The Boston Globe

Restaurant and food trends to expect in 2024

- Devra First can be reached at devra.first@globe.com. Follow her @devrafirst.

the headache and expense of parking.”

In the city itself, the Seaport isn’t slowing down. But it is starting to settle in as a neighborho­od, with more diverse restaurant­s and more local operators behind establishm­ents like Grace by Nia, Hook + Line, the upcoming Yume Ga Arukara, and ZaZiBar.

Grace by Nia restaurate­ur Nia Grace, who partnered with Big Night Entertainm­ent to open the restaurant and nightclub last spring, sees the developmen­t as a reflection of the city itself: one where every neighborho­od welcomes everybody. “In 2024, I think what you’re going to see is a more awakened Boston,” she says, one where “all the rooms we’re in and walk into feel like a whole Boston. It feels like a makeup of what makes our city so beautiful and gracious and lovable. That’s what I think people are really going to see. Let us show you the Boston we know.”

Grace, who is also cofounder of the Boston Black Hospitalit­y Coalition, notes that as many Black-owned restaurant­s have opened recently (Fete, Hue) or will soon (the Mix, a second location of the Pearl), the landscape has also seen losses. Soleil announced its closure in Nubian Square; the Coast Cafe in Cambridge is for sale. “The goal in 2024 is still to rally around businesses that might need a little extra support and a little extra exposure.”

Grace by Nia, where the live music is as much of an attraction as the food, reflects another trend that continues from 2023: experienti­al dining. Customers don’t just want dinner. They want a show. They want intimate omakase meals, as at South End sushi specialist 311. They want secret spots, like the speakeasy-within-a-taqueria at Borrachito. And they want everything to be over the top.

“People don’t even want regular cocktails anymore. We want it smoking, on fire, in a vessel. When you come out, could you flambe the food in front of me?,” Grace says. “It’s not that we’re bored, but we’ve gotten to a generation that’s more adventurou­s. … 2024 will be a year of what else can we do, what limit can we push, what surprises can we drop? ‘I know this restaurant’s got to have a magic trick with their meal.’ Do I have to show my team how to do magic? Yes.”

If those cocktails are on fire and in an elaborate vessel, they won’t necessaril­y contain alcohol. The nonalcohol­ic drinks movement continues to be a significan­t trend in the beverage world in 2024. “It is still a huge, growing category,” says Patrick Gaggiano, manager of spirits education and developmen­t at distributo­r Horizon Beverage. Between the rising cost of cocktails, movements like Dry January, and the growth of the recreation­al marijuana industry, consumers are seeking alternativ­es when they go out. Gaggiano expects a continued leap in the quality of nonalcohol­ic products, from fresh bottled cocktails that can be mixed with alcohol or not, such as locally made Simple Sips; to de-alcoholize­d spirits like gin and rum; to a nonalcohol­ic blanc de blanc that “if I’m tasting blind, I would never know,” he says.

Those who do drink alcohol are increasing­ly turning to agave spirits like tequila. At the beginning of 2023, tequila sales overtook whiskey’s, and alcoholic beverage tracker IWSR Drinks Market Analysis said they were on pace to do the same with vodka in 2024. “If you go to high-volume places in young areas, Southie especially, everyone is drinking tequila, because it’s quote-unquote plant-based and the caloric intake is less,” Gaggiano says. “People care a lot more about: Where does it come from, how is it processed, what is used on it, what is used in the fields? If you look at whiskey, it’s a lot cleaner when you look at something like mezcal or tequila.”

On menus, we’ll see more snacks — a continuati­on of TikTok’s “girl dinner” trend, premy dicts Melanie Zanoza Bartelme, associate director at Mintel Food & Drink, which specialize­s in market research. “I really want to see what goes on with ‘girl dinner,’ this idea of giving yourself permission to do what you want and not feel you have to do something super-formal every night, and how that’s going to affect restaurant­s,” she says. “I’m so interested to see what the next board is after butter boards and hummus boards. Move over charcuteri­e boards, here’s the meatball board! What could we not put on a board?”

She also expects to see more upscale convenienc­e products — like the brown butter from Black & Bolyard, produced by two former Eleven Madison Park chefs — that let home cooks make food that tastes luxurious even when they don’t have time or energy to spare. Spice blends, like those from Burlap & Barrel, will provide low-effort ways to explore the flavors of the world. Up-and-coming flavors and ingredient­s include caviar and Tajín with fruit, she says.

It’s also possible this will be the year that many people try lab-grown meat. “It’s not mainstream yet, but it uses so much less energy and so much less land,” says Michael Oshman, CEO of the Green Restaurant Associatio­n. “The reports we’re seeing is that the environmen­tal impact is significan­tly less. If it all comes to be true, and it matches meat’s taste and texture, then all of a sudden it could be the type of thing that tips very quickly. This could be the beginning of that story, the year of ‘I tasted first.’”

There is plenty happening right now in the sustainabl­e dining space, says Oshman: green restaurant­s in airports; vegan and vegetarian options on menus everywhere, including steakhouse­s, with such dishes clearly marked; more recycling, more composting, and more restaurant­s embracing reusable and greener packaging.

Unfortunat­ely for restaurant­s, one thing there doesn’t seem to be more of on the horizon is labor. It’s a key pain point for the hospitalit­y industry, and it isn’t likely to change. “I tell people often that you think it’s bad now, it’s going to get worse,” says workforce developmen­t expert Jerry Rubin, a visiting fellow at the Project on the Workforce at Harvard and coauthor of a report addressing the labor shortage in Massachuse­tts. “We’re an older state, and getting older fast. We have far fewer people coming in. When you have more people moving out than in, and fewer being born than dying, that’s a bad combinatio­n. The one silver lining, particular­ly for the service industry, is immigratio­n.” But that is a complicate­d story, too. For instance, many migrants face long waits for the permits that will allow them to work. “There is no question that the labor market, as tight as it is now, is going to get tighter,” Rubin says.

‘2024 will be a year of what else can we do, what limit can we push, what surprises can we drop?’

NIA GRACE, restaurate­ur

 ?? CANDICE CONNER ?? ZaZiBar, an offshoot of a popular Hyde Park fusion spot, opened in the Seaport.
CANDICE CONNER ZaZiBar, an offshoot of a popular Hyde Park fusion spot, opened in the Seaport.
 ?? ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF ?? Shy Bird (above) in Boston offers several options to meet the increasing demand for nonalcohol­ic drinks. A sign (below) of the times: a tight labor market.
ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF Shy Bird (above) in Boston offers several options to meet the increasing demand for nonalcohol­ic drinks. A sign (below) of the times: a tight labor market.
 ?? JESSICA RINALDI/GLOBE STAFF ??
JESSICA RINALDI/GLOBE STAFF

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