When
I stood on stage at the Convenience Store News
Exchange in Denver last May, I told
this audience something that felt provocative to some and obvious to
others: the future of food is not about channels — it is about occasions.
Grubhub’s 2025 Delivered Report now validates that assertion with hard data and
real consumer behavior.
Let
me be clear: 2025 was not simply a good year for c-store foodservice. It was
the year convenience stores crossed the psychological threshold from “emergency
food” to intentional meal destination. That shift did not happen by
accident. It happened because the industry leaned directly into what I have
defined for years as the Grocerant niche — fresh food, prepared on
demand or ready-to-eat, optimized for speed, value, and relevance.
Protein, Heat, and Handhelds Win the Occasion
Grubhub’s
data shows that consumers moved decisively away from passive snack items and
toward hot, protein-forward, grab-and-go foods — taquitos, chicken
rollers, and hot dogs leading the charge. That mirrors exactly what I
highlighted in Denver: consumers are no longer “snacking up,” they are mealing
down — replacing traditional QSR visits with faster, closer, more
controllable solutions.
In
2024, bananas and sodas still ranked among top c-store delivery items. By 2025,
the consumer sent a clear signal: bring me heat, bring me protein, bring me
immediacy. Convenience, as Grubhub accurately stated, “got strategic.” What
that really means is that c-stores stopped imitating restaurants and instead outperformed
them on friction, speed, and price-value perception.
At
CSN Exchange, I cited the rise of handheld protein platforms as the most
scalable foodservice opportunity in the channel — rollers, wraps, breakfast
sandwiches, tacos, and global street-food formats that travel well, eat
cleanly, and satisfy quickly. Grubhub’s order data confirms that thesis at
scale.
Made-to-Order Is No Longer Optional
The
statistic that should stop every operator in their tracks: 85% of consumers
have tried made-to-order food from a convenience store. That is not trial;
that is adoption.
Retailers
that understood this earlier — Casey’s, 7-Eleven, Weigel’s — did not treat
foodservice as an add-on. They treated it as infrastructure. I referenced this
exact evolution in Denver when discussing commissary-enabled consistency,
noting that Weigel’s investment in a centralized commissary was not a cost
center but a growth engine. Casey’s continued strength in prepared food and
dispensed beverages further proves that when execution improves, velocity
follows.
7-Eleven’s
commitment to a food-forward design in its 1,300 new U.S. stores underscores
what I said on stage: the box must now be designed around food, not fuel.
Fuel brings traffic. Food builds loyalty.
Foodmaxxing: Function Meets Flavor Meets Shareability
Grubhub’s
concept of “foodmaxxing” aligns directly with what I described in Denver as functional
indulgence — food that satisfies hunger, supports wellness goals, and looks
good enough to share socially.
The
surge in gut-healthy bean salads, a 135% increase in grocery bean orders, and
the proliferation of protein-labeled items in unexpected categories all point
to a consumer who is no longer choosing between health and convenience. They
expect both. Protein cookies, popcorn, cinnamon rolls — these are not fads;
they are signals of permission. Consumers are telling retailers: solve
more needs in one stop.
Beverage
behavior reinforces this shift. Cold foam growth of 75%, matcha up 34%, and
tens of thousands of electrolyte drinks delivered monthly all speak to liquid
functionality — beverages as tools, not treats. This is exactly why I told
the Denver audience that beverage programs must evolve from fountain-centric to
purpose-driven platforms.
2026 Insight: Fresh Food Fast Is the Only Path Forward
Looking
ahead to 2026, the path is clear. The winners will not be the stores with the
biggest menus, but the ones with the clearest food identity.
Three
forward-looking realities every operator should internalize:
1. Fresh
Food Fast Will Define Competitive Advantage
Speed alone is no longer enough. Freshness must be visible, credible, and
consistent. Consumers now equate freshness with trust — and trust with repeat
visits.
2. Protein
Will Remain the Anchor, Not the Accent
Whether animal-based or plant-forward, protein is the currency of modern meals.
The most successful c-stores will build modular platforms that allow protein to
flex across dayparts and cuisines.
3. Delivery
Data Will Shape Store Design
Platforms like Grubhub are not just distribution channels; they are insight
engines. The data clearly shows which items travel, which satisfy, and which
convert. Smart operators will design menus — and kitchens — backward from that
reality.
The
takeaway is simple but profound: convenience stores did not steal share from
restaurants by becoming better restaurants. They won by becoming better
grocerants — places where fresh food, prepared food, and immediate
consumption converge.
2025
was the proof year.
2026 will be the execution year.
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 participation, differentiation
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


























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