Why
Mix-and-Match Components Are Defining the Next Era of Foodservice Growth
According to Steven Johnson Grocerant
Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions®
Alice
May Brock once famously said, “Tomatoes and oregano make it Italian, wine
and tarragon make it French, sour cream makes it Russian, lemon and cinnamon
make it Greek, soy sauce makes it Chinese, garlic makes it good.”
That
insight, offered decades ago, perfectly frames today’s most powerful
foodservice growth strategy: modular meal components that empower the
consumer.
In
2025, success in food retail is no longer about fixed menus or rigid dayparts.
It is about convenient meal participation, differentiation, and
individualization—the same three pillars that have defined the Ready-2-Eat
and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared food space, also known as the Grocerant Niche,
for more than a decade.
What
has changed is not the consumer’s desire for convenience—it is their expectation
of control.
The New American Meal Is Not a Recipe—It’s a Platform
The
modern American meal is no longer anchored to a single cuisine, a single brand,
or even a single retailer. It is a composite—assembled from mix-and-match
components sourced across grocery stores, convenience stores, restaurants,
drugstores, and digital marketplaces.
A
protein from one place.
A sauce from another.
A side that reheats in three minutes.
Consumers
now expect to curate meals the way they curate playlists.
This
is not cultural dilution; it is cultural acceleration.
The
United States has always been a melting pot of people, traditions, and flavors.
Today, the meal itself mirrors that diversity. Italian meets Korean. Tex-Mex
meets Mediterranean. Comfort food meets global spice—often on the same plate.
Retailers
that design interoperable meal components—items that travel well, reheat
cleanly, and pair flexibly—are no longer just selling food. They are selling optionality.
Food Is Everywhere—So Where Will It Be Eaten?
Fresh
prepared, portable, Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat foods are now ubiquitous.
Consumers can find them in:
·
Grocery stores
·
Convenience stores
·
Drugstores
·
Restaurants
·
Ghost kitchens
·
Food trucks
·
Subscription and delivery platforms
The
critical strategic question for menu development is no longer “What do we
serve?” but rather:
“Where
will this food be consumed—and under what constraints?”
At
a desk.
In a car.
Between meetings.
At home, but not cooked.
Food
that succeeds today is designed backward from the moment of consumption,
not forward from the kitchen.
The Consumer Is Evolving Faster Than the Food Industry
Consumers
have been exposed to more flavors than any generation in history—through
travel, media, social platforms, and multicultural communities. Yet they have less
time and less interest in mastering complex cooking skills.
The
Grocerant Niche fills that gap.
It
empowers consumers to:
·
Eat better without cooking from
scratch
·
Explore global flavors without
culinary risk
·
Establish new eating rituals that fit
modern life
This
is not about replacing restaurants or grocery stores. It is about blurring
the line between them.
Three Consumer Forces Still Driving Growth—Now with More
Impact
1. Aging Consumers Are Buying Time, Not Ingredients
Adults
65+ continue to grow as a share of the population, but the key insight is
behavioral, not demographic:
This group is increasingly done with cooking—but not with eating well.
They
value:
·
Familiar flavors
·
Trusted brands
·
Portion control
·
Simplicity
Ready-2-Eat
and Heat-N-Eat meals from non-traditional locations—grocery, drug, and hybrid
retailers—fit seamlessly into their routines. Brand equity and reliability
matter, and this cohort has both the willingness and the ability to spend.
2. Multicultural Consumers Are Redefining “Mainstream”
Flavor
Latino,
Asian, and multicultural consumers are no longer niche influencers—they are core
drivers of flavor normalization.
What
was once “ethnic” is now everyday.
What was once “adventurous” is now expected.
At
the same time, many consumers:
·
Grew up with traditional meals
·
Lack the desire or time to cook them
today
·
Seek authenticity without complexity
This
creates enormous opportunity for componentized global flavors—sauces,
proteins, grains, and sides that can be recombined at home.
3. Women Continue to Set the Food Agenda
Women
remain the dominant force shaping food purchasing, flavor acceptance, and
household food strategy.
With
greater workforce participation, purchasing power, and decision authority,
women are driving demand for:
·
Efficiency without compromise
·
Health without sacrifice
·
Value defined by time saved, not price
alone
Retailers
that ignore this reality fall behind—quickly.
Retail Must Now Move at the Speed of the Consumer
Every
food retailer looking “a customer ahead” must recognize a hard truth:
The
consumer is evolving faster than the restaurant sector, the grocery sector, and
the convenience sector.
Maintaining—or
gaining—market share now requires evolving as fast or faster than the
customer, especially in:
·
Flavor flexibility
·
Portion logic
·
Price–value–service equilibrium
·
Cross-channel usability
Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®
1. Menus
Will Be Replaced by Modular Systems
The future is not a bigger menu—it is a smarter architecture. Winning brands
will design food components that can live across dayparts, channels, and
consumption occasions with minimal friction.
2. Convenience
Will Be Measured in Cognitive Load
Speed alone is no longer enough. The next competitive advantage is reducing
decision fatigue—making it easy for consumers to assemble a meal that “just
works.”
3. Flavor
Is the New Loyalty Program
Points and discounts matter less than consistent, craveable flavor that fits
into real life. If your food integrates seamlessly into the consumer’s routine,
you earn repeat business without incentives.
4. The
Grocerant Is No Longer a Niche—It Is the Operating System
Retailers still treating Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat as an add-on will lose
relevance. Those who treat it as the core growth engine will define the next
decade of food retail.
Foodservice
Solutions® specializes in outsourced business development, leveraging outside
eyes for inside profits. We help identify, quantify, and qualify emerging food
retail opportunities, menu strategies, and Grocerant integration models
designed for today’s rapidly evolving consumer.
Steve
Johnson
Grocerant Guru®
Foodservice Solutions®
www.FoodserviceSolutions.us

















