Forget fine dining rules. One of the most exciting food movements started on a street corner, and decades on, it’s only getting bigger, reshaping menus, deli counters and dinner tables across the country.
Picture this: A sizzling falafel burger stacked with sumac‑kissed onions, cool tzatziki, tangy pickled crunch, and crowned by a juicy portobello mushroom. Weekday lunch just got a serious upgrade. That’s Street Food Couture in action.
First identified as a key megatrend in Unilever Food Solutions’ Future Menus 2025 report, based on insights from more than 250 chefs across 75 countries, the trend has proven it’s no passing phase. The newly released Future Menus 2026 report confirms its continued dominance, signalling a global shift towards bold, accessible and culturally rooted food.
At its core, Street Food Couture is simple. Take a well-loved street food dish, respect what makes it great, and elevate it through technique, presentation and flavour. The result? Food that feels premium without losing its soul.
With gourmet ingredients, precise cooking methods and cross-cultural flavour fusions, chefs and food operators are reworking roadside classics into menu standouts. Techniques like wok cooking, spit roasting and open-flame grilling bring depth at speed, while ingredients such as hot honey, smoked sea salt, and ube (yam) turn familiar formats into something new. At the same time, heritage ingredients like finger millet and black turtle beans are adding a sustainability story to the plate.
“For local chefs, this trend is less about discovery and more about recognition,” says Chef Mary from Unilever Food Solutions. “Food tells the story of who we are. When we elevate our street food, whether it’s shisanyama or bunny chow, we’re not just improving a dish, we’re putting South African flavour on the map.”
That local relevance is key. Global influences from the Middle East, Greece and Southeast Asia are increasingly being paired with South African tastes and ingredients. The result is food that feels both familiar and exciting. A classic Prego roll takes on new life with a Thai-inspired twist, while a simple burger becomes something share-worthy with the right combination of sauces and finishes.
For deli and quick-service operators, the appeal is clear. Street Food Couture offers premium-looking food that remains accessible in terms of production and price. Bold condiments like spicy mustard mayo or tamarind sauce do much of the work, transforming simple builds into dishes customers talk about and come back for.
Visual appeal is just as important. In a social media-driven food culture, how a dish looks can be as powerful as how it tastes.
“We eat with our eyes first, and social media has amplified that instinct,” says Yonela Motloung, Marketing Director for Unilever Food Solutions South Africa. “Every plate has the potential to become a post. When chefs focus on visual impact, they’re not just serving a customer, they’re attracting the next one.”
In a market where diners are looking for value without compromising on experience, Street Food Couture is striking the right balance. It delivers flavour, story and presentation without the fine-dining price tag. And while it may be trending, it’s also rooted in something deeper: a shift towards food that is honest, expressive and accessible. A reminder that some of the best ideas in food didn’t start in professional kitchens.
They started on the street.
Give Street Food Couture a try with these delicious recipes:
CORONATION CHICKEN BURGER
(Chef Pinky)
Ingredients
For the Chicken:
800 g Chicken thighs,
4 each
400 g Knorr Professional Original Chicken Breading
For the Coronation Sauce:
60 ml Sunflower oil
160 g Onions, finely chopped
7 g Robertsons Medium Rajah Curry Powder
7 g Robertsons Veggie Seasoning
300 g Hellmann’s Tangy Mayonnaise
80 g Fine Foods Fruit Chutney
5 g Coriander, roughly chopped
For the Assembly:
60 g Lettuce, shredded
4 pcs Burger buns
Method
To prepare the Chicken:
1. Pre-heat oil in deep fryer to 170 °C.
2. Skin and debone the chicken thighs.
3. In a bowl, add the Knorr Professional Original Chicken Breading.
4. Wet the chicken thighs in cold water and then coat with the breading mix.
5. Deep fry until golden brown. Drain on kitchen paper.
To prepare the Coronation Sauce:
1. Finely chop the onions. Roughly chop the coriander.
2. Heat the oil and fry the onions until soft.
3. Add the Robertsons Medium Rajah and Robertsons Veggie Seasoning.
4. Fry for a further 2 min.
5. Stir in the Fine Foods Fruit Chutney and Hellmann’s Tangy Mayonnaise.
6. Add in the roughly chopped coriander.
7. Allow sauce to cool.
To assemble the Burger:
1. Toast the hamburger bun.
2. Add some shredded lettuce and top with fried chicken.
3. Spread the coronation mayonnaise on the base and lid of the bun and close.
CHICKEN PREGO BURGER (Top image)
(Chef Mary)
Ingredients (4 Portions)
120 g Hellmann’s Tangy Mayonnaise
4 Burger buns
80 g Lettuce, shredded
120 g Tomato, sliced
120 ml Knorr Professional Prego Sauce
For the Chicken:
450 g Chicken fillets,
2 each, cut into 4 slices and flattened
100 g Knorr Professional Original Chicken Breading
Oil for deep frying
For the Fried Onions:
10 ml Sunflower oil
160 g Onion, sliced
4 g Knorr Aromat Original
Method
To prepare the Chicken:
1. Pre-heat oil to 170–180 °C.
2. In a bowl, dip chicken in water, drain off water and coat in Knorr Professional Original
Chicken Breading by rolling 10 times, pressing 7 times and roll again 10 times.
3. Dust off excess breading and deep fry in pre-heated oil until chicken is crispy and
golden brown.
To prepare the Fried Onions
Fry the onions in oil and season with Knorr Aromat Original.
To assemble the Prego Roll:
1. Lightly toast the bun.
2. Spread the bun with a little Hellmann’s Tangy Mayonnaise, shredded lettuce and sliced tomato.
3. Top with fried chicken, Knorr Professional Prego Sauce and fried onions.
4. Spread Hellmann’s Tangy Mayonnaise on the lid of the bun and close.
The full Future Menus 2026 report can be downloaded here, for free.