ANAHEIM, Calif. — Good-for-you sodas. Regenerative everything. Snacks, snacks, snacks. The country’s largest food industry trade show, held last week, offered a glimpse into the grocery store’s rising stars, wannabes and still-hot trends.
Natural Products Expo West — with thousands of booths boasting boutique brands and with more than 70,000 attendees — is all about finding, or becoming, the next big thing in food.
Jockeying for attention from the nation’s largest retailers and distributors, brands were big on world flavors, clean labels and functional benefits.
But the sum of the offerings was more like a streaming service than a movie theater. There was something for everyone, yet most products are unlikely to reach a mass audience. The emphasis among many startups and smaller brands is on personalization and filling niches, like hormone health and allergy friendly.
“Food is like religion: You don’t tell people how to eat, you don’t tell people what to believe in,” said Rich Gammill, managing partner of Proterra Investment Partners in Minneapolis and one of dozens of Minnesotans at the trade show. “It’s about giving consumers choices — you do you, and you follow your own journey with food.”
Here are a few of the trends that stood out at Expo West in 2024.
Snacks and snack accessories
The U.S. remains a nation of grazers, sipping and dipping our way to caloric contentment. Marrying the consumer quests for convenience and better-for-you foods, many brands are putting a healthy shine on old favorites like chips and crackers while others peddle more bars and smoothies that have long attracted health-conscious buyers.
Minnesota-based Maazah, best known for its chutneys and aioli that won the pitch slam at last year’s Expo West, unveiled a new line of lentil dips that will hit stores later this year. Also in the dipping category, Minnesota-based Flackers recently revealed its refreshed packaging and new flavors.