The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Carrot tops and potato Milk on menu for 2022

Climate-change worries and altered food habits during the pandemic mean cooking in the new year could bring some surprises. Lauren Taylor rounds up the trends

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While 2021 brought us air frying, pasta chips and takeaway cocktails, 2022 will be all about eating more sustainabl­y and ordering from restaurant­s that aren’t really restaurant­s…

EXPECT TO SEE RECIPES PROVING THE SCRAPS USUALLY DESTINED FOR THE BIN MAKE GREAT ADDITIONS TO DISHES

WHOLE VEGETABLE COOKERY

There’s been a focus for a while on using as much of the animal as possible, including making bone broth and using cheeks and offal, but it’s common practice in most households to throw away vegetable peelings, stalks and stems.

As we all strive to be more sustainabl­e in 2022 and beyond, there will be new encouragem­ent to use the whole vegetable – including the green ends of leeks, carrot tops, kale ribs, beetroot greens and chard stems.

Expect to see recipes proving the scraps usually destined for the bin make great additions to dishes.

POTATO MILK

Hailed as better for you and for the planet, milk from a potato is said to be the next big thing in alternativ­e milks. Fortified with folic acid, vitamin D and calcium, it’s vegan, gluten-free and lactose-free, so suitable for pretty much every type of diet, and it even froths up nicely for cappuccino­s.

Waitrose predicts the milk will be huge in 2022 and will stock three varieties of Dug potato milk from the Swedish brand Veg of Lund from February.

GHOST KITCHENS

Not as spooky as they sound, ghost kitchens aren’t a completely new concept but the pandemic’s delivery service boom certainly has a lot to do with their growth. On food delivery apps you probably wouldn’t know they weren’t restaurant­s, but they’re actually kitchens solely set up for delivery, without a front-of-house operation or even shopfront you can pick up food from.

Many are run from rented-out facilities – some even shared with multiple businesses – and with fewer overhead costs than a bricks-and-mortar restaurant and instant online traffic, they’re a great way for small businesses to get off the ground.

CROFFLES

Do you remember cronuts – a cross between croissants and doughnuts? Well, the next weird-but-delicious hybrid is croffles: croissants in the shape of waffles.

In what sounds like a glorious breakfast, you get the flaky pastry of croissants with the square dips to gather all the maple syrup you need.

Like all the best viral food trends, the concept comes from South Korea, but all you need is pre-made croissant dough and a waffle maker to create your own. Top with fresh berries, sugar, maple syrup, jam or Nutella.

STRICTER CANCELLATI­ON POLICIES

It’s been a rough couple of years for the hospitalit­y industry and even now, in the post-vaccine era, restaurant­s are experienci­ng costly last-minute cancellati­ons.

To protect their business, it’s not surprising that more and more restaurant­s will introduce stricter policies, which could mean handing over credit card details when booking and a pricey “no show” consequenc­e for diners.

RESTAURANT QR CODES COULD BE HERE TO STAY

Following 2021’s shift in many restaurant­s to providing QR codes for menus, ordering and payment to minimise contact between staff and diners, 2022 could see those practices become even more mainstream. It’s low cost for businesses, fast-paced and safer for everyone.

BEANLESS COFFEE

A major study published in Science by Joseph Poore and Thomas Nemecek in 2018 found that the production of coffee actually emitted more carbon emissions than poultry, pork or prawns (although much less than beef). So if you love your daily cup but want to be mindful of its impact on the planet, you could be drinking beanless coffee in 2022.

Already on sale in the US, the developers of Atomo Coffee say climate change and deforestat­ion mean land that coffee beans can grow on is becoming more limited – a trend that will only continue. Their coffee is made with 98% recycled ingredient­s, including date pips, and has the familiar caffeine hit.

LAND THAT COFFEE BEANS CAN GROW ON IS BECOMING MORE LIMITED – A TREND THAT WILL ONLY CONTINUE

MORINGA

The superfood we might all be talking about this year could be Moringa

– the Whole Foods Trend Council has hailed the “miracle tree” as one to watch.

Native to India but widely grown across Africa and Asia, many people believe it holds medicinal properties and is supposedly packed with impressive amounts of potassium, vitamin C, calcium, protein, iron and antioxidan­ts.

The easiest way to get hold of it is as a powdered supplement to add to dishes and green smoothies.

REDUCETARI­ANISM

Unlike vegans or vegetarian­s who eliminate meat and/or dairy products from their diets entirely, a “reducetari­an” simply chooses to reduce the amount of animal products they consume – even if it’s by as little as 10%. Whether it’s for health, environmen­tal or animal welfare reasons, you could switch to meat-free Mondays, have vegetarian lunches during the week, or commit to learning a couple of vegan recipes a month. It all makes a real difference.

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 ?? ?? NEW APPROACH: The use of QR codes in restaurant­s could be here to stay, and consumers will be encouraged to minimise their vegetable waste.
NEW APPROACH: The use of QR codes in restaurant­s could be here to stay, and consumers will be encouraged to minimise their vegetable waste.

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