Food & Dining
Food Trends of 2025: The Surprising Dishes and Drinks Everyone Will Be Talking About
From lab-grown delicacies to zero-waste snacks — here’s what’s set to shake up your plate this year.
If you thought avocado toast was the pinnacle of food trends, buckle up — 2025 is rewriting the menu in ways few could have predicted. Chefs, brands, and conscious eaters worldwide are turning kitchens into labs and grocery aisles into sustainability playgrounds. Curious about what you’ll be craving next? Here’s what’s heating up on plates (and TikTok feeds) everywhere.
Lab-Grown Everything (Not Just Meat!)
What started with lab-cultivated beef burgers has evolved into a full-blown culinary revolution. Expect to see lab-grown seafood, dairy, and even chocolate hitting upscale restaurants and eco-minded supermarkets. It’s not just about ethics anymore — lab-grown food is marketed as cleaner, greener, and surprisingly tasty.
Hyper-Local, Zero-Waste Restaurants
The buzzword for 2025? Circular dining. Trendy spots are ditching plastic altogether and crafting entire menus from what used to be thrown away — think carrot-top pesto, spent-grain breads, and cocktails flavored with fruit peels. Diners love it, and Mother Earth does too.
Functional Foods: Snacks That Do More
This year, snacks aren’t just guilty pleasures. They’re wellness boosters. Brands are rolling out protein bars infused with adaptogens to beat stress, gummies for gut health, and chips that promise to boost your focus during endless Zoom calls. Believe it or not, people can’t get enough.

Exotic Plant-Based Proteins
Move over soy and pea — water lentils, duckweed, and chickpea miso are rising stars in the plant-based world. Chefs are experimenting with these superfoods for everything from vegan sushi to protein-rich soups.
AI-Designed Recipes & Custom Meals
Don’t be surprised if your favorite restaurant brags about its new AI chef. Some kitchens now use artificial intelligence to craft recipes based on your DNA or real-time nutritional needs. It’s ultra-personalized dining, and yes, it’s delicious.
6Nostalgia with a Twist
Amid all the innovation, comfort food is making a cozy comeback. But in 2025, expect grandma’s classics to be reimagined — think plant-based mac ’n’ cheese, low-sugar pies, and probiotic ice creams. Old favorites, new tricks.
So, whether you’re planning your next grocery haul or your Instagrammable dinner party, keep an eye out for these trendsetters. If 2024 taught us anything, it’s that food isn’t just fuel — it’s a conversation, an experiment, and sometimes, a revolution.
Ready to taste the future?
Food & Dining
She Swapped Puff Pastry for White Bread—This One-Skillet Chicken Potpie Recipe is Breaking the Internet
Rotisserie chicken, mushrooms, and a genius shortcut make this weeknight potpie a soul-soothing masterpiece you’ll want to make again and again.
When it comes to comfort food, potpie is king. But let’s be honest — between prepping pastry dough and simmering filling from scratch, it’s often reserved for a Sunday afternoon affair. But what if we told you that a creamy, bubbling chicken-and-mushroom potpie could be on your table in under 30 minutes — and all you need is one skillet?
That’s exactly what food innovator Grace Parisi has achieved — and the culinary world is eating it up.
“No Pastry, No Problem”: The Brilliant Swap That Changed Everything
Parisi’s secret weapon? Buttered white bread.
Instead of the usual puff pastry or biscuit topping, she reaches for soft, white sandwich bread, butters it generously, and crisps it right in the oven on top of the creamy filling. The result? A crunchy, golden crown of toast that gives you all the flaky satisfaction of a traditional crust — with none of the work.

And don’t worry, purists — the flavor doesn’t suffer one bit. If anything, the bread absorbs just enough of the creamy sauce to create a flavor bomb in every bite.
The Magic Starts with Store-Bought Rotisserie Chicken
Let’s talk convenience. No one wants to poach and shred chicken on a weeknight. That’s why this recipe calls for store-bought rotisserie chicken, which is not only packed with flavor but also incredibly time-saving. Just tear it into bite-sized pieces and you’re ready to roll.
Add in sautéed mushrooms, onions, and a splash of cream, and you’ve got a filling so rich and velvety, it could make grandma weep.
Why It Works
- One-skillet method = minimal dishes
- No pastry dough = saves at least 45 minutes
- Uses fridge and pantry staples = super budget-friendly
- Feeds a crowd = perfect for family dinner or guests
This recipe is part of a growing trend among busy home cooks looking for restaurant-level comfort food with grocery store shortcuts. And frankly, it’s a delicious rebellion.
“She Swapped Puff Pastry for White Bread”—This One-Skillet Chicken Potpie Recipe is Breaking the Internet
- Sauté onion and mushrooms in butter until golden.
- Stir in flour, then slowly add broth and cream to create a thick sauce.
- Fold in shredded chicken and seasonings.
- Top with buttered bread (butter side up).
- Bake at 400°F for 12–15 minutes, until the bread is crisp and golden.
Serve it hot, straight from the skillet, with a crisp green salad or roasted veggies.
Food & Dining
The Secret Behind the Butteriest Bread You’ll Ever Taste — Chef Iliana Regan’s Brioche Will Change Your Kitchen Forever
If clouds could be baked, they’d taste like brioche. But not just any brioche—Chef Iliana Regan’s extra-rich version has been hailed as one of the most luxurious loaves to come out of an American kitchen. Soft, deeply golden, and impossibly buttery, this French classic gets a gourmet revival in Regan’s hands at her acclaimed Chicago restaurant, Elizabeth.
Brioche is not your average weeknight bread. It’s an investment of time, technique, and patience—but the reward? A crust so delicate it shatters, and an interior so tender it’s practically custard. “You can’t rush flavor,” Regan says, and her version proves that some things are absolutely worth waiting for.
It’s not just bread,” she explains. “It’s breakfast, it’s dessert, it’s a memory of Paris—folded in butter.
Why Brioche Is a Baker’s Everest

With a dough enriched by eggs, milk, and a shocking amount of butter, brioche walks the line between pastry and bread. It takes careful mixing to build structure, long proofing to develop flavor, and a gentle hand to shape.
Most home bakers shy away from it. But Regan leans in. Her technique, perfected over years of trials in the kitchen, turns an intimidating recipe into a triumph of texture. The dough rests overnight, allowing fermentation to deepen the flavor, and is then gently rolled and braided before its final rise.
What emerges from the oven is a showstopper: burnished crust, tender layers, and a rich, buttery fragrance that fills the kitchen like a Parisian boulangerie.
How to Use It (Beyond Just Staring at It)
Fresh brioche needs little embellishment. Slice it warm and smear with jam. Toast it and top with poached eggs. Or, go all in: make French toast, bread pudding, or even an upscale burger bun.
Regan has even been known to caramelize brioche cubes and toss them into savory salads—proving once again there are no rules when you’re working with the best.
A Taste of Paris, Baked in Chicago
At Elizabeth, where hyper-local ingredients meet storytelling menus, Regan’s brioche is more than just food. It’s a symbol of slow craft in a fast world. “There’s something sacred about working with your hands,” she says, “and watching dough become something alive.”
And if you’ve never made bread before? Let this be your first. But be warned—after a bite of this cloudlike loaf, ordinary toast may never satisfy again.
Food & Dining
You’ve Never Tasted Bread Like This The Ancient Persian Secret Behind Nan-e Barbari’s Golden Crust
Persian flatbread Nan-e Barbari is making a global comeback—thanks to a floury trick and a chewy bite that’s impossible to forget.
If you’ve only known pita or naan, get ready to meet their bold, crusty Persian cousin: Nan-e Barbari. It’s thick, chewy, golden-crusted, and steeped in centuries of Iranian culinary tradition. But what makes this bread truly unforgettable? The secret lies in a simple, centuries-old glaze called roomal—a flour paste that creates its signature burnished crust.
Originally baked by the Barbari people of northeastern Iran, Nan-e Barbari is one of the oldest styles of Persian bread. It’s now winning hearts across home kitchens and bakeries from New York to Sydney, celebrated for its rustic charm and addictive texture. Served with salty feta, plump olives, or a smear of labneh, it turns a simple snack into a cultural experience.
The Magic Is in the Method
Bread may be the simplest of foods, but Persian bakers take it seriously. Jessamyn Rodriguez, founder of Hot Bread Kitchen, shares a technique that combines ancient tradition with modern ease.
It’s the roomal that transforms this bread from good to unforgettable,” Rodriguez explains. “It crisps the surface just enough to contrast with the tender, pillowy inside.

To try it at home, start by combining 2 cups of lukewarm water and 1 tablespoon of yeast in a stand mixer. Let it sit for five minutes until frothy. Then, add 4 cups of bread flour and 2 teaspoons of salt. Mix on medium speed until it forms a shaggy dough, then increase to medium-high and knead until smooth and supple—about six minutes.
Once you’ve kneaded the dough briefly by hand and transferred it to a lightly oiled bowl, cover it with plastic wrap and let it rise in a draft-free area until it doubles in size—typically one hour.
While it rests, prepare the roomal: a simple mix of flour and water boiled into a paste. This is brushed over the dough right before baking and is the key to that deep golden finish.
A Cultural Staple, Reimagined
Traditionally served with Persian stews and cheeses, Nan-e Barbari has become a canvas for both sweet and savory spreads. “Think avocado toast, but better,” laughs one Tehran-born home cook now living in California. “My grandma used to make it with sour cream and cucumbers. Now I serve it with hummus and poached eggs.”
As global cuisines continue to blend, ancient breads like Nan-e Barbari are finding new life in modern kitchens. And once you’ve made it—or tasted it—you may never look at supermarket bread the same way again.
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