The Scotsman

Forget granola – now ‘pimped porridge’ is on trend for 2018

● Look out for vegan ‘junk food’ and ‘mass appeal’ Chinese cuisine

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

It has long been a mainstay of the Scottish diet, with the salt versus sugar debate raging between different corners of the British Isles.

Now Scots staple porridge – albeit a “pimped” version – is set to be one of the most popular food trends for 2018.

Vegan junk food and “micromanag­ed” menus, which would see diners asked for feedback on each dish, are also among the foods trends set for this year, according to the restaurant industry’s annual prediction­s for the food trade.

Industry website Big Hospitalit­y said that the trends, alongside a resurgence in the popularity of French food and a demand for casual Chinese dining, were set to take the restaurant industry by storm in 2018.

Porridge, which Big Hospitalit­y describes as granola’s “dowdy and downright boring cousin”, could become popular once more due to the creation of “build you own” porridge bars in London, it said.

Tony Fullerton, spokesman for Scots porridge maker Stoats, said Big Hospitalit­y’s prediction­s of a porridge boom were being borne out in a rise in its sales.

He said: “There are more people talking about porridge online and there is an increase in popularity.”

Joe Lutrario, author of the annual prediction­s for Big Hospitalit­y, said: “Granola has long been the favoured

0 Porridge – in a ‘pimped’ form – is set to be a 2018 trendsette­r ‘healthy’ bowl breakfast of the Instagram set, but 2018 will see a return to a more old-school breakfast staple – albeit one that’s been pimped.”

He added that a branded mid-market Chinese restaurant format – akin to Indianiran­ian chain Dishoom – is ripe for opening.

He said: “Much like the curry house, the family-run high street Chinese is in desperate need of a makeover. Yet nobody has ever really managed to create an affordable Chinese restaurant with mass appeal that builds on the traditiona­l Chinese restaurant experience beloved by many in spite of the often secondrate food and ambience.

“A Chinese answer to Dishoom’s bacon naan roll? Yes please.”

The site said the market for the “less virtuous” side of vegan cusine, such as burgers and fried chicken, had been growing in recent months.

Mr Lutario said: “2017 was undoubtedl­y the year veganism went mainstream, but throughout the coming 12 months, expect to see plantbased restaurant­s letting their hairdownab­itandembra­cing something not typically associated with veganism – ‘junk food’.”

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