Thursday, March 5, 2026

Flavor Forward: Why Beef Is Back on the Menu

 


Flavor is not a trend. Flavor is the foundation. And today, across every restaurant segment — from QSR to polished casual — beef is reclaiming its rightful place as the centerpiece of craveability, culinary authenticity, and menu profitability.

Beef is not simply protein. It is umami density. It is Maillard reaction theater. It is the emotional connective tissue between nostalgia and indulgence according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

And right now, operators understand something critical: when consumers trade up, they trade into flavor.

 


The Big Signal: McDonald's and the Big Arch Burger

The announcement that McDonald’s will bring the Big Arch Burger to the U.S. beginning March 3 is more than a product launch — it is a strategic declaration.

NRN’s Sam Oches and Alicia Kelso noted that the Big Arch fulfills a “barbell strategy” for the brand: value on one end, premium on the other. The Big Arch is engineered as a premium burger play — bigger build, layered beef flavor, elevated construction.

The question isn’t whether McDonald’s can build a premium burger. They can.

The question is whether today’s consumer is ready to pay for beef-forward indulgence again.

History suggests yes — but with conditions.

Learning from the Past: Arch Deluxe to Angus

When McDonald’s launched the Arch Deluxe in the 1990s, it tried to reposition beef sophistication without reshaping consumer perception. Later Angus burger iterations attempted premium positioning without fully articulating differentiated flavor architecture.

The modern consumer, however, is not the 1990s consumer.

Today’s guest:

·       Understands sourcing narratives

·       Recognizes cooking mediums (tallow vs. seed oils)

·       Associates beef with satiety and protein density

·       Values indulgence as an intentional purchase

Premium beef must deliver sensory justification — thickness, juiciness, caramelization, aroma.

The Big Arch arrives into a marketplace that is far more protein-literate and flavor-aware.

 


Beef Tallow: The Flavor Multiplier

Few ingredients communicate authenticity like beef tallow.

When Wienerschnitzel publicly embraced beef tallow frying, it was not just a culinary decision — it was a branding maneuver. Tallow signals old-school flavor physics. It suggests depth. It whispers nostalgia.

Beef tallow creates:

·       Richer mouthfeel

·       Enhanced crust formation

·       Aromatic carry-through

·       Distinctive savory resonance

Consumers increasingly equate tallow with “real food.” That perception alone has marketing value.

Flavor equity matters.

 


Four Chains Doubling Down on Beef Innovation

Beef innovation is happening across segments. Consider these current chain examples:

1. McDonald's — Big Arch Burger

A premium stacked burger aimed at trading customers up within the QSR ecosystem. It signals renewed confidence in beef-led margin expansion.

2. Shake Shack — Elevated Beef Positioning

Shake Shack continues to post positive results while maintaining a tightly focused, high-quality beef identity. Its strategy: fewer SKUs, stronger beef narrative, better experience economics.

3. Red Robin — Gourmet Burger Reinforcement

Red Robin’s earnings suggest stability in full-service casual dining. Gourmet burger builds and premium add-ons reinforce beef as a customizable indulgence platform.

4. Outback Steakhouse — Steakhouse Momentum

Outback’s resilience underscores that full-service steak occasions remain durable. Consumers are not abandoning beef-centric dining experiences — they are rationalizing them.

 


Pizza vs. Beef: A Tale of Dominance and Differentiation

While Domino’s continues to dominate pizza and gain share, Papa Johns reported a 5% sales decline and plans to close 300 underperforming locations. That signals segmentation pressure within carbohydrate-heavy categories.

Beef, by contrast, is operating from a protein-forward advantage. In a GLP-1 and high-protein environment, beef offers perceived nutritional justification for indulgence.

The center-of-plate protein often wins when consumers are selective.

Fast Casual Divergence: Beef as Stability

Fast casual brands are showing bifurcation.

CAVA and Shake Shack posted positive results. Sweetgreen reported a dramatic 11.5% sales decline. That is not a condemnation of vegetables — it is evidence that protein-forward builds offer stronger indulgence justification in inflationary conditions.

Beef provides:

·       Higher check averages

·       Better add-on attachment rates

·       Perceived fullness

·       Occasion anchoring

Flavor drives frequency. Protein drives permission.

 


A Historical Perspective: America and Beef

Beef consumption has always tracked economic confidence.

Post–World War II suburbanization fueled backyard grilling culture. The 1970s brought price volatility but cemented burgers as democratic indulgence. The 1990s fast-food wars intensified value-driven beef formats. The 2000s introduced premiumization — Angus, grass-fed narratives, steakhouse casualization.

Today’s era is different.

We are in what I call the “Flavor Justification Cycle.” Consumers are not eating less beef — they are eating beef with intention.

They want:

·       Fewer but better occasions

·       Transparent sourcing

·       Cooking authenticity

·       Sensory payoff

Flavor is the differentiator.

 


Why Beef Works Right Now

1.       Umami Dominance – Beef triggers deep savory receptors.

2.       Protein Relevance – High-protein positioning aligns with macro-trends.

3.       Menu Versatility – Burgers, bowls, sandwiches, steaks.

4.       Premium Laddering – Beef supports tiered pricing strategies.

5.       Nostalgia Leverage – Tallow, char, grill marks, butcher language.

Beef is both emotional and functional.

 


The Full-Service Surprise

Casual dining brands like Applebee's and BJ's Restaurant & Brewhouse reported solid news. Meanwhile, breakfast brands like IHOP dispelled fears that brunch spending is collapsing.

Consumers are not retreating from restaurants. They are choosing occasions that feel worth it.

Beef often anchors those occasions.

Grocerant Guru® Insights

1.       Flavor Is Currency
Premium beef must overdeliver sensorially. Thickness, crust, aroma, and juiciness are non-negotiable.

2.       Beef Tallow Is Brand Theater
Cooking medium transparency creates differentiation in a crowded burger market.

3.       Barbell Strategy Requires Clarity
Value menus bring traffic. Premium beef drives margin. Confusing positioning kills both.

4.       Protein Is Permission
In a health-aware economy, beef’s protein density provides psychological justification for indulgence.

5.       Occasion Economics Favor Beef
When consumers dine out less frequently, they choose meals with center-of-plate gravity.

Beef is not simply back.

Beef is strategically resurgent.

And in a marketplace defined by scrutiny, restraint, and selective indulgence — flavor wins.

Elevate Your Brand with Expert Insights

For corporate presentations, regional chain strategies, educational forums, or keynote speaking, Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, delivers actionable insights that fuel success.

With deep experience in restaurant operations, brand positioning, and strategic consulting, Steven provides valuable takeaways that inspire and drive results.

Visit GrocerantGuru.com or FoodserviceSolutions.US Call 1-253-759-7869



Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Frozen Food Court: Why $87 Billion in Branded Frozen Sales Signals the New “What’s for Dinner?” Battleground



Frozen food is no longer the backup plan. It is now the strategic center of the modern American meal solution according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

According to the “2026 Power of Frozen in Retail” report from the American Frozen Food Institute (AFFI) in partnership with FMI – The Food Industry Association, annual frozen food sales have reached $87 billion, up $27.4 billion versus 2019, with 2.0% year-over-year growth driven by both inflation and volume expansion. Unit sales are up 4.5% versus 2019, confirming that this is not merely price-driven growth — it is behavioral.

To understand this resurgence, we must step back.

 


From TV Dinners to Meal Architecture

Frozen food has long mirrored American lifestyles. In the 1950s, the TV dinner symbolized convenience and postwar optimism. In the 1980s and 1990s, branded frozen entrées became synonymous with time compression as dual-income households surged.

After the 2008 recession, frozen became a value anchor. During the 2020 pandemic, it became a pantry hedge against supply chain uncertainty. Today, in a period defined by inflationary pressure and heightened food waste awareness, frozen has re-emerged as a meal-planning essential.

Nearly 99% of U.S. households purchased frozen food in the past year. Even more telling:

·       40% of consumers use frozen foods every few days or daily, up from 35% in 2019.

·       77% purchase frozen with a specific meal or day in mind, up from 71% in 2023.

·       Three in four consumers (76%) combine fresh and frozen ingredients within a single meal.

That data signals integration, not impulse.

Frozen is no longer a silo category — it is embedded in dinner architecture.

 


The Economic Recalibration of Dinner

Consumers are recalibrating around three pressures:

1.       Price sensitivity

2.       Food waste reduction

3.       Time scarcity

Price, ease, and taste now dominate purchase decisions, with shoppers actively comparing promotions across supermarkets, club, mass, and online outlets. Supermarkets are losing frozen dollar share to alternative formats — particularly club and mass retailers — reinforcing that value optics matter.

Importantly, shoppers are making more trips but buying slightly smaller baskets, reflecting cross-channel purchasing habits and disciplined consumption management.

Frozen processed meat/poultry and frozen fruits/vegetables drove most new dollars and units — categories that act as meal components, not just center-of-plate entrées. Consumers are rebuilding meals modularly.

That modularity is critical.

 


Why Branded Frozen Foods Are Resurgent

Branded frozen foods are benefiting from four structural shifts:

1. Trust in Quality and Nutrition

Perception has improved significantly. Four in ten consumers are highly interested in frozen foods with:

·       Real ingredients

·       Minimal processing

·       High protein

·       No artificial ingredients

Nutrition confidence is strongest among Gen Z and Millennials — cohorts historically skeptical of legacy frozen brands.


2. Restaurant-Quality Expectations at Home

Parents and younger households increasingly seek restaurant-quality experiences without restaurant prices. Seven in ten shoppers actively look for new frozen items. Global cuisines — Italian, Mexican, Mediterranean, Asian — are leading flavor exploration.

3. Food Waste Awareness

Frozen offers portion control, resealability, and extended shelf life — structural advantages in an era where food waste prevention is a financial strategy.

4. Integrated Merchandising

Seasonal displays, high-protein lifestyle sets, fresh/frozen adjacency, and packaging innovations like resealable pouches are improving engagement.

Frozen is no longer parked in the back aisle. It is curated.

 


The Strategic Imperative for Restaurant Brands

Here is the pivotal insight:

Consumers make the decision “What’s for Dinner?” at retail — not in the drive-thru.

If restaurant brands are absent from the frozen aisle, they surrender influence at the moment of meal intent formation.

Historically, restaurant brands protected in-store dining exclusivity. Today, that logic is obsolete. Branded frozen SKUs allow restaurants to:

·       Extend brand presence into weekly meal planning

·       Capture share during inflationary trading-down cycles

·       Participate in hybrid cooking (fresh + frozen assembly)

·       Influence pantry stocking behavior

The freezer has become a decision theater.

Consumers are not choosing between frozen and restaurants; they are blending them. Restaurant-branded frozen items allow operators to stay in the consideration set even on nights when consumers stay home.

Failure to compete in the frozen food court means forfeiting frequency.

 


Format Disruption: Where the Dollars Are Shifting

Supermarkets are losing frozen share to club, mass, and online retailers. That shift underscores:

·       The power of bulk pricing optics

·       Subscription and digital replenishment models

·       Cross-channel price transparency

Retailers that treat frozen as static inventory will lose momentum. Those who treat it as a dynamic meal-planning hub will gain loyalty.

 


The Wellness and Sustainability Overlay

Consumers are increasingly aligning frozen purchases with:

·       Cleaner labels

·       Ingredient simplicity

·       Energy efficiency

·       Perceived sustainability

Frozen food’s long shelf life supports lower household waste — an under-leveraged marketing narrative.

 


Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       The Frozen Aisle Will Become a Branded Restaurant Portfolio Platform.
Expect accelerated licensing deals between national restaurant brands and frozen manufacturers. The freezer will function as a distributed extension of restaurant menus.

2.       Meal Components Will Outpace Full Entrées.
Consumers are assembling meals modularly. High-protein vegetables, seasoned proteins, global sauces, and side dishes will outperform traditional single-tray dinners.

3.       Cross-Merchandising Will Redefine Store Layout Strategy.
Fresh and frozen adjacency will become standard practice, integrating frozen into perimeter planning rather than isolating it in center-store silos.

4.       Smaller Freezer Footprints Will Drive Packaging Innovation.
Urbanization and smaller living spaces will force compact, stackable, resealable formats optimized for limited freezer capacity.

5.       “What’s for Dinner?” Data Will Become the Core Competitive Asset.
Retailers and restaurant brands that leverage loyalty data to anticipate weekly meal intent — then target frozen solutions accordingly — will win disproportionate share.

 


The $87 billion frozen category is not nostalgia. It is structural adaptation.

The freezer is no longer cold storage. It is the new food court — and it sits inside the home.

Success Leaves Clues—Are You Ready to Find Yours?

One key insight that continues to drive success is this: "The consumer is dynamic, not static." This principle is the foundation of our work at Foodservice Solutions®, where Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, has been helping brands stay relevant in an ever-evolving market.

Want to strengthen your brand’s connection with today’s consumers? Let’s talk. Call 253-759-7869 for more information.

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