu and Lima Beans
A modern and creative yet simple way of cooking barbecued pork with a rich mala flavor paired with a refreshingly crisp, pickled lotus root.
Chef Chris Zhong, People’s Republic of China
For Casual Full-Service Restaurants
Cost (€) per portion: < 1
Pork Neck
Pickled Lotus Root in Spicy, Sweet and Sour Sauce (for 40 pieces)
Pork Neck
Pickled Lotus Root in Spicy, Sweet and Sour Sauce (for 40 pieces)
Assembly
For Central Production Kitchens:
This recipe can be stored chilled and assembled. The baking part can be done to order
A modern take on a German classic with an apple and red cabbage roulade, and potato donut to balance the richness of the beef by adding more varied flavors and textures to the dish.
Chef René-Noel Schiemer, Germany
For Casual Independent Restaurants
Cost (€) per portion: 4-5
Braised Beef
Crunchy Topping
Potato Donut
Red Cabbage and Apple Roulade
Braised Beef
Crunchy Topping
Potato Donut
Red Cabbage and Apple Roulade
Assembly
A modern, minimalist take on cooking and presenting paella using different techniques with the right mix of the best ingredients : bouillon, paste, concentration of flavors, and accurate cooking times for the most ideal rice flavor and texture.
Chef Peio Cruz, Spain
For Casual Independent Restaurants and Chain Restaurants
Cost (€) per portion: 1-2
Rice Base
Prawn Bouillon
Topping Sauce
Salmorreta (concentrated paste to boost the taste)
Assembly
Rice Base
Salmorreta
Prawn Bouillon
Assembly
A dish with modernized components inspired by the different regions in Indonesia from Central Java, Lampung City, to Kalimantan Island. The grilled chicken is paired with crispy spinach, udon Manday, fermented unripe jackfruit in a seruit sauce made with a combination of tomatoes, chili, shrimp paste, and calamansi.
Chef Gungun Chandra Handayana, Indonesia
For Casual Restaurants
Cost (€) per portion: < 1
Grilled Chicken
Spice Mix Paste
Crispy Spinach
Seruit Sauce
Stir Fried Udon Manday
Grilled Chicken
Crunchy Spinach
Sauté Manday Udon
Sambal Seruit Caviar
Assembly
Chicken is the top best-selling dish according to a survey of 1400 independent restaurant, hotel, and elderly care operators from 19 countries in 2023.
A selection of filling ideas:
Guiisadong Gulay (sauteed Vegetables)
Guinataang Gulay (Vegetables in Coconut Milk)
Tortang Talong (Eggplant Omelette)
Stewed Tofu and Lima Beans
Smoked Wintermelon
Flavor Shock
1. Google Keyword Planner, Mar 2018-Feb 2022
Local Abundance
2. Q4443 Trendsetter March 2022, UFS e-panel plus d-hoc, 19 countries, Base n=1,303
Low-Waste Menus
3. wfp.org 4. Q4443 Trendsetter March 2022, UFS e-panel plus ad-hoc, 19 countries, Base n=1,303
Modernized Comfort Food
5. Q4443 Trendsetter March 2022, UFS e-panel plus ad-hoc, 19 countries, Base n=1,303
6. What’s new on your menu?. April 2023. Kantar for Global UFS e-panel.
Plant-Powered Protein
7. Nielsen IQ Panelview, 2022
8. sciencedirect.com
Irresistible Vegetables
9. Unilever Regenerati
Created by TCO London
Photography: Remko Kraaijeveld (food), Charmaine Wu (chefs) Recipes: Unilever Food Solutions Chefs
Food Styling: Chef Maurits van Vroenhoven
Recipe Editing: Chef Thais Gimenez, Chef Michael Yamashita
Research Studies: Daniel Quinn, Elspeth Edwards, and Charlotte McDonald of The Forge London, Unilever Food Solutions Consumer Marketing Insights, Kantar
Expert Insights: Chef Sam Kass, Patrick Chan, Sana Minhas, Christian Weij, Unilever Food Solution Chefs
Special thanks to: Chef Eric Chua, Unilever Food Solutions Singapore
The Future Menus 2024 Trend Report by Unilever Food Solutions was compiled from robust global data and extensive chef inputs, including industry reports of leading third-party sources (Kantar, Firmenich, Symrise, IFF, The Forge, CMJ-PDC), social media analytics using 77,000 keywords representing 69 million searches across more than 21 countries, perspectives from UFS’ 250 professional chefs and in-depth feedback of more than 1,600 chef professionals located in 21 markets worldwide via UFS e-panels. These insights have been translated into practical, action-driven solutions for foodservice operators globally, including recipe ideas, techniques, and ingredient solutions that operators can use on their menus.