These Global Beverage Trends Are Dominating The Restaurant Industry
Del Taco's Mini Shake with Peach Popping Pearls

These Global Beverage Trends Are Dominating The Restaurant Industry

Restaurants are bringing their own spin to nonalcoholic drinks like boba, matcha and horchata

Nancy Kruse | Aug 06, 2021

The global pantry has long provided a reliable wellspring of inspiration for chefs, who have adapted and adopted international flavors with dishes that nod to their source while luring patrons to try something new. Current menu exemplars include Elote Mexican street corn hash with chipotle crema, which is a limited-time-only offer at daytime cafe chain First Watch, and Kung Pao noodles with crispy lobster tossed in a sweet and spicy soy-ginger sauce, which is on the permanent menu at seafood powerhouse Red Lobster.

Relatively less attention has been paid to beverage offerings. Sure, bartenders have been quick to experiment with imported spirits, beers and wines and to concoct creative cocktails, but the nonalcoholic side has been a relative nonstarter. There are signs, however, that this is starting to change.

Bubbles are bursting. Boba, or bubble tea, is a Taiwanese import in which the tea is served with distinctive black tapioca pearls. Previously the province of bubble tea cafes, the bubbles have been popping up all over of late. Del Taco opened the flood gates in June 2020 with a Sprite Poppers promotion, in which mango or cherry boba were added as toppers to the beverage. It proved so popular that the chain came back for seconds this spring with limited-time Mini Shake Poppers and lemonade Poppers. This time around, the popping pearls were blueberry and peach-flavored.

Numerous operators have since taken the plunge. In May, Caribou Coffee added a trio of teas to cool the sizzling summer. The raspberry green tea, matcha tea cooler and sparkling green tea lemonade come with coconut-coffee jelly bubbles. Sonic Drive-In got summer off to a sweet start with Bursting Bubbles that launched in May and ran until August 1. Featured in the Blue Burst Slush and the Cherry Burst Slush, the green-apple-flavored orbs could also be added to any cold drink

Dunkin’ rolled out its own Popping Bubbles in late June with a punning press release referring to “pop culture” and inviting patrons to step out of their “personal bubbles” to test-drive the new strawberry-flavored bursting bubbles that can paired with any iced or frozen beverage. What’s more, they’re served with an extra wide pink-and-orange paper straw made specifically to enhance the sipping experience. And in a variation on the theme, Shake Shack’s Cherry Pop Shake marries vanilla cola-flavored frozen custard with Amarena cherry and popping candy and is available until October.

Easy being green. Matcha, a powder made from finely ground green tea leaves, is touted for its nutritional properties. It also offers ready compatibility with a range of other ingredients. Caribou’s Matcha Tea Cooler is blended simply with vanilla and half and half and shake mix, while Nectar Juice Bar pumps up the protein with the pineapple matcha smoothie made with cashew milk, vanilla protein, and agave nectar.

The blueberry matcha latte, a springtime special at Dunkin’, offered patrons their choice of milk, serving size and serving format, from hot to iced to frozen. At the same time, Peet’s Coffee’s mint matcha blended iced beverage blended green tea with milk and peppermint, an appropriate quaff for St. Patrick’s Day. 

Rice is nice. Rice-based horchata, popular throughout Mexico and Guatemala, combines rice soaked in water that is strained and mixed with cinnamon and vanilla. On menus here it’s being incorporated in coffees, like Peet’s horchata cold brew oat latte or Starbucks’ Almondmilk Horchata Frappuccino. 

Horchata makes a satisfying smoothie, too. Jamba Juice’s Lotta Horchata combines unsweetened almond milk, fat free vanilla frozen yogurt and cold brew coffee with honey and cinnamon. Juice It Up offered a version that combined almond milk and nonfat yogurt with dates, banana, cinnamon and chia seeds. Adding some sweetness is Del Taco’s current Oreo cookie horchata shake made with the titular cookie pieces and horchata syrup in the chain’s cult favorite vanilla shake.

Looking ahead, we’ll see more beverage-and-food mashups like Dunkin’s matcha-glazed doughnut LTO earlier in the year. Voodoo Doughnuts based in Portland, Ore., leverages its dough expertise in unexpected delights like the cannolo stuffed with matcha cream this spring and the doughnut filled with horchata-flavored custard this summer. And Kung Fu Tea, an international chain with units throughout the U.S., is running a Hot Boba Summer promotion featuring Mango Creamsicle Boba Tea, the ultimate East-meets-West, old school-meets-new school hot weather refresher.


Tiffany Kent, CFP®

Managing Partner @ Wealth Engagement | CFP®| Goldman Sachs Demystifying financial planning and investing | Empowering women to be financially confident

3y

Nancy Kruse when we were in NYC this summer everyone around us was drinking the bubble tea. do you know where we can try it here in Atlanta? Thanks!!

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Kim Perrotta

"FRANCHISEE Advocate, Tried, True, and Trusted. Honest Adviser", "Wisdom & Experience" - By referral only. Hard Truth.

3y

Thank you Nancy, great article. I remember a time when there were only 4 heads on the soda machine and coffee! Small was small, Medium was medium, and Large was large. Now Medium is "Regular" and Large is followed by 32-50 OZ! Today's choices are endless and generally delicious. One machine provides for 127 choices! Beverage trends as you so aptly mention are more like drinks at a Bar/Lounge. Endless combinations, handcrafted, etc.

Manuj Aggarwal

Top Voice in AI | CIO at TetraNoodle | Proven & Personalized Business Growth With AI | AI keynote speaker | 4x patents in AI/ML | 2x author | Travel lover ✈️

3y

Global beverage trends are dominating the restaurant industry. In the past decade, restaurants have evolved on their menus and beverages. From cocktail cultures to coffee houses and tap water wars, each region brings different eating habits, which are now influencing businesses across the globe. Global beverage trends are dominating the restaurant industry. In the past decade, restaurants have evolved on their menus and beverages. From cocktail cultures to coffee houses and tap water wars, each region brings different eating habits, which are now influencing businesses across the globe. Nancy Kruse amazing post.

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