6 Food Trends Fashion Needs to Know About in 2026
As fashion looks toward 2026, these are the six food trends the industry needs to know.
Mini everything
Mini food and drink formats are emerging as a dominant trend for 2026, as consumers seek enjoyment without excess, according to WGSN. For some consumers, minis function as low-commitment self-rewards: a one-bite dessert, a small sip of something special, or an “unserious” treat designed to spark joy and shareability. Brands like Ladurée, Milk Bar and Magnolia Bakery have all leaned into mini formats, offering scaled-down versions that feel playful yet premium.
Minis are also increasingly about value. With budgets still under pressure, smaller portions allow consumers to indulge without overspending and enable brands to offer premium experiences at accessible price points. This logic extends to drinks, where mini cocktails and tasting formats encourage experimentation and reposition alcohol as an accessory rather than the main event. A notable example is 818 Tequila, which introduced a miniature bottle designed as a bag charm, says Jennifer Creevy, director of food and drink at WGSN.
Health is another powerful driver. As the use of GLP-1 medications becomes more widespread, demand for smaller dishes and drinks is reshaping menus across the spectrum. Creevy notes that this will influence not just restaurant offerings but also how consumers cook and portion meals at home. Tiny cocktails, snack-sized plates and scaled-down desserts are becoming the norm rather than the exception. At the high end, chefs are already responding. Heston Blumenthal’s Mindful Experience menu offers a glimpse into this future, delivering flavor, texture and mouthfeel in reduced portions ideal for diners on GLP-1s.
Texture as the new flavor
As flavor innovation plateaus, texture is becoming food’s most powerful source of novelty. From chewy mochi and popping boba to crunchy chilli crisp, consumers are increasingly seeking foods that deliver sensory contrast and physical engagement. According to Creevy, global textures are travelling faster and landing in unexpected markets. One emerging example is Q, which is a springy, elastic chew inspired by kueh desserts from Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia, reflecting growing interest in tactile eating experiences rooted in regional food cultures.
This textural focus is also reshaping beverages. Creevy points to the rise of “ready-to-eat cocktails” and drinks designed to be chewed as much as sipped, incorporating foams, gels and gelatin-based elements that burst or stretch in the mouth. The appeal is emotional as much as sensory. Pinterest’s Gimme Gummy trend shows how playful, nostalgic textures offer comfort and escapism in uncertain times. “Beyond taste and convenience, these textures create immersive offline moments,” says Sydney Stanback, global head of trends and insights at Pinterest. They’re inspiring fashion trends, too. She adds that searches for “gummy bears aesthetic” on Pinterest are up 50%, “yokan” up 60% and “jelly candy aesthetic” has doubled year-on-year.
Edible rituals
In 2026, comfort eating is less about indulgence and more about ritualized emotional regulation. As economic volatility, climate anxiety and digital fatigue intensify, consumers are becoming more selective about where they expend emotional energy, replacing reactive snacking with repeatable rituals such as structured morning routines, evening wind-down teas and mid-afternoon “reset” drinks like matcha or bone broth. “[It] turns food into a low-risk, everyday way to regain comfort, sensory pleasure and a sense of control,” says Rose Coffey, senior foresight analyst at trend forecasting firm The Future Laboratory.