Tech

Seattle website knows what you're eating

Allrecipes.com says people want healthier foods, more South American and Japaneses dishes, and pies.

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Ronald Holden

Allrecipes.com says people want healthier foods, more South American and Japaneses dishes, and pies.

Allrecipes.com, founded here 14 years ago, is now part of  Readers Digest but is still headquartered in Seattle, overlooking  Westlake Park. The site received 435 million visitors in 2010, so they  know something about what America wants for dinner.

Less processed food, more fruit and vegetables, for beginners. More  South American and Japanese recipes, for another. Less meat in general.  More pies. The biggest trend: more frequent neighborhood shopping at  local bakeries, farmers markets, fruit stands, and wine and butcher shops.

Now, you could say these are self-fulfilling prophecies, that the home chefs with the inclination to use the internet to look up recipes  are more savvy than most, and that trends like "eating healthier" are  really nothing new. But it's hard to argue with the data provided by 435  million visits. Says the latest Allrecipes newsletter: "In October  2010, 71 million cooks (1/3 of all internet users 18+ years of age)  visited food sites, consuming 1.2 billion pages of content." Recipe  sites are said to be the fourth-most frequented internet category, after  porn, search and social media. Allrecipes ranks in the top 500 websites  worldwide, and saw a 38 percent spike in use in the past three months.

So you better believe it when the stats tell you "that even with all  that baking going on, the majority of consumers are not making their (pie) crusts from scratch but buying them from the grocery store fridge  or freezer case." The flip side of that is a whopping 1025 percent increase  (since 2009) in the use of prepared frosting and a 239 percent increase  in prepared cookie dough. Shopping increasingly involves smart phones as  well: "Growing across all age groups, the consumer is searching for  recipes, checking competitive pricing and making grocery lists with  phones ... stored in an apron pocket."

Monthly, casual meals at home were reported by over half the  Allrecipes users, as were formal sit-down dinners for special occasions.  The rationale for a lot of trends, like home entertaining and "drinking   at home" is clearly financial, but that doesn't stop a contradictory  trend: more restaurant-style high-end stoves and fancy accoutrements  like microplane graters, mandolines, and heat-resistant spatulas. In the  unending battle for space on the kitchen counter, the indoor barbecue  is on its way out, in favor of more useful appliances like blenders and  bread machines, not to mention charging stations for those mobile  phones.

Now, Allrecipes isn't the only source of information about how Americans spend their food dollars. We wrote last  year about the not-so surprising data produced by supermarket  scanners: Americans buy more soda pop than milk, for example, more  cookies than fresh vegetables. And the new  Zagat guide says Seattle diners spend less when they eat in  restaurants than any city in America except New Orleans. And tip less,  too.

No wonder Seattle restaurants are in such disarray, throwing money  onto the sidewalk in hopes of luring bargain-hunters to their tables.  Not money, exactly, but Groupon-style half-off coupons. Same thing. A  nation of penny-pinchers, a city of cheapskates. But that's another  story.

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Ronald Holden

By Ronald Holden

Ronald Holden is a regular Crosscut contributor. His new book, published this month, is titled “HOME GROWN Seattle: 101 True Tales of Local Food & Drink." (Belltown Media. $17.95).