The Future Of Dinner In America Will Reflect Past Traditions But With Modern Twists

Chicago — U.S. consumers ate nearly 100 billion dinner meals last year with the vast majority of those meals being shared with others in the home. The tradition of eating at home together has stood the test of time and will continue over the next five years but with a lot of modern twists, finds the recently released Future of Dinner study by The NPD Group, a leading global information company.

Although consumers still have dinner at home together, the American dinner meal today looks different compared to 20 years ago. Consumers now have access to almost anything through grocery delivery, meal prep kits, grocerants (supermarkets that offer restaurant quality foods), online ordering, and mobile apps.  Convenience is just as important as it was 20 years ago but a new level of it has been enabled with technology and new kitchen tools. In the past, dinner comprised of the “trinity meal” – a protein, a starch, and a vegetable. Today, dinner tends to be a “multi-component” meal, rather than three separate items, the protein, vegetable, and starch are combined in one item, like tacos, according to the NPD study, which  provides a comprehensive view of how solving for dinner is, and will be, evolving based on generational shifts, consumer needs, and new solutions available to consumers.

In the future consumers will be less concerned about getting the parts and pieces for their dinner and more focused on getting the meal as a whole. Even with more focus on getting the entire or most of the meal at once, the types of dinners forecast to grow over the next five years show meal preparers’ willingness to invest a moderate amount of time into the meal.  The average dinner meal takes about 30 minutes to prepare and cook and this level of involvement will continue in many U.S. households.  As breakfast and lunch become more snack food driven, fragmented, and portable, dinner retains a structure of mostly hot main dishes paired with a side along the dinner continuum, reports NPD.  Fresh, refrigerated, and blended meals (meals that include a restaurant or prepared food) are among the types of dinner items forecast to grow.

“While dinner as an institution is deeply rooted, the what, how, and why surrounding dinner reflects much of the disruptive change we see all around us,” says David Portalatin, NPD food industry advisor.  “Consumers are solving for convenience at dinner time in new ways while still retaining dinner meal traditions. Food companies need to understand these shifts in order to meet the needs of their consumers and grow their business.” 

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About The NPD Group, Inc.

NPD is the leading global provider of market information and business solutions covering brick-and-mortar, e-commerce, and emerging channels in more than 20 industries. We combine our unique data assets with analytic solutions to help our clients measure performance, predict trends, and improve results, advising them to help drive successful growth. Practice areas include apparel, appliances, automotive, beauty, books, consumer electronics, e-commerce, entertainment, fashion accessories, food consumption, foodservice, footwear, home, juvenile products, mobile, office supplies, retail, sports, technology, toys, travel retail, games, and watches / jewelry. For more information, visit npd.com. Follow us on Twitter: @npdgroup

Source: The NPD Group, Inc.