Saturday, July 18, 2026

The New American Menu: Why Emerging Ethnic Restaurant Chains Are the Next Billion-Dollar Growth Story

 


For more than 30 years, I've watched consumers migrate from one food trend to another. Tex-Mex became mainstream. Sushi moved from specialty restaurants into supermarket delis. Mediterranean cuisine evolved from a niche category into one of the fastest-growing segments in fast casual.

Today, another powerful undercurrent is reshaping the foodservice industry.

America isn't simply eating more "ethnic food." Consumers are embracing authentic global cuisines delivered through scalable restaurant chains, grocery prepared foods, meal kits, and convenience-driven formats. The result is one of the biggest shifts in restaurant development since the birth of fast casual.

As the Grocerant Guru®, I believe this migration is still in its early innings.

The next decade won't be dominated by another hamburger chain.

It will be defined by globally inspired brands that deliver authenticity, portability, affordability, digital convenience, and culinary discovery.


The Consumer Has Changed

Today's consumer expects more than convenience.

They want adventure without risk.

Social media has fundamentally changed how consumers discover food. TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and streaming travel shows have introduced millions of Americans to cuisines they had never previously experienced.

Instead of asking, "What is Korean food?"

Consumers now ask,

"Where's the best Korean fried chicken?"

That represents an extraordinary behavioral shift.

Generation Z and Millennials—now representing the largest purchasing cohorts in foodservice—grew up in multicultural communities and have become comfortable experimenting with Vietnamese pho, Japanese ramen, Filipino barbecue, Indian curries, Mediterranean bowls, Peruvian chicken, West African jollof rice, Caribbean jerk chicken, and regional Mexican specialties.

For them, global flavors are no longer exotic.

They're Tuesday night dinner.


The Numbers Tell the Story

The restaurant industry continues demonstrating remarkable resilience despite inflationary pressures.

According to Circana, Americans spent approximately $1 million every minute in restaurants during 2025. Restaurant spending increased roughly 3% year-over-year, even as overall restaurant traffic remained relatively flat, highlighting consumers' willingness to spend on concepts delivering differentiated value.

Technomic reports that the U.S. fast-casual segment generated nearly $77 billion in sales during 2025, increasing approximately 6%, outperforming much of the broader restaurant industry despite slower overall growth. Mediterranean and innovative sandwich concepts were among the strongest-performing categories.

No company better illustrates this trend than CAVA.

In fiscal 2025, CAVA reported:

·       Revenue exceeding $1.16 billion

·       22.5% annual revenue growth

·       72 net new restaurant openings

·       Same-restaurant sales growth of 4.0%

·       Restaurant-level margins of 24.4%

The momentum continued into 2026, with first-quarter revenue increasing more than 32%, same-restaurant sales climbing 9.7%, and guest traffic rising 6.8% year over year.

That's remarkable growth during an era when many traditional restaurant brands continue struggling to increase customer traffic.


The Next Generation of Ethnic Chains

Watch these cuisine segments carefully over the next five years:

·       Mediterranean

·       Korean BBQ and Korean fried chicken

·       Vietnamese

·       Filipino

·       Japanese ramen and hand rolls

·       Indian street food

·       Regional Mexican concepts

·       Peruvian rotisserie chicken

·       Caribbean cuisine

·       West African concepts

·       Middle Eastern street food

·       Hawaiian poke and island cuisine

Many of these brands are beginning exactly where Chipotle and Panera once started—regional expansion supported by highly loyal customers.

The difference?

Today's operators have digital ordering, AI-assisted labor management, sophisticated loyalty programs, third-party delivery, and social media providing nearly unlimited consumer awareness.


Grocery Retailers Are Following Their Lead

One of the biggest mistakes retailers can make is assuming these restaurant chains are competitors.

They're actually innovation laboratories.

Walk through progressive supermarket prepared food departments today and you'll increasingly find:

·       Korean fried chicken

·       Fresh sushi

·       Mediterranean grain bowls

·       Butter chicken

·       Chicken tikka masala

·       Pho

·       Birria tacos

·       Ramen

·       Poke bowls

·       Hummus bars

·       Fresh spring rolls

·       Globally inspired meal kits

Private-label international sauces, marinades, frozen entrées, spice blends, and ready-to-heat meals continue expanding as consumers recreate restaurant-quality experiences at home.

The restaurant and grocery industries are no longer operating in separate worlds.

They're sharing the same consumer.


Authenticity Is the New Competitive Advantage

Consumers increasingly reward brands that tell genuine cultural stories.

They want recipes rooted in heritage.

They appreciate regional ingredients.

They expect transparency.

Simply adding "Asian" or "Mediterranean" to a menu description no longer creates differentiation.

Consumers have become educated.

They know the difference between authentic and imitation.

Operators that respect culinary traditions while simplifying ordering, improving speed of service, and maintaining operational consistency will continue winning market share.


What Comes Next?

The next decade will likely produce national brands that many Americans have never heard of today.

Several will emerge from cuisines that remain underrepresented nationally.

Others will come from regional immigrant communities introducing authentic family recipes through scalable restaurant formats.

History suggests many of tomorrow's billion-dollar restaurant companies are currently operating fewer than 100 locations.

That's exactly where the next wave of disruption begins.

The real opportunity isn't simply serving ethnic food.

It's delivering authentic global flavors with convenience, customization, affordability, portability, and digital engagement.

That intersection is exactly where the future of the Grocerant resides.


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. The definition of "American food" is changing. Tomorrow's mainstream menu will increasingly include Korean, Filipino, Indian, Vietnamese, Mediterranean, West African, and regional Latin American dishes as everyday meal solutions—not special-occasion dining.

2. Grocery retailers should embrace, not fear, emerging ethnic restaurant chains. The smartest retailers will translate restaurant innovation into fresh prepared foods, private-label offerings, meal kits, and grab-and-go solutions that satisfy consumers looking for authentic global flavors at home.

3. The next billion-dollar restaurant brands will likely emerge from today's regional ethnic concepts. Just as Chipotle transformed Mexican-inspired fast casual and CAVA elevated Mediterranean cuisine, the next generation of industry leaders will be those that successfully combine authentic cultural flavors with operational simplicity, digital convenience, and exceptional value. The winners won't just sell meals—they'll create memorable food experiences that consumers return to again and again.

Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participationdifferentiation and individualization?  Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: Facebook,  LinkedIn, or Twitter



Friday, July 17, 2026

The $100 Dinner Is Here: Why Grocery Inflation Is Reshaping America's Dinner Table Through 2028

 


For years, consumers believed grocery shopping was the affordable alternative to eating out. That assumption is rapidly changing. Today's consumer isn't simply asking, "What's for dinner?" They're asking, "What can I afford for dinner?" according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

According to the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Consumer Price Index, grocery prices (food-at-home) increased again in June, marking the fifth monthly increase this year. Food-at-home prices rose 0.2% in June and are now 2.7% higher than one year ago. Dairy products climbed 1.2% in June alone, meats, poultry, fish and eggs rose 0.6%, while egg prices jumped another 4.3% in a single month. Fresh fruits and vegetables remain the fastest-growing category over the past year, increasing 5.3%.

Those numbers matter because food inflation compounds over time—and consumers feel it at every meal.

The bigger concern may be what lies ahead.

Meteorologists and commodity analysts warn that a powerful El Niño weather pattern could significantly disrupt global agricultural production. Goldman Sachs projects global food commodity prices could increase as much as 15.8% before the effects fully work their way through the supply chain, potentially extending inflationary pressure well into 2028.

For retailers, restaurants, manufacturers, and consumers alike, this is no longer simply an inflation story. It has become a behavioral economics story.


Five Years of Sticker Shock

Over the past five years, grocery prices have risen roughly 25% to 30% across many staple food categories. Some categories—including eggs, beef, coffee, cocoa, butter, and fresh produce—have experienced significantly larger swings depending on weather, disease outbreaks, supply chain disruptions, and global demand.

The result is that the average meal costs dramatically more than it did just five years ago.

Estimated Average Grocery Cost Per Home-Cooked Meal

Household

2021

2026

Increase

Senior Living Alone

$4.75

$6.10

+28%

Couple

$10.20

$13.25

+30%

Family of Four

$18.40

$24.10

+31%

That seemingly modest increase becomes substantial over time.

Annual Grocery Meal Cost Comparison

Household

Five Years Ago

Today

Annual Difference

Senior (365 meals)

$1,734

$2,227

+$493

Couple (365 dinners)

$3,723

$4,836

+$1,113

Family of Four (365 dinners)

$6,716

$8,797

+$2,081

These estimates reflect dinner meal preparation only. Once breakfast, lunch, snacks, beverages, and household essentials are included, many American families are spending several thousand dollars more per year than they did just five years ago.


Consumers Are Changing Behavior Faster Than Prices

Consumers don't simply absorb higher prices.

They adapt.

Circana research consistently shows consumers actively trading across retail channels to maximize value. Households are purchasing fewer impulse items, increasing private-label purchases, shopping multiple retailers each week, and planning meals around promotions rather than preferences.

At the same time, FMI research indicates that grocery shopping has become increasingly strategic. Consumers are entering stores with digital shopping lists, clipping digital coupons, participating in loyalty programs, and comparing prices across retailers before making purchases.

For many households, meal planning now begins with price—not appetite.


The Rise of the Grocerant Economy

Ironically, rising grocery costs are helping fuel one of the fastest-growing segments in food retail—the Grocerant.

Prepared foods, ready-to-eat meals, meal kits, rotisserie chicken, deli entrees, sushi, grab-and-go salads, fresh pizza, heat-and-eat family meals, and restaurant-quality offerings inside supermarkets continue gaining consumer acceptance because they solve three problems simultaneously:

  • Time
  • Labor
  • Food waste

When consumers compare the total cost of purchasing ten separate ingredients versus buying a complete prepared meal, the value proposition has changed dramatically.

A supermarket rotisserie chicken paired with prepared side dishes can often feed two adults for less than purchasing the raw ingredients individually.

That equation simply didn't exist ten years ago.

Today's consumer evaluates total value—not just shelf price.

Convenience has become an economic benefit.

Weather Is Becoming a Food Cost Variable

The grocery industry has always depended on predictable growing seasons.

Those seasons are becoming less predictable.

NOAA and the World Meteorological Organization have warned that strong El Niño conditions increase the likelihood of drought, flooding, excessive heat, and crop disruptions around the world. Those weather events ripple through global food supply chains, affecting everything from dairy feed and beef production to coffee, cocoa, fruits, vegetables, grains, and seafood.

Unlike temporary supply chain disruptions, weather-driven inflation can persist across multiple growing seasons.

That means retailers may face continued cost pressure well beyond today's headlines.


Value Is Being Redefined

Consumers no longer define value as simply paying less.

Today's value equation includes:

  • Price
  • Quality
  • Time savings
  • Convenience
  • Reduced food waste
  • Meal flexibility
  • Portion control

That's precisely why prepared foods continue outperforming many traditional grocery categories.

The consumer isn't abandoning cooking.

They're selectively outsourcing portions of meal preparation.

Retailers that recognize this shift—and merchandise accordingly—will be positioned to capture larger food dollars even as household budgets remain under pressure.

The future of grocery retail isn't about selling more ingredients.

It's about selling complete meal solutions that reduce effort while delivering predictable value.

The dinner plate has become one of America's most important economic indicators.


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Meal Solutions Will Continue Outpacing Ingredients
Consumers increasingly calculate the total cost of time, preparation, cleanup, and food waste—not just the price on the shelf. Retailers that deliver complete Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat meal solutions will continue to gain share as shoppers seek convenience without sacrificing value.

2. Private Label and Fresh Prepared Foods Will Win Together
The strongest retailers won't force consumers to choose between savings and convenience. They will expand premium private-label ingredients alongside chef-inspired prepared foods, allowing shoppers to mix, match, and customize affordable meals that fit changing budgets.

3. The New Competitive Battleground Is "Cost Per Meal"
Winning retailers, restaurants, convenience stores, and club stores will increasingly market the total cost to feed one, two, or four people—not just individual item prices. Consumers are thinking in meals, not products, and those who communicate clear meal value will earn greater loyalty as grocery inflation and weather-related supply disruptions continue to reshape food purchasing through 2028.

Are you trapped doing what you have always done and doing it the same way?  Interested in learning how www.FoodserviceSolutions.us can edify your retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participationdifferentiation and individualization?  Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit:  www.FoodserviceSolutions.us for more information.