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    Home»Business»From commodity to cultural catalyst: Fruit’s reinvention
    Business

    From commodity to cultural catalyst: Fruit’s reinvention

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJune 13, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    When you’ve worked in the food industry for as long as I have, you start to recognize when an ingredient stops being a supporting actor and becomes the main character.

    That’s what’s happening right now with fruit.

    We’ve watched pineapple slices top upside-down cakes, fruit bowls land in lunchboxes, smoothies take over breakfast, and acai bowls become social currency. But what we’re seeing now feels different. Fruit isn’t just part of the conversation, it’s shaping it.

    That’s why we dug into this further by analyzing cultural signals, social listening, and category data to create our inaugural trend forecast, Fruit Fwd: Fruit, Flavor and the 2026 Feed. The through line? Consumers are looking for more flavor, flexibility, function, and fun. Fruit is at the intersection of all four.

    THE 4-F’S ARE NO LONGER SEPARATE CONVERSATIONS

    Consumers aren’t thinking in neat categories saying, “Now I want something decadent,” and later, “Now I want something nutritious.” They want both, sometimes in the same bite.

    That’s why tropical flavors are surging. Fruits like guava, passionfruit, dragon fruit, and pineapple offer a sensory escape as flavor exploration becomes mainstream, especially for younger consumers. In fact, over a third of people surveyed in Australia and Asia enjoy trying unfamiliar flavors, proving what consumers are really chasing is an experience.

    Fruit is both adventurous and familiar. It can take more indulgent forms yet is inherently good for you. Packed with widely known benefits, fruit really is that ingredient that can stretch along the spectrum, meeting a variety of moments and needs for all kinds of occasions and preferences.

    Fruit becomes an anchor in this new architecture of eating. It pairs easily. It can travel well. It satisfies visually and nutritionally.

    With snacking, consumers want their favorite treats, but they are more aware of what they eat and actively seek options they can feel good about. In fact, 90% of Gen Z and millennials crave bold unconventional tastes like mango, papaya, and passion fruit.

    ON-DEMAND FOOD AND DRINK SHAPES DINING EXPERIENCES

    Traditional mealtimes, serving sizes, and overall food routines are changing. Smaller, more flexible eating moments are redefining how people satisfy cravings and balance wellness. “Girl dinner,” snack plates with fruit as a nutritious anchor, and mix-and-match mini meals aren’t fads, they’re reflections of how people actually live. In fact, more than half (55%) of consumers say they replace meals with snacks when pressed for time, and 75% view snacking as a critical daily moment of joy.

    And those moments aren’t just about what people eat, but about what they sip alongside it.

    As eating becomes more fluid throughout the day, beverages are evolving in parallel. Tropical beverage introductions have jumped 98% in the past three years. What’s driving that growth is flavor plus format. Fruit has moved from garnish to headline as consumers seek drinks that feel premium, photogenic, and easy to tailor to their tastes.

    That shift is especially visible in the rise of mocktail culture. Our internal research found that social conversation around mocktails alone has surged by a factor of 200 recently, with dirty sodas, refreshers, and zero-proof cocktails gaining traction as consumers experiment with more personalized drink rituals. Long-held beverage loyalties are fading, replaced by curiosity and customization.

    CULTURE IS THE NEW TEST KITCHEN

    I’m seeing today’s menu being shaped as much by social media as by Michelin Star chefs. Social rituals influence what we crave. Creative that makes you pause drives discovery. Emotional relevance drives repeat purchase.

    Fruit has a clear advantage in this environment because it’s naturally versatile. It can be nostalgic or global. Functional or indulgent. Minimal or maximal. It’s one of the few ingredients that crosses every part of the day and demographic with ease and contextual relevance.

    Another cultural phenomenon is seeking indulgences in the form of a little moment of joy, also called treatonomics. More than half of Gen Z indulges in small “little treats” at least once a week. Not extravagances, but little acts of self-care. A frozen fruit dessert at the end of a long day. A vibrant smoothie. A tropical fruit snack that feels like a mini escape. These are emotional resets and treats.

    In uncertain economic cycles, small luxuries scale. And fruit delivers indulgence with built-in permission.

    WHERE TRENDS INTERSECT

    When you zoom out, the picture is clear.

    Flavor exploration fuels discovery. Discovery drives demand for new formats. And all of it is accelerated by social influence and emotional pull. These trends operate as an ecosystem.

    Fruit fits naturally within that ecosystem because it evolves without losing its core identity. It’s grounded in something timeless—real, recognizable food—yet it’s flexible enough to show up in new formats, flavors, and rituals.

    The brands driving and defining what’s next in 2026 will recognize how flavor, format, culture, and emotion continuously reinforce one another.

    Mike Secor is VP of marketing at Dole Packaged Foods U.S.



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