Sunday, May 31, 2026

Ready-2-Eat Is Reshaping America’s Dinner Table

 


Why Fresh Prepared Foods Are Winning the Battle for Consumer Time

Cooking from scratch increasingly feels like something you read about in history books rather than experience every night at home. According to the Steven Johnson, consumers still crave comfort foods, family meals, and restaurant-quality flavors—but they no longer want the prep work, cleanup, or time commitment that comes with traditional cooking.

That shift has transformed the food industry. Today’s consumers are not simply shopping for groceries; they are shopping for solutions.

The result? America has entered the golden age of Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh foods.

Millennials may have accelerated the trend, but Gen X, Baby Boomers, and Gen Z are all embracing meals that are convenient, customizable, portable, and fast. In many households, dinner now comes from a grocery deli, convenience store kitchen, restaurant drive-thru, meal kit, or app-based delivery platform rather than from scratch cooking.

Consumers are no longer asking:
“What should I cook tonight?”

They’re asking:
“What’s the easiest great meal I can get right now?”


The Consumer Shift Is Bigger Than Most People Realize

The numbers tell the story:

·       More than 60% of restaurant traffic now happens off-premise through takeout, drive-thru, curbside pickup, or delivery.

·       Nearly 70% of adults regularly browse restaurant menus online before deciding what to eat.

·       Grocery prepared foods continue gaining share as consumers replace traditional center-store grocery shopping with fresh meal solutions.

·       Hybrid eating has become mainstream, with families combining restaurant items, grocery deli foods, frozen meal components, and convenience-store snacks into one customized meal occasion.

The old boundaries between grocery stores, restaurants, and convenience stores have collapsed. Consumers no longer care who makes the food—as long as it tastes good, saves time, and feels fresh.

That is the essence of the Grocerant phenomenon.


The Companies Winning the Ready-2-Eat Revolution

Some of the most successful food retailers in America are thriving because they understand one thing:

Consumers value convenience almost as much as taste.

Costco

Costco’s famous $4.99 rotisserie chicken may be one of the greatest Ready-2-Eat products ever created. It drives traffic, builds loyalty, and fuels companion purchases from salads to mashed potatoes to desserts. Consumers often enter Costco for groceries and leave with dinner solved.

Wawa

Wawa transformed the convenience store category by focusing on freshly prepared hoagies, breakfast sandwiches, soups, bowls, and beverages. Many consumers now view Wawa as a restaurant first and gas station second.

Whole Foods Market

Whole Foods helped normalize premium Heat-N-Eat meals, chef-inspired deli items, hot bars, and globally inspired prepared foods. Consumers increasingly use Whole Foods as a weeknight dinner destination rather than a traditional grocery trip.

 

7-Eleven

Once known primarily for packaged snacks, 7-Eleven now aggressively competes with restaurants through pizza, chicken wings, fresh sandwiches, rice bowls, taquitos, and grab-and-go meal solutions.

Trader Joe's

Trader Joe’s mastered the “assembly meal” strategy. Consumers mix frozen entrĂ©es, prepared proteins, sauces, salads, and side dishes into quick customized meals that feel homemade without requiring actual cooking expertise.

DoorDash and Uber Eats

Delivery platforms fundamentally changed consumer expectations. Today’s consumers expect restaurant-quality meals delivered to their door almost instantly. That expectation now influences grocery stores, c-stores, and even warehouse clubs.

 


Why Consumers Prefer Heat-N-Eat Foods

The Ready-2-Eat trend is not just about laziness. It reflects deeper changes in modern life:

Time Scarcity

Families are balancing work, school, commuting, side hustles, streaming entertainment, and digital overload. Time has become the most valuable currency.

Cooking Skills Gap

Many younger consumers were never taught traditional cooking skills. Heating, assembling, and customizing meals feels easier and less intimidating than cooking from scratch.

Reduced Cleanup

Consumers increasingly dislike meal cleanup more than cooking itself. Heat-N-Eat meals eliminate much of the mess.

Customization

Modern consumers want personalized meals. Ready-made meal components allow one family member to eat low-carb, another vegetarian, and another high-protein—all from the same purchase.

Restaurant Expectations Everywhere

Consumers now expect restaurant-quality flavor in grocery stores, convenience stores, airports, hospitals, and stadiums.


Grocerants Are Everywhere

The term “Grocerant” describes the blending of grocery stores and restaurants into one seamless food experience.

Today:

·       Grocery stores operate restaurant-quality kitchens.

·       Convenience stores sell premium fresh meals.

·       Restaurants sell family meal bundles.

·       Meal kits mimic restaurant preparation.

·       Retailers use AI and loyalty apps to personalize meal suggestions.

·       Consumers build meals from multiple locations in a single day.

The future of food is not one channel defeating another.

The future is channel blurring.

Consumers simply follow convenience, quality, value, and speed.

Retailers that still operate like it is 1990 are already losing traffic.

Three Things Most People Don’t Know About the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Steven Johnson coined and popularized the term “Grocerant,” helping define one of the biggest shifts in modern food retailing long before most companies recognized it.

2.       The Grocerant Guru® identified “meal component marketing” years before retailers fully embraced customizable Heat-N-Eat family meal solutions.

3.       Many convenience store food strategies now driving growth—including fresh grab-and-go meals, bundled meal deals, and restaurant-quality prepared foods—mirror trends the Grocerant Guru® publicly forecast years earlier.

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.

Stay Ahead of the Competition with Fresh Ideas

Is your food marketing keeping up with tomorrow’s trends—or stuck in yesterday’s playbook? If you're ready for fresh ideations that set your brand apart, we’re here to help.

At Foodservice Solutions®, we specialize in consumer-driven retail food strategies that enhance convenience, differentiation, and individualization—key factors in driving growth.

Email us at Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Connect with us on social media: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter



Saturday, May 30, 2026

Grocerants 2026: Why the Battle for America’s Meal Dollar Has Moved Beyond Restaurants

 


At the intersection of the consumer, fresh prepared food, convenience, and technology, the American food industry is undergoing a structural transformation that legacy restaurant operators can no longer ignore. That intersection is called the “Grocerant” niche — a marketplace filled with Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh food solutions that now compete directly with traditional restaurants for every meal occasion.

According to Steven Johnson, millennials and Gen Z consumers are no longer defining foodservice by restaurant walls, but by accessibility, portability, speed, perceived value, and digital convenience. Today’s consumers are not asking, “Where should we dine?” They are asking, “What is the fastest, freshest, easiest meal solution available right now?”

That shift is redefining the retail food ecosystem in 2025 and 2026.


The Consumer Has Changed Faster Than Legacy Foodservice

Consumers are living increasingly fragmented lives. Hybrid work schedules, rising childcare costs, longer commute times, youth sports, gaming culture, streaming entertainment, and economic uncertainty have fundamentally altered eating behavior. Consumers still eat multiple times per day, but traditional meal structures continue to erode.

According to the National Restaurant Association, off-premise dining now represents a majority of restaurant traffic for many brands, while convenience continues to outperform formal dining growth. At the same time, data from Circana shows consumers increasingly replacing traditional restaurant visits with prepared foods purchased from grocery stores, club stores, convenience stores, and mass retailers.

The restaurant industry once controlled meal occasions through location dominance and menu familiarity. That advantage is disappearing.

Today, consumers can purchase:

·       Fresh sushi at grocery stores

·       Restaurant-quality pizza from convenience stores

·       Protein bowls from supermarkets

·       Barista-quality coffee from kiosks

·       Heat-and-eat family meals from warehouse clubs

·       Chef-inspired grab-and-go meals from drug stores

The consumer no longer distinguishes between “restaurant food” and “retail food.” They simply evaluate convenience, quality, speed, and value.



Convenience Stores Have Become Foodservice Powerhouses

The biggest disruption in foodservice may not be coming from restaurants at all.

It is coming from convenience stores.

According to NACS, prepared food and dispensed beverages remain among the highest-margin categories in the c-store industry in 2025. Major convenience retailers are investing aggressively in:

·       Fresh commissary systems

·       Premium coffee programs

·       Made-to-order kitchens

·       Digital loyalty ecosystems

·       Delivery partnerships

·       AI-driven personalization

Chains such as Wawa, Sheetz, QuikTrip, 7-Eleven, and Casey's are no longer competing with gas stations. They are competing directly with quick-service restaurants.

Consumers increasingly trust c-stores for breakfast sandwiches, pizza, chicken, snacks, bakery items, specialty beverages, and late-night meals.

The convenience store sector understands something many legacy restaurant brands still resist:
Consumers buy meal solutions, not retail channels.



Grocery Stores Are Winning More Meal Occasions

Prepared foods departments inside grocery stores continue evolving into full-scale foodservice operations.

Retailers including Whole Foods Market, Trader Joe's, Safeway, Wegmans, and Kroger have expanded:

·       Fresh prepared meal kits

·       Grab-and-go entrees

·       Global flavors

·       Ready-to-heat family meals

·       Fresh bakery programs

·       Restaurant-quality desserts

·       Premium beverage offerings

The grocery service deli has evolved into one of the most important battlegrounds in foodservice.

Consumers now routinely replace restaurant visits with:

·       Rotisserie chicken meals

·       Prepared pasta bowls

·       Sushi trays

·       Fresh salads

·       Take-home pizza

·       Chef-curated heat-and-eat meals

In many cases, grocery retailers deliver higher perceived value at lower prices than restaurants burdened by rising labor and occupancy costs.



Digital Technology Has Destroyed Traditional Food Boundaries

Technology has accelerated channel blurring across every retail food segment.

Delivery apps, loyalty ecosystems, mobile ordering, AI-driven recommendations, frictionless checkout, and predictive personalization have fundamentally changed how consumers discover and purchase food.

Companies such as DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Instacart have conditioned consumers to expect immediate access to food from virtually anywhere.

The modern consumer no longer thinks in traditional categories:

·       Restaurant

·       Grocery

·       Convenience store

·       Drug store

·       Club store

Those distinctions largely exist only inside corporate organizational charts.

Consumers simply want:

·       Convenience

·       Speed

·       Freshness

·       Craveability

·       Consistent quality

·       Value

·       Frictionless access

That reality has permanently altered competitive dynamics.



Legacy Restaurant Brands Face a Relevance Crisis

Many restaurant brands still operate with a 1990s mindset in a 2026 marketplace.

Too many continue protecting outdated definitions of:

·       Dayparts

·       Dining occasions

·       Menu structures

·       Portion expectations

·       Distribution models

Meanwhile, competitors continue capturing incremental food occasions through:

·       Smaller formats

·       Ghost kitchens

·       Smart lockers

·       Meal subscriptions

·       AI personalization

·       Dynamic pricing

·       Retail partnerships

·       Grab-and-go merchandising

Brand protectionism has become a liability.

Consumers are dynamic, not static. Brands must evolve with consumers or risk declining relevance.

The most successful foodservice operators today understand that growth no longer depends exclusively on what happens inside four walls. It depends on owning more eating occasions wherever the consumer happens to be.



The Future Belongs to Flexible Food Brands

The future of foodservice belongs to brands that:

·       Meet consumers where they are

·       Sell across multiple channels

·       Simplify meal decisions

·       Integrate technology seamlessly

·       Deliver perceived value consistently

·       Adapt quickly to changing lifestyles

Consumers are no longer loyal to channels. They are loyal to convenience ecosystems that make life easier.

The Grocerant niche is not a trend. It is the continued evolution of modern food consumption behavior.

And the brands that recognize that fastest will win the next decade of foodservice growth.

Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Consumers no longer care where food comes from — only whether it solves an immediate need.
The battle is no longer restaurant versus grocery versus convenience store. The battle is who owns the next eating occasion.

2.       Prepared fresh food has become the new traffic driver across retail.
In 2026, foodservice is increasingly becoming the primary growth engine inside grocery stores, convenience stores, and non-traditional retail formats.

3.       The most dangerous phrase in food retail is “that’s not our business.”
Every retailer selling fresh prepared food is now competing for restaurant market share — whether restaurants acknowledge it or not.

Stay Ahead of the Competition with Fresh Ideas

Is your food marketing keeping up with tomorrow’s trends—or stuck in yesterday’s playbook? If you're ready for fresh ideations that set your brand apart, we’re here to help.

At Foodservice Solutions®, we specialize in consumer-driven retail food strategies that enhance convenience, differentiation, and individualization—key factors in driving growth.

Email us at Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Connect with us on social media: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter