Big flavours, bigger trends: India’s food culture reimagined in 2025.
If 2025 taught us anything about eating, it’s that Indian plates became canvases bold,
creative, and deeply shareable. From cafés to street corners to the reels that dominated social media, the year’s food trends reflected India’s love for innovation, nostalgia, and global inspiration all at once. Whether you were craving spice, seeking something buttery-sweet, or sipping something aerated and aesthetic, 2025 had something to satisfy every palate.
Let’s take a delicious journey through the biggest food trends that ruled India in 2025; one bite, sip, and viral moment at a time.
Kunafa Mania: Sweet JavaScript for the Senses
Kunafa wasn’t just a dessert, it was a full-blown food movement in India. Originally a Middle Eastern sweet, kunafa exploded on Indian menus and social feeds, making cafes and bakeries rethink their dessert game. From kunafa cheesecakes and pastry cups to kunafa milk cake and croissant versions, the stretchy cheese-and-syrup classic became Instagram’s favourite food ASMR moment. Its layered textures and vibrant plating made it one of 2025’s most irresistible fads.

Matcha Revolution: Green Is the New Black
Long before 2025, matcha was a niche concept in Indian cafés. This year it burst into the mainstream. Gen Z and health-focused foodies pushed matcha into every corner of menus from matcha kulfi and matcha rasmalai to matcha-chai hybrids. Its antioxidants and smoother caffeine kick made it not just trendy but genuinely desirable. Cafés and dessert spots turned the vibrant green powder into a year-round sensation.
Cloud Coffee: A Dream in a Cup
Move over dalgona, cloud coffee became the aesthetic successor. Defined by its airy, cotton-candy-like foam and soft pastel hues, this drink dominated reels and brunch menus alike. Whether it was rose cloud latte, blue pea vanilla cloud cold brew, or matcha-fusion versions, cafe counters were full of frothy goodness that looked as good as it tasted. Its visual appeal made it a digital darling and real-world favourite.
Korean Street Food Craze
India’s love affair with Korean cuisine deepened in 2025. Beyond ramyeon and traditional fare, Korean street food from gooey cheese garlic buns and spicy tteokbokki to K-style fried chicken exploded on Indian streets and social feeds. This trend rode social media’s penchant for bold, saucy visuals and shareable bites, pushing Korean flavours into the everyday Indian food consciousness.
Retro Mithai Revamps: Tradition Gets a Makeover
Classic Indian sweets weren’t left behind. The nostalgia-meets-new trend saw jalebi, rasgulla, sandesh, and motichoor ladoo reinvented into gourmet dessert hybrids, think jalebi cheesecake jars, mysore pak truffles, motichoor tiramisu and matcha barfi. These fusion sweets combined comfort with creativity, satisfying both traditionalists and trendseekers.
Loaded Pav: Street Food Glow-Up
Pav got a makeover that took India by storm. No longer just vada pav or bhaji pav, the loaded pav trend offered gooey cheese blends, swicy butter pav, lasooni pav and other elevated street versions. These sizzling, buttery creations became a staple for food trucks and cafés alike, and their ASMR-friendly makeovers kept reels buzzing all year.
Swicy: Sweet Meets Spice
The swicy trend, a playful blend of sweet and spicy became a defining flavour profile of 2025. From swicy chicken wings and fries to honey-chilli tofu and swicy sauces, India embraced bold taste contrasts. This flavour architecture appealed to Gen Z and millennials alike, satisfying cravings for intense, layered taste experiences.
Biryani, Burgers and Comfort Classics Still Lead
According to food delivery insights, comfort food continued its dominance. Biryani remained India’s most-ordered dish, clocking tens of millions of orders, while burgers and pizzas collectively moved millions more. These timeless favourites show that even amid innovation, tried-and-true comfort plates retained their central place on Indian tables.
Regional Flavours Rise On The Road
Food culture in 2025 also embraced hyper-regional tastes. From local biryanis and coastal seafood to authentic Kerala and Goan specialties appearing in dining chains and even on premium trains, Indians showed renewed love for regional identities through food. Local flavours, supported by upgraded service standards, saw increased bookings and engagement in travel dining as well.
Healthier Grains and Conscious Eating
Millennial and Gen-Z diners weren’t just chasing flavour, they wanted nutrition too. Ancient grains like khapli atta surged in popularity because of their perceived health benefits. Millet-based meals became common in community and campus cafés, linking nutrition with affordability and innovation in eating habits.
Why 2025’s Trends Mattered
What tied these trends together was accessibility, visual appeal, and cultural blending. India in 2025 wasn’t just eating, it was curating, photographing, sharing and remixing food experiences. Social media transformed foods from plates to global viral moments, while health and heritage guided choices beyond aesthetics.
Conclusion: A Plate That Tells India’s Story
From kunafa’s gooey indulgence and cloud coffee’s dreamy foam to matcha’s green revival and loaded pav’s street food glow-up, 2025 was a year where food culture danced between tradition and trend-setting innovation. What we ate told a larger story: one of evolving tastes, global inspirations, and a hunger for both novelty and comfort.
As India heads into 2026, these trends won’t just be memories, they are the foundation for future culinary creativity.













