Consumer Trends

Want your LTO to work? Include apples, bacon or steak

These are the ingredients, flavors and menu items that consumers find the most appealing in limited-time offers, according to Technomic.
diners looking at menu
Consumers really like apple-flavored menu items, but they also like bacon and steak. / Image courtesy of Shutterstock

As labor and supply challenges continue to push operators to streamline menus, limited-time offers remain a platform for showcasing innovation.

Over the last five years, LTOs increased 31% on chain menus, according to Technomic research presented at last week’s Menu Directions conference at University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. Although LTOs reached their peak in 2021 during the pandemic, counts remained robust through mid-2022, and Technomic forecasts the numbers to surpass pre-pandemic levels this year.

But not all limited-time offers are created equal, Technomic’s menu experts Lizzy Freier and Katie Belflower told the operators and chefs in the audience. When consumers rate LTOs as to how likely they would be to purchase that menu item, certain ingredients, flavors and cooking styles rise to the top.

Apple desserts, for example. Of those limited-time offers that recently landed in the Top 10 for high purchase intent, apple desserts claimed three spots. Denny’s Caramel Apple Pie Crisp and O’Charley’s Apple Cobbler appealed respectively to 64% and 62% of those surveyed.  

Consumers rank LTOs by their menu name and description only; they never see or taste the food. But apple is the most appealing flavor for pies and cobblers.

Bacon also gets high marks in savory items, with respondents finding Bacon Cheeseburger Sliders and a Chicken BLT very appealing. And steak was singled out in three top menu items: a Tenderloin Steak Sandwich at the Habit Burger Grill, a 14-ounce Choice Porterhouse Steak Dinner at Black Bear Diner and a Philly Steak and Cheese Sandwich at Shoney’s. The presenters noted that 56% of consumers eat steak at least once every couple of weeks.

Technomic also measures an LTO for its draw (which can translate to incremental traffic) and its craveability (which translates to incremental sales).

Seafood items score high for draw. Consumers gravitate toward restaurant seafood dishes because they shy away from cooking them at home, and 36% order seafood once a week or more from foodservice. Seafood crosses meal occasions, too—Crabcake Eggs Benedict, Lobster Thermidor and a Crab and Cheddar Quiche were all favorites.

Satisfying a craving is the leading “need state” for selecting a restaurant, with over one-third of consumers saying it was their primary reason in a recent Technomic survey.

So which LTOs did they find most craveable? Those items that scored the highest tended to be comforting, indulgent foods. A Chocolate Peanut Butter Drop from Perkins (76%), Shrimp and Grits at First Watch (75%), New York Strip Steak with Marinated Mushrooms at Hard Rock Café (74%) and Short Rib Fried Rice from P.F. Chang’s (73%) were four of the top 10.

Not all diners think alike

Freier and Belflower also pointed out that trends vary by generation and gender.

Gen Z, for instance, goes for Tex-Mex items, carb-loaded foods like fries and mac ‘n cheese, and dessert-breakfast mashups. Forty-eight percent gave high marks to the Apple Pie Stuffed French Toast at Silver Diner (there is that apple dessert again!).

Millennials, on the other hand, are steak eaters, singling out a NY strip steak flight from Perry’s and an oversized porterhouse steak at Black Bear Diner. This age group has more disposable income than Gen Z and seems to like heartier items. They also ranked breakfast platters and chicken and bacon sandwiches high.

While Gen X also goes for generous portions (surf and turf entrees and big sandwiches, for example), they also prefer veggie dishes like fried mushrooms and street corn. And Baby Boomers go for dishes that focus on seafood, fruit and sweeter flavors.

It’s no great surprise that male diners are meat eaters. Items with the words “bacon,” “steak” and “meat” in their names or descriptions were particularly appealing. And pairing bacon with cheese can push up the scores even more.

Operators who think women are all about salads and healthy options, think again. According to Technomic, P.J. Whelihan’s Chocolate Chip Cookie Riffs captured the fancy of 65% of female consumers, and 63% ranked Denny’s Signature Pancookie up there.

Berry breakfasts and twists on chicken salad also scored high. The latter included a Chicken Fajita Salad from Paris Baguette, popular with 62% of female respondents.

Trends to watch

Looking ahead, Freier and Belflower used Technomic’s predictive analytics program to forecast future trends. One of the most interesting findings: 28% of consumers are more open to experimentation since the pandemic started.

In the next two years, operators can expect these trends to continue or grow, according to the data:

• Plant-based alternatives (cheese, pork, beef, oat milk, cauliflower rice, almond milk, poultry, in that order)

• Hot and spicy (habanero marinade, Nashville hot, honey hot, chamoy, peri-peri sauce, mango-habanero sauce)

• Global sauces, condiments and spices (aillade, pil-pil, tapenade, urfa biber, lemon grass marinade, Asian ginger sauce, adobo sauce and cilantro-lime aioli, as well as several in the hot and spicy list above)

When experimenting with these trends, keep in mind that 42% of consumers are more likely to try a new or unique flavor from a restaurant than when cooking at home, Technomic found.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Why population trends may help, and hurt, restaurants

The Bottom Line: Darden CEO Rick Cardenas told investors this week that demographic trends are shifting in restaurants’ favor. But some demographic trends will be a headwind.

Financing

TGI Friday's closures continue the bar & grill sector's long decline

The Bottom Line: The chain has been struggling in the U.S. for years as domestic consumers shift spending away from traditional bar & grill chains.

Financing

How many Boston Market locations are left? That's a good question

The fast-casual chain appears to have closed at least one-third of its restaurants in 2023, and likely many more as years of decline become a freefall. But how many it has remains a mystery.

Trending

More from our partners