Thursday, May 14, 2026

Alice May Brock and the New American Meal: The Flavor Legacy That Changed Food Forever

 



“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 quote from Alice May Brock remains one of the simplest and most profound explanations of flavor architecture in modern American food culture. It distilled global cuisine into approachable meal components long before “customization,” “meal kits,” “food personalization,” or “grocerant” became industry buzzwords.

Alice May Brock did more than popularize flavor combinations. She helped democratize food culture in America by showing consumers that meals did not need to be rigid, formal, or bound by one culinary tradition. Her words reflected the evolution of the American table into a melting pot of flavor, accessibility, and creativity.

Today, that same philosophy fuels billions of dollars in foodservice growth.

According to the National Restaurant Association, the U.S. restaurant and foodservice industry is projected to surpass $1.5 trillion in sales in 2026, driven heavily by convenience, off-premise consumption, portable meals, prepared foods, and consumer demand for customization. The fastest-growing sectors continue to include fresh prepared Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat offerings found across grocery stores, convenience stores, restaurants, club stores, and delivery platforms.


Alice May Brock understood something decades ago that retailers are monetizing today: flavor flexibility drives emotional connection.

Consumers no longer eat within strict culinary boundaries. One meal today may include Mediterranean hummus, Korean barbecue chicken, Mexican street corn, and Italian focaccia bread all on the same plate. That blending of culinary traditions mirrors the changing demographics and lifestyles of America itself.

The modern American meal has become modular.

Meal components now matter more than formal entrées.

Prepared proteins, sauces, side dishes, grains, vegetables, toppings, and flavor enhancers are increasingly sold individually because consumers want control over personalization. Brock’s quote captured the emotional side of that transition. She made flavor less intimidating and more participatory.

That emotional participation is critical in today’s food economy.

Consumers increasingly seek:

·       Familiar flavors with global twists

·       Convenient meal assembly

·       Restaurant-quality taste at home

·       Affordable indulgence

·       Flexible portions

·       Customization for individual family preferences

In many ways, Alice May Brock predicted the rise of the grocerant economy without ever using the word.

Today, retailers across every food sector are capitalizing on component-based eating.

Examples include:

·       Rotisserie chicken paired with globally inspired sauces

·       Ready-made pasta combined with Asian fusion proteins

·       Heat-N-Eat mashed potatoes mixed with Mediterranean toppings

·       Grab-and-go rice bowls customized with proteins and sauces

·       Taco bars assembled from prepared grocery meal kits

·       Fresh prepared deli items reassembled into personalized dinners

The emotional appeal comes from empowerment.

Consumers feel creative without needing culinary mastery.

That matters because Americans are increasingly time-starved. Research consistently shows consumers want better food experiences but spend less time cooking from scratch. The average household now mixes restaurant items, prepared foods, meal kits, frozen products, and fresh grocery components into hybrid meals assembled at home.



That shift has transformed retail foodservice.

Convenience stores now offer Korean chicken bowls and smoked brisket sandwiches. Grocery stores feature sushi stations, artisan pizza counters, and Mediterranean bars. Drug stores continue expanding refrigerated meal solutions. Restaurants increasingly design menu items that travel well for delivery and reheating.

Flavor has become portable.

Customization has become emotional.

Meal participation has become experiential.

Steven Johnson, Foodservice Solutions® founder and Grocerant Guru® based in Tacoma, stated:

“Convenient meal participation, differentiation and individualization; are each hallmarks of the Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared grocerant niche. That is the recipe for retail food success in 2018 and the new electricity driving foodservice sales.”

That statement has only become more accurate over time.

Consumers increasingly build meals around:

·       Speed

·       Flavor exploration

·       Affordability

·       Portability

·       Variety

·       Emotional comfort

Alice May Brock’s quote also revealed another truth: ingredients themselves tell cultural stories.

Tomatoes and oregano evoke Italian comfort food.
Wine and tarragon suggest French refinement.
Lemon and cinnamon communicate Greek brightness and warmth.
Soy sauce symbolizes Chinese depth and umami.
Garlic, as Brock humorously observed, simply makes food better.

Those ingredient shortcuts helped Americans emotionally connect with global cuisine during a time when many international flavors were still unfamiliar to mainstream consumers.

Today, those once-exotic ingredients are everyday staples.

Sriracha, chimichurri, gochujang, harissa, tahini, curry sauces, and miso now appear in grocery prepared foods, convenience stores, and quick-service restaurant menu innovation pipelines nationwide.

The evolution reflects a larger demographic and cultural truth: America’s food identity is multicultural.



Meal components allow consumers to personalize that identity daily.

One family member may prefer spicy Korean flavors while another chooses classic comfort food. Component-based meal solutions allow retailers to satisfy both simultaneously without increasing operational complexity dramatically.

That flexibility is financially powerful.

Prepared food margins often exceed traditional center-store grocery margins. Fresh prepared foods also drive trip frequency, impulse purchases, and customer loyalty. Retailers increasingly understand that the future of foodservice is not just selling meals — it is selling adaptable meal ecosystems.

That is where the Grocerant niche continues to thrive.

Fresh prepared and portable Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat foods can now be found at:

·       Grocery stores

·       Convenience stores

·       Restaurants

·       Club stores

·       Drug stores

·       Airport kiosks

·       Mobile food trucks

·       Delivery-only ghost kitchens

Consumers no longer ask:
“What should I cook?”

Instead, they increasingly ask:
“What components can I combine quickly into something satisfying?”

That behavioral shift represents one of the most important transformations in modern food retail.

Alice May Brock helped make that shift emotionally accessible.

Her words reduced culinary intimidation and elevated flavor curiosity. She helped Americans see food not as rigid doctrine but as creative assembly.



Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Flavor diversity drives repeat visits
Consumers increasingly return to retailers offering customizable meal components with global flavor options that can be mixed and matched easily.

2.       Meal components outperform rigid meal structures
Prepared proteins, sauces, sides, and toppings allow consumers to individualize meals while reducing preparation time and perceived cooking stress.

3.       Convenience without flavor compromise wins
Consumers expect restaurant-quality flavor in portable, affordable, Heat-N-Eat formats available across multiple retail channels.

4.       The future of foodservice is hybrid eating
The line separating grocery stores, restaurants, convenience stores, and delivery providers continues to blur as consumers build meals from multiple retail sources simultaneously.

Alice May Brock’s quote still resonates because it captured the emotional truth about food in America: flavor is identity, food is connection, and meals are increasingly personal expressions assembled from a world of possibilities.

For international corporate presentations, educational forums, or keynotes contact: Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions.  His extensive experience as a multi-unit restaurant operator, consultant, brand / product positioning expert and public speaking will leave success clues for all. For more information visit www.GrocerantGuru.com , www.FoodserviceSolutions.us or call    1-253-759-7869



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Restaurant Industry “Melting Pot” Advantage: Why Flavor Diversity and Workforce Diversity Continue to Drive Growth

 


America’s restaurant industry remains one of the most powerful examples of the nation’s cultural and economic “melting pot.” The sector’s long-term strength is directly tied to two core assets: flavor diversity and workforce diversity. Together, they have fueled restaurant innovation, menu expansion, customer engagement, and long-term industry growth for more than 100 years according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

According to the National Restaurant Association 2026 State of the Restaurant Industry report, total U.S. restaurant and foodservice sales are projected to reach $1.55 trillion in 2026, with industry employment expected to rise to 15.8 million workers.

That scale is not accidental.


The restaurant sector succeeds because it continuously absorbs new waves of cultural influence, immigrant entrepreneurship, regional flavor systems, and evolving consumer preferences. From Italian pizza to Korean fried chicken, from Jewish delicatessens to Mediterranean bowls, America’s restaurant industry has consistently transformed global flavors into mainstream consumer demand.

The “melting pot” is not just a social concept inside the restaurant industry. It is the engine of menu innovation.



The First Great Flavor Wave: Italian, Jewish, and European Immigration

Between 1880 and 1940, millions of immigrants arrived from Southern and Eastern Europe. They brought culinary traditions that would permanently reshape American dining habits.

Italian immigrants introduced:

·       Pizza

·       Pasta dishes

·       Meatballs

·       Lasagna

·       Espresso culture

·       Garlic-forward sauces

Jewish immigrants helped popularize:

·       Bagels

·       Delicatessen sandwiches

·       Smoked meats

·       Pickled products

·       Bakery traditions

At the time, many Americans viewed these foods as “ethnic” or unfamiliar. Over time, they became foundational to mainstream American dining.

Pizza may be the single greatest example of the restaurant industry’s “melting pot” success story. What began as immigrant street food evolved into one of the most consumed restaurant menu items in America.

The lesson remains relevant today: authentic flavors often become mainstream category leaders.



The Second Flavor Wave: Chinese and Mexican Cuisine Expansion

Following World War II, suburban growth and interstate travel accelerated the national expansion of Chinese and Mexican restaurants.

Chinese-American restaurants introduced millions of consumers to:

·       Egg rolls

·       Chow mein

·       Fried rice

·       Sweet and sour chicken

·       Orange chicken

Mexican cuisine expanded nationally through:

·       Tacos

·       Burritos

·       Tamales

·       Enchiladas

·       Salsa

·       Nachos

During this era, restaurant operators learned how to balance authenticity with accessibility. Consumers wanted cultural exploration, but they also wanted flavor familiarity.

This period helped establish the modern quick-service and casual-dining flavor strategy still used today:

·       Familiar formats

·       Bold flavors

·       Easy portability

·       Shareable meals

·       Affordable pricing

Restaurants became one of America’s most successful cultural translation vehicles.



The Third Flavor Wave: Global Fusion and Culinary Exploration

From the 1990s through the mid-2010s, Millennials accelerated the demand for broader flavor diversity.

This wave introduced:

·       Sushi

·       Thai curries

·       Pho

·       Ramen

·       Mediterranean bowls

·       Korean barbecue

·       Poke

·       Shawarma

·       Falafel

·       Cuban sandwiches

Food television, celebrity chefs, social media, and international travel dramatically expanded consumer flavor awareness.

Consumers increasingly viewed restaurants as affordable adventure.

Menu terminology itself evolved:

·       Harissa

·       Gochujang

·       Chimichurri

·       Sriracha

·       Tahini

·       Yuzu

·       Birria

·       Miso

What was once considered niche became mainstream.

Restaurants that embraced multicultural flavor systems gained a significant competitive advantage over operators relying on repetitive legacy menus.



The Fourth Flavor Wave: Gen Z and “Borderless Eating”

Today’s younger consumers are driving what many food marketers call “borderless eating.”

Unlike prior generations that adopted cuisines one category at a time, Gen Z consumers comfortably mix flavors from multiple cultures in a single meal occasion.

Examples include:

·       Korean tacos

·       Nashville hot chicken with Asian sauces

·       Birria ramen

·       Ube desserts

·       Mediterranean-Mexican mashups

·       Hot honey pizza

·       Cajun seafood boils with Asian spice profiles

Social media dramatically accelerated flavor discovery cycles. A regional dish can now become a national restaurant trend within months rather than years.

Consumers increasingly seek:

·       Bold flavors

·       Heat

·       Texture

·       Regional authenticity

·       Cultural storytelling

·       Visual appeal

That trend directly benefits restaurant operators willing to embrace flavor diversity.



Four Examples of the Restaurant Industry’s “Melting Pot” Success

1. Korean Flavor Profiles Enter Mainstream Menus

Gochujang sauces, Korean fried chicken, kimchi slaw, bulgogi beef, and spicy Korean barbecue flavors are now appearing across fast casual, QSR, and casual dining menus.

Consumers associate Korean flavors with boldness, spice, authenticity, and trend-forward eating.

2. Mediterranean Cuisine Becomes a Lifestyle Category

Mediterranean food evolved far beyond traditional Greek restaurants.

Menu growth now includes:

·       Falafel wraps

·       Chicken shawarma bowls

·       Hummus flights

·       Harissa chicken

·       Tahini sauces

·       Lentil grain bowls

Consumers increasingly associate Mediterranean flavors with freshness, health, and customization.



3. Mexican Cuisine Evolves into Regional Specialization

Consumers now distinguish between:

·       Tex-Mex

·       Baja cuisine

·       Oaxaca-style mole

·       Street tacos

·       Birria

·       Carne asada traditions

That growing sophistication reflects increasing consumer appreciation for authentic regional flavor identity.



4. Filipino Cuisine Gains Momentum

Filipino-inspired foods such as:

·       Ube desserts

·       Adobo chicken

·       Lumpia

·       Pancit noodles

·       Tocino

·       Halo-halo

are becoming increasingly visible in bakery, fast casual, and social-media-driven restaurant concepts.

Like previous immigrant flavor waves, Filipino cuisine is now entering broader American restaurant culture.



Workforce Diversity Fuels Restaurant Innovation

The restaurant industry’s workforce diversity remains one of its greatest competitive strengths.

Restaurant kitchens have historically functioned as multicultural collaboration centers where chefs, cooks, operators, and entrepreneurs exchange techniques, recipes, ingredients, and preparation methods daily.

According to the National Restaurant Association, the restaurant industry employs one of the most diverse workforces in the United States, while approximately 41% of restaurant businesses are minority owned.

That workforce diversity helps restaurants:

·       Develop authentic menu items

·       Identify emerging flavor trends

·       Improve cultural credibility

·       Strengthen community engagement

·       Adapt faster to demographic shifts

In many cases, immigrant restaurant entrepreneurs become the first entry point for entirely new flavor categories in America.

That pattern has repeated itself for more than a century.



Authenticity Has Become a Competitive Advantage

Consumers no longer simply want “international flavors.” They increasingly demand authenticity.

That includes:

·       Traditional preparation methods

·       Cultural storytelling

·       Regional ingredients

·       Authentic recipes

·       Heritage-based branding

·       Culinary transparency

Restaurants that merely imitate global flavors without authenticity often struggle to maintain long-term relevance.

Consumers may initially visit for novelty, but repeat traffic is driven by:

·       Flavor consistency

·       Emotional connection

·       Cultural credibility

·       Hospitality

·       Trust

Authenticity has shifted from niche positioning to mainstream expectation.


The Grocerant Guru® Perspective

From the perspective of the Grocerant Guru®, the future winners in foodservice will be operators that successfully combine:

·       Flavor diversity

·       Workforce diversity

·       Menu adaptability

·       Authentic culinary storytelling

·       Strong value perception

·       Experiential dining

The restaurant industry’s ability to absorb successive waves of cultural influence remains one of its greatest economic advantages.

The “melting pot” is not fading.

It is expanding.

Consumers increasingly define value not only by price, but also by experience, flavor excitement, authenticity, and emotional engagement. Restaurants that continue introducing culturally relevant flavors while maintaining operational consistency will remain positioned for long-term growth.



Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru® on Restaurant Marketing Messaging

1.       Flavor Discovery Must Be Part of the Marketing Strategy
Consumers increasingly use restaurants as affordable exploration vehicles. Limited-time global flavors, regional specialties, and mashup innovation drive trial visits and social-media engagement.

2.       Authenticity Outperforms Generic “Ethnic” Positioning
Consumers increasingly reward restaurants that clearly communicate cultural roots, ingredient heritage, chef backgrounds, and regional culinary identity.

3.       Workforce Diversity Should Be Incorporated into Brand Storytelling
Restaurants that showcase real culinary voices, immigrant entrepreneurship, family heritage, and authentic preparation methods build stronger emotional loyalty and greater long-term consumer trust.

Tap into the Foodservice Solutions® team for greater understanding of New Electricity or for a Grocerant Program Assessment, Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®.  Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us  of Tacoma, WA has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869