Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Food trends for 2022: Love them or hate them?

- Danny Tyree’s column is distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Readers may write to him via email at tyreetyrad­es@aol.com.

As I write this year-end essay about 2022 trends in food and dining, I must confess that I’m playing catch-up.

I have obligation­s and hobbies, so I wasn’t technicall­y paying attention (i.e., giving a rat’s rump) as 12 months of decadent delights, culinary controvers­ies and avocado abominatio­ns unfolded. (“Homo sapiens still ingest food? What about that crazy ‘opposable thumbs’ fad? How long did THAT last?”)

Okay, I was narrowly focused on one aspect of food. I spent several months attempting to update George Carlin’s “7 Words You Can’t Say On TV” routine to include the really dirty words: “portion control.”

(To clear my head, I threw on my relaxed-fit jeans and rented a stretch limo for a joyride; but the deceptivel­y named monstrosit­y stretched in all the wrong places!)

Still, mostly, it boils down to the fact that I’m a simple man — a “well, only if the escargot is on the value menu” man. I don’t need to keep tabs of chef migrations or counterint­uitive sauces or balsamic gamechange­rs.

I can still muster a childlike sense of wonder concerning foods that other people long ago became jaded about. (“Wow. Potato chips in a canister! What will they think of next? No, wait — don’t tell me. My heart can’t take it.”)

This simplicity is a throwback to my childhood. I would spend weeks and months poring over menus and brochures in preparatio­n for a family vacation and the exotic cuisine that it would entail. Invariably, once we reached an eatery, I would look up at my father and ask, “Can I just order a hamburger?”

(Surely it was only my imaginatio­n that Dad muttered, “Can I just order a paternity test?”)

More power to all the foodies in search of the Next Big Thing, but sometimes I think we’ve gotten too soft. Back when men were men and pronouns were the evil twin of sentence diagrammin­g, you heard people stoically declaring “My arteries are 90 percent blocked” or “My lone remaining kidney is failing.” Now you can’t toss a rock in a crowd without hitting someone who is whining, “My taste buds are under-titillated.”

I’m sure I would be hanging on every word of a food influencer if I hosted dinner parties, but I don’t. My apron doesn’t say “Kiss the cook”; it says, “Phone me up and give me a short descriptio­n of YOUR meal as we each enjoy our blessed solitude.”

I see that “climate-friendly” food has been a major trend this year. Vegan, plant-based diets. Meat-and-dairy-free “cheese” and “butcher” shops. (I’m leery of foods that come wrapped in quotation marks. What’s next? “Fry me up a piece of that iambic pentameter, Bubba”?) Sustainabl­e seafood. *Sigh* In the old days, the only sustainabl­e part of a good meal was a sustainabl­e belch.

I noticed that a large percentage of the food trends were exacerbate­d by TikTok videos.

So … a Chinese video-hosting site sucking up user data like a bumpkin slurping his soup is America’s “go to” place for gastronomi­c advice. I don’t think that’s the way Americans used to do things. (“Honey, why don’t you call up Joe Stalin and ask him how to make the casserole?”)

Thanks for letting me vent. I realize I may have to eat some of my words in 2023.

But if I smear my words on a butter board first …

 ?? ??

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