This Week in Food – April 25

A simple look at the biggest food news, from FDA updates and grocery trends to restaurant changes and price pressure.

This week, the food business was shaped by three big themes:

  • More food safety and label talk from the FDA
  • Steady pressure on grocery and restaurant costs and..
  • A strong move toward protein, plant-based ideas, and easier menu planning

Food inflation is still in the picture, even when some parts cool a little…

1) FDA stays busy

One of the biggest stories this week was the FDA’s push to modernize food inspections through its BRIDGE Project.

The agency is also still working on food traceability, gluten-free labeling, and other food safety issues that matter to brands and shoppers. Source

The message is clear: food companies should expect more attention on records, labels, and safety checks.

For brands, that means keeping paperwork tight and making sure product claims are easy to support. Source

2) Prices are still a concern

Food prices did not spike across the board in March, but they are still higher than last year.

The latest CPI data showed food prices were up 2.7 percent over the past 12 months, while food away from home rose 3.8 percent. Source

That means restaurants and grocery brands are still juggling higher costs, even when monthly numbers look calmer.

Shoppers may not feel a huge jump every week, but the longer trend still matters for menus, margins, and household budgets. Source

3) Grocery and produce keep moving

In grocery and produce, this week brought more talk about store growth, supply updates, and market pressure.

Blue Book’s reports highlighted retailer expansion, produce updates, and the usual mix of pricing and supply chain shifts that shape shelf life and shelf space. Source

There was also fresh attention on food inflation, citrus supply, and weather-related crop concerns.

For food sellers, that means ingredients can still change fast, especially in fresh categories. Source.

4) Restaurants are leaning on change

The restaurant side of the business is still adjusting to higher costs, changing customer habits, and new tech.

Recent industry coverage pointed to delivery tools, drive-thru ideas, and AI-style efficiency tools showing up more often in foodservice. Source

At the same time, the outlook for 2026 still looks solid overall. Industry data says restaurant sales are expected to keep growing, even if operators remain careful with labor and food costs. Source [web:16].

5) Protein is still the big trend

Another clear theme this week is the strong demand for protein.

A recent food trend roundup said protein is now one of the most powerful claims in grocery, with brands across many categories rushing to meet that demand. Source.

Plant-based food is not going away, but it is changing.

The focus is moving toward simple ingredients, better taste, and more natural food ideas instead of just meat lookalikes. Source

What it means

For brands: Clean labels, clear claims, and strong supply planning matter more than ever. Source

For restaurants: Menu changes, tech tools, and cost control are still the main game. Source

For shoppers: Grocery prices are not exploding, but they are still higher than last year, so value will stay important. Source

watchlist for next week

Watch for more FDA food rule updates, fresh grocery pricing news, and more brands pushing protein, clean labels, and faster service…

Updated for the week of April 25, 2026.