Posted by Alumni from The Atlantic
December 27, 2025
How do you measure a year' In cups of coffee, yes, but also in the rushed early-morning breakfasts, the many trips to the grocery store, the slow dinners spent with friends. Each tells a story of how we filled our days. Some of this year's food preferences reflect how Americans' lives have changed. As my colleague Yasmin Tayag explained in May, diners serving the classic American breakfast'eggs, potatoes, and coffee'were once a staple of affordability. Now, as supply shortages and tariffs affect these foods, stepping out for breakfast 'can require a level of budgeting once reserved for fancy brunch.' It's not just prices that have changed; so, too, have Americans' taste preferences. In August, Ellen Cushing wrote about how food is becoming spicier. More than half of American consumers are likely to buy an item described as spicy'up from 39 percent in 2015, she reported. Then there are the fried-chicken sandwiches. Consumption has increased 19 percent at American restaurants,... learn more