Professionals from all walks of life have their own slang that can go viral as new trends gain popularity. And that’s completely normal. But someone who has a silver tongue (or corporate backing) can spin the truth and hype up something that is entirely ordinary.
For some, a deconstructed meal is the pinnacle of the fine dining experience. For others, they've heard the word so often that it’s a sign that things have become entirely too corporatized, that the chef might be lazy and pretentious, or that their ‘foodie’ friend wants to show off. Redditor u/zzzzzzzzzra started a discussion on r/Cooking, asking folks to share popular foodie terms that they find particularly annoying. Scroll down to read their opinions, and remember to upvote the ones you agree are overused.
We wanted to learn more about the evolution of food trends and terms, so we got in touch with pie artist Jessica Leigh Clark-Bojin, @thepieous. She is a published author, the founder of the Pies Are Awesome project, and you'll find Bored Panda's full interview with her as you read on.
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I had guests visiting and I ordered us all Indian takeaway (since our local place was honestly one of the best I've ever tasted). While eating, they discussed the food and shared their favorites, and it pleased me to see them enjoying it! Until they looked at me with zero irony and said "'...Oh, sorry. We're foodies! We like to find new tastes and discuss them just for fun.' What did they think I'd done the multiple times I'd eaten from there before?! Just ram it into my mouth hole while sniffing detergent to block out the taste? Yeah, self-identifying as a 'foodie' makes me cringe at the soul level.
One of my Facebook friends once posted these smug pictures of how she invited a few friends over (all of them German) and they cooked Persian food together. An unironically admiring comment that made me cringe so bad: "You are the most international Germans that I know." Yeah, right, because they bought a Persian cook book.
Pie artist Jessica, @thepieous, shed some light on food terms that get overused. "Language evolves. Trendy terms and neologisms (like 'Foodie') are subject to an even faster evolution… It seems invariably with any trend connected to new language use, we go through the same stages."
According to her, everything starts with relative obscurity where "only a few niche initiates are familiar with the new meaning of the term." Then, we move on to the so-called mainstream breakthrough, "usually connected to a trendy journalist breaking the story and introducing the term to a wide audience." Inevitably, this is followed by the 'corporate co-opting' of the term and, then, by "public rejection of the term by a population sickened by the new corporate connotation."
Jessica told Bored Panda that "it’s the path from 'refreshing authenticity' to 'cringe-inducing inauthenticity' that all trends must walk… and trendy food terms do not get a pass." Since people crave novelty, "when a famous chef, food journalist, or other notable personality in the space serves us up a new term that paints a new picture, a new way of looking at or thinking of the same old same old, well, we’re all over that!"
'Better-Than-Sex'. I saw a story somewhere about a woman who sold Better-Than-Sex Banana Bread at her local farmer's market. One day, it was changed to Almost-Better-Than-Sex Banana Bread. Girl must've had QUITE the experience...
If something you eat is ‘better than sex’ then I’d respectfully suggest that you or indeed your partner/s aren’t very good at sex or being considerate lovers. I really like my food, I love all sorts of food, it’s amazing stuff, from the cheap sausage butty at your local greasy spoon with ketchup to Heston’s Fat Duck creations, food can evoke all sorts of happy memories of social occasions, of family long gone (I’m looking at you Grandma, your fruit cake was awesome) but ‘better than sex’? Nah. Go back and have another go at sex would ya?
I'm Indian and we have so many dishes which have no animal products. Suddenly some of my favourite dishes are vegan and people start telling me the benifits of the dishes I have been eating decades.
Proper Indian food is probably the best food ever. Carnivore, vegetarian, vegan, the staple foods are so adaptable and the flavours are out of this world. If you haven't yet tasted or cooked with paneer, try it, it is the most amazing cheese.
The term goes viral and "suddenly everything is about 'artisanal small batches' or 'deconstructed mouthfeel' for a few months. But sooner or later, the people tasked with creating new content/products for us to purchase take note of the trend and jump on board—oftentimes changing the original meaning of the term in the process," Jessica said, giving an example of how even McDonald's tried to present its coffee as artisanal.
"Sometimes the concepts behind the trendy terms have legs that outlive the co-option of the term itself. Look at the word 'artisanal'—even though this term is sooo played right now, we still actually do really like the idea of small batch, locally sourced, hand-crafted food products. So as the word artisanal becomes meaningless, savvy markers simply find another, similar term to replace it with."
Stop deconstructing my food. Just tell me you were too lazy to present me a completed dish.
One of these days some 5 star restaurant is going to serve deconstructed beef Wellington and they will bring in a live cow.
"Sinful". Any recipe trying to make you feel evil for eating a slice of cake is stupid as hell
The whole idea of 'superfoods' is toxic and reductive. It’s the reason culture gets fixated on singular savior-foods like kale or quinoa and we have to deal with them being in everything for years. No single food should be fetishized like that.
Pie artist Jessica told Bored that she's starting to see the term 'bespoke' replace 'artisanal' in some contexts, including "bespoke waffle bar experience" and "bespoke nachos," referring to "customized, small batch products delivered with a hands-on human touch." Another 'foodie' term gaining popularity is 'upscaled' which refers to "high-end versions of comfort foods, and the practice of making simpler/cheaper ingredients into something fancier."
"This trend is still growing in light of the food price inflation the world is still reeling from after the pandemic, but I have a feeling that the term 'upscale' in the culinary context may be due for a refresh shortly," she shared her thoughts about the future with us.
"As food insecurity continues to be a global concern and we start to see more of a shift towards sustainable sources of nutrition that are easy to grow like fungi, seaweeds, and insect proteins, keep your eyes peeled for a new foodie term to take the place of the less palatable and less sexy 'sustainable' moniker. 'Superfoods' is already taken... I'm curious to see what term will ultimately emerge to blanket this new food trend!"
i cant stand the excessive cost trend...like the $1000 burger or whatever. adding gold leaf and caviar and diamond dust or whatever for no other reason than the "bling" factor is so dumb. gold leaf on pastry i kind of get, but its absolutely pointless in savoury dishes...it has no flavor or nutritional value.
I love when a product label says it's gluten-free, when there's no gluten in it in the first place.
In Europe that means that the food has been made in a completely gluten free isolated factory so people with deadly allergy to gluten can eat it safely knowing that it has not been cross contaminated with it.
Many of the terms featured in this list would be perfectly fine if they weren’t overused to the point of absolute absurdity. If everything’s rustic, clean, and artisanal, then nothing is. Similarly, if every chef uses umami bombs and aioli, those words lose any and all meaning.
Naturally, the terms that foodies use will change over time. New trends are going to pop up, old ones are going to wither (until, inevitably, some of them return with a vengeance). The world of food isn’t all that different from the fashion world in this regard.
Terms rise and fall as new techniques and ingredients rise and fall in popularity. All that the internet asks is that people use them where they’re genuinely applicable, not just to say, well, anything at all.
Can’t stand “artisanal” anymore, I think it’s been used now to describe subway’s “artisanal bread”…yeah right
I've been making stock since I was a teenager. My daughter (who saw me make it often) tried to introduce me to 'bone broth' like it was some new and magical invention.
The redditor’s thread got 6.2k upvotes and really showed the extent to which some folks are tired of some chefs’ pretentious comments. It’d be fair to say that people want to deal with grounded chefs cooking tasty food with quality ingredients, without making everything seem fancier (and more expensive) than it really is. Yes, image matters. But customers want a genuinely good experience, not just the illusion of one.
One of the worst sins any chef can commit is to focus on the presentation and deconstruction of the dishes at the expense of taste. Which reminds us—if you haven’t yet seen director Mark Mylod’s movie ‘The Menu,’ it’s a very fine, well, deconstruction (pardon the pun) of fine dining culture in the modern age.
Sometimes, a tasty cheeseburger is all that’s needed to leave a customer satisfied. It does not need to be rustic. The cheese doesn’t have to be artisanal. And the meat doesn’t have to be described as coming from grass-fed cows. The dish can speak for itself.
*Guilt free* anything, I absolutely hate that. Why associate food with guilt? Just don't eat too much of an unhealthy food
God I hate the whole idea of food porn. Nothing makes me more uncomfortable than someone eating food and making pleasure noises like there's someone feeling them up under the table. Just say it's nice! Don't be weirdly sexual!!
Stuff like za or za's for Pizza, sammy for sandwich, nugs for chicken nuggets, etc. Each time I'm at my sister's and she wants pizza delivered she will say something like "so how bout sum zahs, brah?" and it is one of the most grating things for me. I physically tense up and have to try not to frown.
“Authentic” and “not authentic”. I’m sick and tired of the authenticity police when someone doesn’t use a speciality ingredient found in the Amazon or they don’t have a 1000 year old wok in their kitchen.
I just want authentic food when I travel out of the country. Tourist food sucks; I don't want recipes altered to better appeal to me, I want to taste how it should be.
The word porn in food. Hey guys don't want to turn on TV and have some idiot keep shouting porn in front of my kids.
'Deconstructed'. Next thing you know, you'll have a restaurant charging $40 for a Deconstructed Caesar salad that's just a bowl of lettuce next to a bowl of croutons next to a block of whole Parmesan.
I hate recipes that refer to the food as “crack” or “crack-like”.
Does it make you run around the neighborhood naked while screaming at everyone. Then no it is not crack like.
“Hack” when it’s just a fast food order.
what is that thing in the middle the burrito waffle looking thing??
I can't stand 'hack' when it's literally just an alternative recipe to a popular dish...like 'ramen hack'
I once saw an article where the title was something like "don't have a bread maker? try this amazing bread hack it will change your life" and all it was, was cooking bread from scratch.
Just the exhagerated "omg soooo good" faces people make on their cooking channels after they take the first bite.
Grass fed… like ok I know that in America a lot of cattle are grain fed so it actually means something, but it’s become pervasive in Europe too where almost all cattle are fed outside on grass, like, it means nothing.
Hen’s egg. So many menus with a hen’s egg. Like, if it’s a f*****g duck egg, or a quail egg, just say that, but if you just say egg I think we’ll get which damned bird it’s coming from.
GGGGRRWWAAARAARRRRRGGGGHHHH
We'd know it was a chicken, sure, but as an interesting side note, I once saw a post about historical details that have been lost because they seemed so obvious to contemporary people that no one ever bothered to write them down, and someone pointed out that a few thousand years in the future, archeologists studying our recipes might be totally unsure what kind of egg we were using. They all just say 'egg,' because everyone knows it's a chicken egg, right? The Romans thought the same thing about their concrete formula, and it only took us a few thousand years to work that out.
The hipster convention of naming a restaurant two random, unrelated nouns, (e.g. Wrench & Rodent Seabastropub.)
Was this not a thing for generations already? I thought its was because years ago many pub patrons could not read so the pubs would a picture, often and animal with an object as their sign ie "Fox and Fiddle"' or "Elephant and Castle". Or have i been lied to?
'Handhelds'. They're talking about sandwiches like they're a Game Boy. It's so weird.
'Umami bomb'. So many TV chefs and YouTube personalities use this term. You know, like 'I’m gonna drop an umami bomb and add some miso to this...'
"Crack". Every recipe on Pinterest: 'Tuna Casserole Crack!! My kids can't get enough!!!!'"
If you’re subjecting your children to crack, someone needs to call CPS, like yesterday. Perhaps you should pick a word that doesn’t mean a substance that tears people to pieces on a daily basis and causes untold suffering in society? And if you won’t, you can always switch it up; “Casserole heroin! My kids will pull a blade on grandma to secure a fix!” …Look - just pick another word, yeah?
Aioli. Stop calling anything with a glop of mayo in it aioli.
Well, Aioli (or all i oli) is a condiment (Egypth origin severral centuries ago and present in several mediterranean region also,) condiment made with olive oil, garlic and salt that may look like mayo, but it tastes nothing like it. I mean, it's an actual thing and you would not use it for the same things as mayo. And definitively you would not use it to derscribe flavoured mayo variations. Thats just like calling a chine style fried rice Paella. It makes no sense.
'Better-than-takeout'. Of course the burger you spent $30 and four hours on is better than the Big Mac they slap together for $4.
Ya and nee. I stopped with takeouts because my food is definitely better than takeouts, and way healthier.
I have two: the entirety of “Thug Kitchen” (my sister got me the cookbook as a gift, very thoughtful but the whole book is cringe) and “better than sex”. Ma’am if that chocolate cake is better than sex I am concerned your needs are not being met.
*Edit* I am fully aware asexual people exist, I apologize if this joke came off as insensitive.
'Nom' and 'yummy' are both VERY high on my list of words that make my body retract into itself. I have no defense for this, but it absolutely is nails on the chalkboard for me.
I hate it when people say or type “chef’s kiss”, especially with emojis. It triggers irrational anger and annoyance in me.
Farm to table. If you grew up on a farm this will set your hair on fire!
Maybe it's more of a trend than a term but it feels like it's just a turn of phrase to me where now everything is a god damned "bowl". Noodle bowl, burrito bowl, etc. It's a damn bowl of noodles and I could put that "burrito bowl" on a plate and it would be a taco salad. Just give me some damned stir-fry not an "asian bowl".
never got that whole bowl thing, its just a salad with some extras. bowl just adds 2-5 € to the price
That trend where people called stock "bone broth" for a while.
Stock can be vegetable stock as well. It's not a trend, it's being accurate.
I'm a sous chef at a local restaurant that has various 'aiolis' on the menu. What we've found is that you can put chipotle mayo on a menu and it'll do OK...call it aioli, though, and suddenly it's 'high class' and people want it on everything.
I’ll add _protein(s)_ _crisp up_, _mouthfeel_, _food porn_ and anything to do with orgasms or sexual pleasure_.
What's so wrong with the term protein? If you want more specificity in what protein is used then I can understand it.
These food porn sandwiches that have an entire chicken worth of fried cutlets and a full jar of sauce dripping over it with 100 slices of melted cheese all on a roll. First comment is an emoji with heart eyes and “I must have this in my life”.
'Clean' is a big one for me. I follow a few weight-loss motivation groups, including a couple of fitness-focused ones. I freaking hate when someone describes their diet as 'clean-eating.' It literally tells me nothing about what they're eating..." In bodybuilding/CrossFit groups, 'clean eating' seems to be ingrained into their lexicon. I can't stand it.
It is another name for eating the same thing all the time and splurging is eating two teaspoons of peanut butter once a month.
I love the idea of a gastropub. A place that serves high-quality pub grub with great service and a nice atmosphere is super appealing to me! Too bad most 'gastropubs' serve the same junk you can get anywhere...just on a square plate with truffle oil on the top.
Unctuous. It doesn't mean what people think it means. It used to be pejorative.
1. (of a person) excessively or ingratiatingly flattering; oily.
2. (chiefly of minerals) having a greasy or soapy feel.
The word comes from the French « onctueux » that means savory, suave, sleek, tasty. That’s a culinary reference to one of the best gastronomy in the world, not an excerpt from the dictionary. This word in this context means exactly what these people think it means. They just know better than you.
Restaurants that refer to themselves as an “eatery” annoys me for no reason
An ex back in the day couldn't stop raving about their Grandma's 'Dump Soup,' and could hardly wait for the day that I'd finally try it. Just the name alone turned me off to ever wanting to experience it
Doesn’t that mean just throwing all your leftovers into a pot and hope it tastes good.
Ordering off of the 'secret menu' isn't a hack — you're just customizing a hamburger.
I really like the idea of an actual secret menu -- one that the employees came up with and only tell their favorite customers about, or only have at their specific location, which has actual unique stuff (so not, say, the In-N-Out secret menu). We did this at one place I worked, and it was a lot of fun. I'm also moderately into the starbucks "secret menu" and hate when baristas complain about it. So long as they have the recipe on their phone, none of those drinks are hard to make. Just say you hate customers and go.
Ooey-gooey. Every time I hear that phrase I want to vomit
Decadent. Giada said it like 14 thousand times in one freaking video once.
Many of these are what I think of as "magazine speak." You know, like when you read an article in a fashion magazine or something and think "no human person has ever talked like this"? I accept and tune out a certain level of that around food, because it often is coming from a magazine, or a blog post, or a cooking show. I don't expect people in those scenarios to talk normally.
I think in today's world you should call it influencer speak
Load More Replies...While I think it is okay for an individual to occasionally use a but of poetic license when getting excited about food, there are many little phrases that lose their meaning quickly when repeated so much.
All of these were a; complete news to me (I’m a Swede, I seem blessedly spared from any of this - we’re pragmatists and we know our food can’t compete with anything anyway so we rarely make it a lifestyle), b; thoroughly confusing and c; slightly unhinged. I think I commented on every single post, I’m completely lost. “Rustic” food? “Crack”? “Mouthfeel”?! I couldn’t stop reading but now I kind of wish I had. And here I am, viewing food as unfortunately necessary as fuel for the meatbag my brain use as a transportation system. I eat, but it’s not exactly a hobby. People are different, but it makes it even harder to understand all these food related shenanigans.
One that really bothers me is "to perfection". Like "grilled to perfection" or "toasted to perfection". There's a sandwich place that I used to frequent that had "toasted to perfection" at the end of literally every panini description on their menu. Come on guys, get a thesaurus
One that also really bothers me isn't a word trend, but a video trend where people shove the food at the camera then squeeze it and make all the fillings come out. It's so reminiscent of what happens after digestion that it immediately makes me never want to eat that food ever.
Load More Replies...I'm not sure, but I think life changing should be on here. That might be wrong, though
Not necessarily foodie, but as someone who struggles with IBS (irritable, not inflammatory) on a daily basis, my intestines physically cringe when I hear someone say they could survive on meat alone because they love it so much (too much meat severely f***s up my digestion).
I hate brightly coloured stuff. The whole "rainbow" trend. Ugh. I even refuse to add food colouring to the red velvet cake - it's completely necessary and over the top. I saw a cheese toast coloured in like four bright colours and it just looked disgusting. Not like something I'd wanna put in my mouth.
Quick note: I know no one who uses these terms unless being sarcastic. (US)
I've become irrationally annoyed by "melty". Every sandwich & burger ad talks about "melty cheese". Drives me nuts & I'm not sure why.
When I was in America last month I saw a restaurant calling itself a "scratch kitchen," Made me vow never ever to go to a scratch kitchen ever. Just sounds dirty. PS I do love a bit of mouthfeel. I don't drop it into conversation but as someone who struggles to eat, sometimes it's the easiest way to express why I love certain foods and my husband doesn't question it. I've always used it though.
"Farm to table" is information, indication that the food is nor from a factory, didn't arrive pre-made and frozen, then get warmed up in the kitchen. Bone broth is not the same as stock. Bone broth is boiled for an extreme length of time to extract nutrients from the bones. Stock or just broth do mean the same, and might not contain any bones at all. They are often several food items boiled together for a shorter period of time, perhaps an hour, not hours like bone broth.
Descriptive words and foods come and go with fashion trends, artisan, rustic, homely, deconstructed, all arrive and leave as people become familiar with them. Once a word becomes part of the general publics lexicon then the trendy sorts ditch it and have to find a new one, y’know the sort, the ones who liked The Beatles before they were famous, they only listen to reel to reel recordings of their Hamburg gigs? Decent food is most often found at the unassuming little soul food cafe that doesn’t shout about the 85 year roasted duckling wings that have been tended to by a monk who has taken a vow of silence so he doesn’t disturb the energy inside the oven, they just make solid and tasty food that’ll stick to your ribs, go there and enjoy some soul food, it’s been called that for decades, it’s not trendy or cutting edge, it’s just bloody good, go and find it!
One for me is things like "Vegan chicken" or "plant based beef" and like, I do get the marketing I guess, if you are trying to switch people from eating meat. But it still irks me. Especially when there are so many really good vegetarian/vegan dishes out there. You don't need to eat these super marketed over priced products to be meat free and eat healthy. And I'm sure Vegan's don't want to be eating something called chicken even if it isn't chicken. I know I wouldn't.
This really grates on me `meat free chicken pasties` or `meat free beef burgers`. If it's not chicken pasties or a beef burger, why does it have chicken and beef on the label. If this was anything else but vegetarian food, trading standards would be all over it for false advertising. And why are vegetarian not concerned that food manufacturers are not willing to name the mystery stuff their burgers are made from. If there were any green leafy veg,carrot, etc in it, I'm sure they would be shouting that from the hill tops.
Load More Replies...Many of these are what I think of as "magazine speak." You know, like when you read an article in a fashion magazine or something and think "no human person has ever talked like this"? I accept and tune out a certain level of that around food, because it often is coming from a magazine, or a blog post, or a cooking show. I don't expect people in those scenarios to talk normally.
I think in today's world you should call it influencer speak
Load More Replies...While I think it is okay for an individual to occasionally use a but of poetic license when getting excited about food, there are many little phrases that lose their meaning quickly when repeated so much.
All of these were a; complete news to me (I’m a Swede, I seem blessedly spared from any of this - we’re pragmatists and we know our food can’t compete with anything anyway so we rarely make it a lifestyle), b; thoroughly confusing and c; slightly unhinged. I think I commented on every single post, I’m completely lost. “Rustic” food? “Crack”? “Mouthfeel”?! I couldn’t stop reading but now I kind of wish I had. And here I am, viewing food as unfortunately necessary as fuel for the meatbag my brain use as a transportation system. I eat, but it’s not exactly a hobby. People are different, but it makes it even harder to understand all these food related shenanigans.
One that really bothers me is "to perfection". Like "grilled to perfection" or "toasted to perfection". There's a sandwich place that I used to frequent that had "toasted to perfection" at the end of literally every panini description on their menu. Come on guys, get a thesaurus
One that also really bothers me isn't a word trend, but a video trend where people shove the food at the camera then squeeze it and make all the fillings come out. It's so reminiscent of what happens after digestion that it immediately makes me never want to eat that food ever.
Load More Replies...I'm not sure, but I think life changing should be on here. That might be wrong, though
Not necessarily foodie, but as someone who struggles with IBS (irritable, not inflammatory) on a daily basis, my intestines physically cringe when I hear someone say they could survive on meat alone because they love it so much (too much meat severely f***s up my digestion).
I hate brightly coloured stuff. The whole "rainbow" trend. Ugh. I even refuse to add food colouring to the red velvet cake - it's completely necessary and over the top. I saw a cheese toast coloured in like four bright colours and it just looked disgusting. Not like something I'd wanna put in my mouth.
Quick note: I know no one who uses these terms unless being sarcastic. (US)
I've become irrationally annoyed by "melty". Every sandwich & burger ad talks about "melty cheese". Drives me nuts & I'm not sure why.
When I was in America last month I saw a restaurant calling itself a "scratch kitchen," Made me vow never ever to go to a scratch kitchen ever. Just sounds dirty. PS I do love a bit of mouthfeel. I don't drop it into conversation but as someone who struggles to eat, sometimes it's the easiest way to express why I love certain foods and my husband doesn't question it. I've always used it though.
"Farm to table" is information, indication that the food is nor from a factory, didn't arrive pre-made and frozen, then get warmed up in the kitchen. Bone broth is not the same as stock. Bone broth is boiled for an extreme length of time to extract nutrients from the bones. Stock or just broth do mean the same, and might not contain any bones at all. They are often several food items boiled together for a shorter period of time, perhaps an hour, not hours like bone broth.
Descriptive words and foods come and go with fashion trends, artisan, rustic, homely, deconstructed, all arrive and leave as people become familiar with them. Once a word becomes part of the general publics lexicon then the trendy sorts ditch it and have to find a new one, y’know the sort, the ones who liked The Beatles before they were famous, they only listen to reel to reel recordings of their Hamburg gigs? Decent food is most often found at the unassuming little soul food cafe that doesn’t shout about the 85 year roasted duckling wings that have been tended to by a monk who has taken a vow of silence so he doesn’t disturb the energy inside the oven, they just make solid and tasty food that’ll stick to your ribs, go there and enjoy some soul food, it’s been called that for decades, it’s not trendy or cutting edge, it’s just bloody good, go and find it!
One for me is things like "Vegan chicken" or "plant based beef" and like, I do get the marketing I guess, if you are trying to switch people from eating meat. But it still irks me. Especially when there are so many really good vegetarian/vegan dishes out there. You don't need to eat these super marketed over priced products to be meat free and eat healthy. And I'm sure Vegan's don't want to be eating something called chicken even if it isn't chicken. I know I wouldn't.
This really grates on me `meat free chicken pasties` or `meat free beef burgers`. If it's not chicken pasties or a beef burger, why does it have chicken and beef on the label. If this was anything else but vegetarian food, trading standards would be all over it for false advertising. And why are vegetarian not concerned that food manufacturers are not willing to name the mystery stuff their burgers are made from. If there were any green leafy veg,carrot, etc in it, I'm sure they would be shouting that from the hill tops.
Load More Replies...