The
grocerant era—where restaurant-quality meals are sold everywhere food is
sold—is no longer emerging. It is here, reshaping traffic patterns,
loyalty loops, and consumer occasions in real time according to Steven Johnson,
Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®
.
In 2025, U.S. consumers purchase 34% of prepared meals outside traditional
restaurants, according to Foodservice Solutions® proprietary research.
Retailers know it. C-stores know it. And now… major restaurant chains know it
too.
This
holiday season proves one unmistakable truth: chain restaurants are
aggressively repositioning themselves as grocerant brands—blending restaurant
flavor with retail convenience. Whether through scaled catering, premium
seasonal meal kits, or CPG-style brand extensions, the message is the same:
“If
consumers won’t come to the restaurant as often, the restaurant must go to the
consumer—anywhere, anytime.”
Below,
we highlight three quantifiable 2025 examples demonstrating how chains
are staking real ground in the grocerant landscape.
1. Catering Becomes a Grocerant Power Play
Walk-On’s, Lazy Dog & Biscuitville show how restaurants
can out-retail retailers.
Holiday
catering is no longer a side business—it is the fastest-growing grocerant
category, up 18.4% YOY in revenue across U.S. chains (Foodservice
Solutions® 2025 Catering Index).
Walk-On’s Sports Bistreaux
·
New Louisiana-themed catering: Devils
on Horseback, Bayou Pasta, Voodoo Shrimp & Grits
·
Adds boxed lunches—an essential for
the corporate grocerant occasion
·
Grocerant impact: Walk-On’s
catering is projected to exceed 12% of total 2025 revenue, up from 7.5% in
2022
Walk-On’s
demonstrates what every grocerant operator has learned: protein-centric,
culturally distinctive menus outperform generic holiday trays by more than 22%.
Lazy Dog
Lazy
Dog leans into preset lunch/dinner menus, mirroring retail meal bundles.
·
Signature entrees & seasonal LTOs
·
DIY Gingerbread House Kits sold
in-store and online
·
100% of proceeds to Habitat for
Humanity (purpose-driven selling)
Lazy
Dog’s gingerbread kit is a grocerant masterstroke: retail-priced, low-labor,
high-margin, kid-friendly, and shoppable online.
Biscuitville
Biscuitville
goes full sensory-branding with:
·
Party-sized build-your-own biscuits
·
Scratch-made sausage balls (a
high-frequency Southern party item)
Biscuitville’s
catering SKU count has grown 42% since 2021, and breakfast catering
overall has grown 23.7% YOY, making it one of the most profitable
dayparts in the grocerant ecosystem.
Why
it matters:
Catering turns restaurant brands into occasion-based retailers,
inserting themselves into office events, holiday gatherings, school functions,
and in-home celebrations traditionally dominated by grocery-store delis.
2. Retail Crossovers & CPG Extensions Hit Hyperdrive
Panda Express, Starbucks, Moe’s & Dunkin’ embrace
grocerant channel blurring.
If
2022–2024 were the years of menu expansion, 2025 is the year of brand
expansion. Restaurants are launching retail-ready specialty products,
a category projected to reach $38.7B in sales in 2025, up from $27B in
2020.
Panda Express × Compartés Chocolate Bars
This
luxury chocolate collaboration functions like a CPG-first strategy:
·
Four flavors inspired by menu icons
·
$11.95 each; $49.95 gift box
·
Sold online—far outside restaurant
dining occasions
Panda’s
chocolate line targets the $7B premium gifting segment, extending the
brand into grocery-adjacent retail without ever entering cold-chain
distribution.
Starbucks Seasonal Beverage Add-Ons
Cold
foam and customized toppings mimic the “add-on retail value stack” used by CPG
beverage companies.
·
Chestnut Praline cold foam
·
Protein cold foam
·
Eggnog Cream Cold Foam topping
Customization
SKUs at Starbucks now drive 18% of holiday beverage upsell revenue,
functioning like micro-CPG offerings layered onto the core menu.
Moe’s OG Menu at 2000s Prices
Moe’s
reintroduces nostalgia-driven value meals at $5.99, directly competing
with both:
·
Grocery meal kits (now averaging $6.22
per serving), and
·
C-store hot-case burritos (average
$4.69 but smaller portions)
This
is a volume-driving grocerant strategy packaged like a retail
“rollback.”
Dunkin’ Limited-Edition Holiday Munchkins
Dunkin’
mimics seasonal retail candy SKUs with limited-time “Holiday Sprinkle”
Munchkins—priced and portioned for impulse retail buying, not
in-restaurant dining.
Why
it matters:
Restaurants are behaving like packaged goods companies. When restaurant brands
show up on desks, in kitchens, at office parties, and inside gift boxes, they
shift the battleground from “menu share” to retail share-of-stomach.
3. Premium Holiday LTOs Turn Restaurants into In-Home
Celebrations
STK, Momofuku, Burgerville & Another Broken Egg use
flavor-forward LTOs to compete with premium grocery delis.
The
grocerant market thrives on premium seasonal indulgence. Retailers like
Wegmans, Whole Foods, and Lunds & Byerlys have owned this space for two
decades—until now.
Restaurant
chains are countering with restaurant-quality premium LTOs priced for
at-home sharing:
STK Steakhouse
·
A5 Wagyu Potstickers
·
Colossal Lobster Tail
·
Holiday Martini & Toasted
Marshmallow Old Fashioned
STK
is essentially selling a luxury grocerant celebratory meal without the
grocery store.
Momofuku Noodle Bar – Truffle Ramen
With
six grams of shaved Burgundy truffle, Momofuku’s holiday ramen competes
directly with premium retailer kits priced $22–$26—except Momofuku offers the chef
halo grocery stores can’t replicate.
Burgerville Seasonal Menu
Cranberry
Brie Bacon Burgers, Candy Cane Shakes, and Stumptown Cold Brew innovations turn
Burgerville into a local premium grocerant brand, not just a restaurant.
Another Broken Egg & Ruby Slipper
Both
chains deliver upscale breakfast/brunch experiences through seasonal dishes
like:
·
Peppermint Mocha Waffles
·
White Chocolate Cranberry Stuffed
French Toast
Breakfast
is the new grocerant battleground, with 36% of all weekend breakfast
consumed off-premise.
Why
it matters:
Restaurant brands know consumers expect “holiday indulgence experiences” at
home—so they’re delivering high-margin LTOs designed to steal occasions from
grocery bakery, deli, and premium meal kits.
The Grocerant Guru®:
Four 2025 Takeaway Insights
1. If a restaurant can be eaten anywhere, it becomes a
retail brand.
Chains
that treat off-premise occasions as retail channels—not simply
delivery—will win the next decade.
2. Catering is the grocerant Trojan Horse.
Once
a chain feeds an office or party, brand familiarity skyrockets and
customer migration follows. Catering is the new trial channel.
3. Seasonal LTOs now define brand relevance.
Holiday
menus are no longer “special”; they are core revenue drivers. Expect
chains to offer monthly retail-style seasonal SKUs by 2027.
4. Restaurants aren’t entering the grocerant space—they are
becoming grocerant companies.
The
line between store, restaurant, and brand continues to blur. The winners will
be those who sell meals everywhere consumers want to eat them—not only
inside their four walls.
Gain a Competitive Edge with a Grocerant ScoreCard
Unlock
new opportunities with a Grocerant ScoreCard, designed to optimize product
positioning, placement, and consumer engagement.
Since
1991, Foodservice Solutions® has been the global leader in the
Grocerant niche—helping brands identify high-growth strategies that
resonate with modern consumers.
📞
Call 253-759-7869 or 📩
Email Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us















