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Texture is the Next Umami

How multi-sensory eating is reshaping craveability

Apr 21, 2026
∙ Paid
Dubai Chewy Cookie from @thecups.ca

A few years ago, it felt like umami was everywhere. Loosely translating to “deliciousness” the term was first coined in Japan in 1908, and has long been recognized in Japanese culinary lexicon as the elusive “fifth taste.” Over the past decades, the term broke into mainstream Western food writing and consumer vocabulary as shorthand for savory, depth, richness, and craveability. It provided a new way to talk about flavor; a new lens to understand why a dish resonates.

Now we’re seeing a similar obsession take hold, but this time it’s not about taste. It’s about texture.

Chefs, of course, have always known this. Texture has long been one of the quiet levers of great cooking—something that adds intrigue and contrast to a dish. Pastry chefs, in particular, are adept at utilizing texture: crisp against creamy, airy against dense, molten against crunchy. The kind of interplay that turns something good into something memorable.

What’s changed is that consumers are now actively seeking multi-sensory eating experiences. They’re more open to textures that once felt unfamiliar, even polarizing. Chewy, gelatinous, bouncy, foamy—textures that used to live on the margins are moving into the mainstream. And they’re not just noticing texture on the plate; they’re looking for it everywhere, from beverages, to snacks, to fast casual formats.

If umami expanded how we think about flavor, texture is broadening how we experience food altogether—adding a new dimension that’s just as critical to what’s considered craveable, memorable, and increasingly, shareable today. In a feed-driven world, that stretch, crackle, and pull resonates.

From Flavor to Feeling

What’s driving excitement—and attention—today is how food feels. The contrast of crispy and creamy. The pull of melted cheese. The bounce of a chewy bite. The crack, the stretch, the crunch. It’s not just about what something tastes like; it’s about what happens when you bite into it. It’s visual, it’s visceral, and it gives people something to react to.

According to Purato’s 2026 Global Taste Tomorrow Report—built on insights from over 23,000 consumers in 56 countries—71% of consumers say texture drives enjoyment, while 67% are actively seeking “novelty through new formats or unexpected mouthfeels.” The report also cites “texture mash-ups” as the second-fastest-growing trend in the bakery category today.

This shift is showing up everywhere—from menus, to marketing language, to the way people engage with food online.

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