Image Credit Meyer Jabara Hotels

Mobile ordering and delivery apps are making it too convenient for people to order meals in vs. going out to eat; To bring diners back it takes the right concepts, menus, ingredients, portion sizes, local flavors, and more

The most successful hotel restaurants are ones that strike a balance between personal taste and perceived value. As a consumer myself, I am sometimes guilty of dining out and thinking: “I could have made this dish better myself at home,” or “At these prices, this meal better be worth it.

The problem with this way of thinking is that people are replacing FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) with JOMO (Joy of Missing Out). That consumer mindset can be detrimental to a restaurant’s reputation and its bottom line. When I find myself questioning my dining choices, I put on my corporate director of F&B hat and try to identify the root of the problem. “What is this restaurant doing wrong? Is it the concept? The menu? The ingredients? The portion sizes? The lack of local flavor?

Here are 5 trends that chefs and F&B directors can embrace to help put joy back into the on-site restaurant experience or JODO (Joy of Dining Out):

  1. Crave-Worthy Menus: During the pandemic, people got creative and cooked their meals at home based on available ingredients and smaller budgets. To get them comfortable with dining out again, it will take a strong, often urgent desire for a specific food that quenches a taste or brings emotional satisfaction. Recalling childhood recipes and researching new spices to enhance menu items are wonderful places to start. Specialty toppings for salads. Gourmet chili dogs. Oversized chocolate bars. Giant cannoli. Bacon and cheddar biscuits drizzled with honey. Creating crave-worthy menus by elevating comfort foods is an uncomplicated way to tug at the heartstrings and get people excited again to go out to eat.
  1. Smaller Portions: People do not eat like they used to. Health conscious travelers (along with high-spending Millennials and Gen-Z consumers) do not get excited over big, unsanitary buffets with a lot of hands touching food items. They appreciate smaller portion sizes and sharing plates that allow them to sample more without eating more. Not only is this better for the restaurant’s bottom line, but it aids in the hotel’s sustainability efforts. Whenever there is food left over (especially from a large banquet), be good stewards in the neighborhood and donate remaining provisions to the local food bank.
  1. Local Flavors: Like it or not, if you are located in Maryland, you must have a mouth-watering crabcake on the menu. You may be tired of serving it, but travelers sought your restaurant out because they had a craving for that staple of the state, especially when the popular menu item is prepared with jumbo lump crab meat. Experiencing local flavors are important to travelers, but it does not have to be the same old thing. Variations exist to staple menu items, such as serving crabcakes Carolina style which have more breadcrumbs and are pan fried. Or, have fun with fusion. Add Old Bay spice to shrimp tacos or a pineapple slaw and rim margaritas with new flavors, such as Tajin. You cannot go wrong adding items to the menu that people came to your region for, like a crab and corn chowder with a sour dough bread bowl. It may seem overindulgent, but it’s flavorful and packed with pizzazz. 
  1. Coffee Experiences: Coffee is not just a beverage — it’s a strategic F&B pillar that drives revenue, enhances brand perception, and caters to evolving guest expectations. In 2025, properties that treat coffee as part of their guest experience design, rather than just a utility, are gaining a competitive edge. Coffee can drive all-day revenue (from morning service to afternoon pick-me-ups and even late-night specialty drinks). It improves guest satisfaction scores and loyalty, especially among Millennials and Gen Z travelers; adds differentiation in the market; and can pair with food or dessert items, creating upselling opportunities at breakfast, brunch, and in-room service. Coffee concepts can also work across multiple outlets—room service, lobby cafés, grab-and-go stations, meeting spaces, and events.
  1. Smoke ‘Em If You Got ‘Em: Infusing drinks with aromatic smoke is a popular trend in hotels for its presentation capabilities and sensory experience. Smoking adds unique flavor profiles (oak, cherrywood, mesquite) and allows beverage teams to reinterpret classic cocktails like Old Fashioneds or Manhattans that can become branded menu highlights and customer favorites. Smoke also engages sight, smell, and taste. The visual reveal and aromatic impact of a smoked beverage leaves a lasting impression. It creates a dramatic, memorable moment, especially when prepared tableside or bar-side. On a social level, smokey drinks are highly photogenic, increasing the chances guests will share their experience online. They often command premium pricing due to the visual drama and craftsmanship; guests are more likely to splurge on a $20+ drink if it feels experiential, and even consumers with JOMO (Joy of Missing Out) will find it fun to venture out and take selfies with the smoking concoction to share with their friends.

Boutique hotels and upscale lounges especially benefit from smoked cocktails because they project a sense of innovation, mindfulness, and luxury. They align with the current “experiential luxury” trend—offering more than just food and drink, but an atmosphere and feeling. Finally, smoking cocktails, cheeses, and even charcuterie items with a variety of woods, herbs (like rosemary or sage), teas, or spices, giving bartenders and wait staff creative flexibility and allowing for seasonal or local customization, which fits perfectly into themed menus or regional F&B programming.

The F&B industry is evolving faster than ever, and the businesses that thrive will be the ones that embrace change, not resist it. Today’s diners are not just buying a meal; they want a story, a vibe, a memory. Static operations risk becoming irrelevant if they do not evolve to meet those expectations.

Adaptability = profitability. The most successful F&B operators do not just chase trends — they anticipate them, test ideas quickly, and stay emotionally connected to their guests. Embracing change is not a risk; it’s a growth strategy.

About the Author

Guy Reinbold is Corporate Director of Food and Beverage for Meyer Jabara Hotels, an award-winning hospitality company owning and operating 45 hotels and 36 food-and-beverage outlets in 20 states across the United States. The company strives to create success for all it serves. For more information on Meyer Jabara Hotels, visit www.meyerjabarahotels.com.

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