BROPHY'S SANTA BARBARA
The seafood industry’s outlook is predicted to be brighter because of consumers’ surging interest in eating healthier foods in 2021, according to SeafoodSource, the leading international online business tool.
The COVID-19 pandemic has fueled consumers’ desire to eat healthy, immune-boosting foods and, as lockdowns continue, they are buying and cooking more seafood at home, according to Robyn Carter, founder and CEO of Jump Rope Innovation, a trends and innovation consultancy.
“For years, consumers have received the message that seafood is a heart-healthy alternative and, with a high concentration of omega-3 fatty acids, it's also good for brain health, particularly memory,” Carter told SeafoodSource. “Brain health is an emerging concern among consumers of all ages for many reasons – one of which is the sharp increase in Alzheimer's disease. So we expect to see even more conversation around fish and brain health.”
“We also know that more people have been buying it and buying it more frequently. That means the seafood industry will benefit from an increased ‘seafood IQ’ which will benefit sales for months, years – if not generations – to come,” saidRoerink.
Seafood restaurants are also expected to benefit from this growing interest in consuming fish for health reasons. Combine that with the fact that before the Covid 19 pandemic 70% of all seafood purchased in the U.S. was in restaurants and the outlook gets even brighter.
And, according to a recent article in Esquire, if this pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that we don’t go out to eat because we’re hungry. We go out because we’re lonely.
“What I remember most vividly is leaving the dining room with my wife and passing through the crowded bar, which happened to be filled with friends of ours. We ran into Simon, and Yolanda, and David, all of them waiting for tables and basking in that singular metropolitan electricity that made a lot of us want to plant our flags in New York City in the first place. It took my wife and me about 20 minutes to grab our coats at Verōnika because we wanted to catch up with everyone.
“And I now realize that it is this—that feeling of personalities colliding and conspiring in the serendipity of a moment—that makes a restaurant so essential to the hum of a community. It is this that I am craving. People. People savoring a moment together. We don’t need restaurants because we are hungry. We need restaurants because we are lonely."
BROPHY BROS.
Photo Credit Kcruts Photography
119 HARBOR WAY. SANTA BARBARA, CA 93109
805-966-4418
BROPHY BROS.