Eat healthy- eat out!

Healthy eating is the world’s fastest growing food market trend, according to surveys around the world.  A global survey by ACNielsen in 2008 examined product categories across 66 countries and identified a number of drivers behind the healthy eating trend.

Eating “better for you” foods rather than dieting appears to be the trend for people fighting the battle of the bulge.

While dieting for both women and men remain huge markets, they are not growing markets. Instead, as interest in food and the culinary arts grows, consumers are becoming more knowledgeable about the food they eat.

Even with concerns about the economic downturn, eating healthy ranks top-of-mind with consumers. According to a recent NPD Fast Check Survey on economic conditions, adults who identify themselves as financially worse off compared to last year, said that eating healthy still had the greatest impact on their household food and beverage choices. Saving money ranked a close second.

With healthy food and saving money customers’ top two priorities, restaurants can expect to face tough times in the coming months. A recent Food Marketing Institute study in the US found that 91% of consumers believe they eat healthier food at home than when dining out. As the average restaurant meal is approximately 2.5 times more expensive than home-cooked meals, it is imperative that the restaurant industry improves consumers’ perception of the healthy food content of their meals or risk losing customers.

Karl Faux is head of the consulting division at Perth based HospitalityBiz management consulting and executive recruitment firm. “Australia has established itself as a most likely frontrunner in new and healthy eating trends and we should make use of that reputation and trend,”  he said in 2007.New food ideas are coming on the market almost daily. The words ‘nutritious’ and ‘healthy meals for the entire family’ become ingredients for great dining experiences. And with the babyboomers trying to avoid aging while younger generations have new demands for lighter, fresher tastes, changes in lifestyle and eating habits should be reflected in changes to our menus.

BISTRO interviewed two restaurants to see the effect of healthy eating trends on restaurants and bistros in Australia. The places BISTRO reviewed feature salads, vegetables, seafood, and gluten-free dishes.

The Imperial Hotel in Melbourne is located a stone’s throw from the historic Parliament House in the heart of the theatre precinct at the ‘Paris end’ of  the CBD. It attracts corporate business clientele, the pre- and post-theatre crowd and tourists. Its big screens also attract sporting enthusiasts.

Senior Duty Manager Mark Smith told BISTRO the area dictates the Imperial’s menu. “There is a high demand for helthier dishes, gluten-free and vegetarian eating in the area and we wanted to be able to provide meals for everybody’s dietary and special needs.” He pointed out that customers are getting savvy – doing their research by ringing up or Googling various places to find out which restaurants serves the food they like and cater for their dietary needs before going out.

The chef and the owner of Assaggio Restaurant, 2008  Restaurant & Catering South Australia Winner, Best Italian Restaurant, made his choice before it was trendy.

“I’ve been cooking as a chef for 26 years and three years ago I made a choice to really help customers in their need for these special menus,” Camillo Crugnale said. Assaggio Restaurant at Hyde Park, Adelaide, provides for coeliacs as well as those wanting to reduce their wheat intake. “Our products are formulated from selected vegetables and naturally gluten-free ingredients. Variety is the spice of life, and our collection of dishes gives you plenty of that!

“When you have a medical problem it is easy to think you are the only person in the world suffering. Many restaurants have only one or two choices of both gluten-free and vegetarian options. So, to enjoy a night out and share that special occasion with family and friends you get disappointed when you get a bowl of vegetables, maybe a mushroom dish or that simple salad for dinner,” he said.

“Dining out is about experience and also about sharing a meal with your friends and family. So having different options on the menu is not about keeping this one customer – it is about all the family and a group of friends dining together.” Mark Smith from the Imperial agrees. “It’s not just the gluten-free or vegetarian customer who comes in to eat in our restaurant, it’s their friends and family they bring with them because we have something on the menu for everybody.”

Choosing a vegetarian dish doesn’t necessarily mean the customers are vegetarians. There could be other reasons – wanting something lighter, or simply that it’s too hot to eat red meat. “Probably one in every five dishes on our menu would be a vegetarian meal. We get a lot of requests for our roasted vegetarian risotto and our Mediterranean vegetable pizza,”  Mark said.

Camillo gave us some insight of the effect of healthy food on profit margins.

“We all need to keep a eye on meat dishes. The hardest bit is to keep the produce cost to 25-30% of the retail price. A lot of time the produce will contribute as much as 35-40% of the cost of a meat dish.

On other the hand vegetarian dishes are much more manageable: only 21-23% of the retail price is a cost of produce.”

What about seafood? It is a known ‘light’ alternative on the menu and has clear health benefits. Seafood is the second fastest growing global food category, with over 12% growth each year. Almost every dining place now offers seafood dishes.

Camillo said the seafood industry in South Australia has some of the finest produce in the world.  His problem is that restaurants and fishmongers from the eastern states buy much of the first grade fish, shellfish and crustaceans before they go to market. “Often the best produce bypasses the markets as fishermen go for a greater dollar, because restaurants and shops over there have the customers that will pay $38-45 for a simple salad and fillet of garfish dish, in a restaurant looking over the water. In South Australia customers expect to get value for money. We’re trying on a day-to-day basis to give them the very best and be more creative than fish and chips.”

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Filed Under: Food TrendsFood Trends Around the WorldFood Trends Australia

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