Posted inF&B

“Local offerings are gaining recognition and trending in social media”

…Says Yogen Datta, Executive Chef, ITC Maratha Mumbai, and Area Executive Chef West Region, ITC Hotels.

With the vast recognition of Indian millets, micro-cuisines, local whiskeys and untapped opportunities explored by chefs, there are more trends to catch up with in the F&B space. We ask Yogen Datta, Executive Chef, ITC Maratha Mumbai, and Area Executive Chef West Region, ITC Hotels to shed light on the same.

Yogen Datta, Executive Chef, ITC Maratha Mumbai, and Area Executive Chef West Region, ITC Hotels.

What’s hot on the fine dining menu?

• Responsible dining: Trending restaurants moving into minimally altered houses and heritage buildings offering climate conscious cuisine. Sustainable dining continues to be the trend.

• Plant-based alternative proteins are trending, substituting dairy and meat and reducing the carbon footprint.

• Indian millets, being a superfood and a local alternative grain with health benefits, continue to be explored on the menus.

• Micro-cuisines will be shining as the next level regional cuisines from sub communities exploring the unexplored regional tapestry of the country.

• Social for local: Local offerings are gaining recognition and trending in social media, bringing back into focus what was always around us but stayed unexplored.

• Instagram, YouTube and Facebook are some platforms which have helped in generating curiosity amongst the general population about the local dining places.

• Small plates continue to trend because they offer variations within a meal, keeping the meal manageable.

What’s brewing in beverages?

• Indian whisky: Various regional blends like Indri, Paul John and variations, Amruth etc are gaining traction on a national level.

• Bar chefs: Chefs entering bars and creating flavours using ingredients and techniques which were earlier restricted to the kitchens.

 Tech influence on fine dining:

• Data science is helping shape experiential dining.

• 3 D food printing (the process of manufacturing food products using a variety of additive manufacturing techniques) may be coming in as it becomes affordable with technology advancement. And cutting edge science is used to manufacture plant-based meats which in turn gets featured into the menus of fine dining establishments.