Keith Albright has a reputation for being a healthy eater. He packs cauliflower for lunch.
“I mean, I do eat healthy, but it’s so I can sin later,” he said. “That’s how I balance the permission to indulge.”
Albright, the marketing insights and analytics manager at Cargill, embodies what he sees many Americans attempting to do — making enough healthy choices so they can earn indulgences.
Cargill’s latest TrendTracker report validates what he has seen. While consumers demand healthy, sustainable food, they also have an anxious desire for decadent experiences and food that meets emotional needs.
And that relationship is evolving, surveys showed.
“These trends rely on each other,” he said. “It’s a very purposeful calculation they’re making.”
There’s typically no “Whatever, I’m going to indulge” sense of resignation about these tradeoffs, Albright said. Choosing a treat now goes well beyond the numbers on the label.
“A few years ago it was about calories, grams of fat, sugar, but now consumers are doing the math at a much higher and holistic level,” he said. “We’re calculating that emotional payoff almost as much as the ingredients.”