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THE HOT LIST: SUMMER 2026

Spanish tomato and watermelon gazpacho cold soup styled and decorated in glasses with ingredients on white table, top view
  • World Cup promotions
  • Salty beverages
  • Wraps 2.0
  • Tacomakase
  • Grapefruit
  • Fire-kissed everything
  • Herb-forward salads
  • Acid-driven bright flavors
  • Vegetable “snow”
  • High protein
  • Summer sorbets
  • Reinterpreted Tiramisu
  • Customized musubi
  • Tamarind glazes
  • Bitter greens
  • Dirty-soda coffees
  • Pull-apart breads
  • Gunpowder masala
  • Late-night menus
  • Chilled soups
  • Upgraded S’mores
  • Value-meals
  • Ranchziki
  • Complex lemonades
  • Pickled melon rinds
  • Pops of color
  • Savory boba garnishes
  • Cucumbers
  • Boy kibble/girl dinner
  • Cacao
  • Banana drinks
  • Salted egg yolks
  • Scallion pancakes
  • “Q” textures
  • GLP-1 friendly dishes
  • Koji
  • Grapes
  • Crispy-crunchy-crackly
  • Sustainable wines
  • Mom-themed restaurants

Diners are increasingly hyper-focused on high-protein and plant-based foods. Alongside all of the new-fangled, lab-based, cell-cultured options out there is the humble bean. A staple food for millenia, beans are being re-examined as a healthy, versatile ingredient worthy of menu inclusion.

  • Retro and heirloom recipes—like Southern succotash, French cassoulet, and Cajun red beans and rice—fit the bill for those in search of authenticity.
  • Most world cuisines incorporate some type of bean in their classic dishes. Think feijoada in Brazil, black beans and rice with plantains in Puerto Rico, and garbanzo beans in Israel. Modern interpretations of these recipes are packed with produce and herbs.
  • The creamy texture of mung beans is proving an ideal substitute for those that are eliminating soy from their diets.