A lot happened in 2015. In 2015 we saw a lot of stories, fittingly,
about food. From new inventions like caffeinated peanut butter and chocolate
slices, to new-to-us concepts like eating bugs, and strange food-preparation
methods like making soup in a Keurig and eating at a restaurant without human
workers, the foods of 2015 felt like they came straight out of the future.
From the crazy (24-karat gold Kit
Kats) to the depressing (Norovirus at Chipotle) to the completely bizarre
(FATwater) in 2015, it can’t help but feel like we saw it all. Maybe all this
food news means we can come away from the year with a heightened sense of
awareness about our food supply, or maybe it just means, as a culture, we have
finally taken our food obsession too far. But whatever we decide to take away
from this year’s food inventions, let us not forget the highs and lows that
brought us here, to the end of the journey of our crazy edible year.
Caffeinated peanut butter
Coffee and peanut butter are, to me,
two good things that do not need fixing. Yet caffeinated peanut butter,
otherwise known as STEEM, is doing just that. The food fusion aims at
“providing a consistent release of sustained energy” through the naturally slow
digestion of peanut butter. STEEM’s mission is to free you from the humanly
distractions of hunger and fatigue in one convenient jar. And a lot of people
got very excited about this when STEEM first came out, because apparently we
have become too busy to be expected to drink coffee and eat breakfast at the
same time. The whole sentiment seems kind of depressing, like we are eventually
going to get to a place where we stop enjoying food entirely and sustain
ourselves off grey scientific nutrient paste. Wait, that
already happened last year…
Chocolate slices
These are really amazing and it’s
hard to believe it took us this long to figure it out. And unlike chocolate
spreads, you don’t even need to dirty a knife. Chocolate slices make you
realize that anything really is possible, all while wondering what other foods
we’re missing out on by not slicing… Anyone?
Activated Charcoal Juice
While 2015 saw no shortage of
cold-pressed juiceries, this year we saw liquid bottles of inky black activated
charcoal slowly start to replace 2014’s vision of quintessential health: the
green juice. Activated charcoal has been traditionally used in medicine to
treat poisonings due to its ability to prevent the absorption of chemicals
inside the body. Today the juice world touts activated charcoal as the latest
answer in our never-ending quest to rid the body of those pesky every day
toxins that we seem unable to escape… until now?
Hangover curing salami
Serious Pig, a London-based craft meat business
introduced the world to its first hangover curing salami this year. The salami
allegedly works as a preventative measure and is supposed to be eaten while
you’re still drinking. It boasts ginger and chili to combat the two common
hangover symptoms of nausea and fatigue, and is appropriately called Hangover
Cured. Ginger is known to help with nausea, and chilli is an endorphin booster,
meaning that while there is no scientific evidence to Hangover Cured, eating
some when you’ve had one too many could make you feel a little better in the
morning.
Bugs
Otherwise known as “the protein of
the future,” TIME Magazine called eating bugs a food trend of 2015, and they
weren’t wrong. While in 2014 we heard a lot of talk of eating bugs, the
discussions were mostly centered around how gross and unrealistic the eating
bugs would be. But in 2015, as we begun to better understand the meat
industry’s impact on the environment, we watched bugs mature into a serious,
sustainable food option. Gourmet bug
recipe books and inventions like cricket flour
and cricket chips
helped some move past the creepy crawly factor, and we realized over two
billion people around the world already consider bugs a dietary staple.
Super-elaborate milkshakes
Savory yogurt
Chef Dan Barber’s family farm in the
Berkshires Blue Hill Farms, which supplies produce for Chef Barber’s
famous farm-to table restaurants in New York City and Pocantico Hills, New
York, brought savoury yogurt to our attention in
2015. Available in seasonal flavors like butternut squash, carrot,
tomato, and beet, Blue Hill Farm’s savory yogurts turned Americans onto
the idea that yogurt doesn’t have to be sweet. Chef Dan Barber is a long-time
food environmentalist pioneer, and author of The Third Plate where he
also argues eating less meat could help the environment. It seems Barber has
his fingerprints all over the food trends of 2015.
24-karat gold Kit Kats
Burger King’s black burger
Keurig soup
You can now make chicken noodle soup in your
coffee-making Keurig machine and I’m not sure we will ever recover from this. After the world realized how horrible Keurig’s K-cups are for the
environment, the company had a horrible year sales-wise, eventually
leading it to partner with Campbell’s in hopes of boosting sales by
revitalizing their brand to include soup. Campbell’s marketing director Michael
Goodman declared the innovation a “winning idea.” Time will tell if the people
agree.
FATwaterFATwater is a 20 calories water beverage with two grams of medium chain triglyceride fat derived from coconut oil per serving. It was invented by the founder of Bulletproof Coffee, you know, the trend that has everyone adding butter and oil to their coffee in hopes of losing weight? FATwater bills itself as a type of sports drinks. But instead of the immediate energy boost you get from other sugary sports drinks, FATwater aims at providing sustainable energy that doesn’t cause you to crash, claiming to also be “more hydrating” than regular water. But some researchers have disagreed with FATwater’s claims, stating that the type of fat in FATwater doesn’t actually give drinkers any energy at all, and that water hydrates the body on its own just fine. That’s a relief, because at $35.95 for a 12-pack, switching to FATwater won’t come cheap.
Automats
While self-serve kiosks have been slowly
creeping into fast food restaurants for a while, 2015 saw an entirely different
type of service: no human workers. Restaurants with no visible human help are
called automats, and began popping up in America in 2015. San Francisco saw its
first automat in the form of Eatsa, a healthy fast-food eatery with no cashiers
or wait staff, requiring customers to place orders on tablets and receive their
food at self-serve cubbies. Some claimed the rise of automats is linked to the
pressure to increase fast-food worker’s wages, but companies like McDonalds and
Panera, who are starting to implement self-serve kiosks of their own, denied
the two are related, claiming the new digitized workforce will allow them to
have a bigger workforce in the kitchen. But some have prophesized that robots will soon
be able to assemble food orders themselves. Either way, one thing is
clear: the future is most certainly now.