Showing posts with label Biggest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biggest. Show all posts

The 10 Biggest Food Crazes of 2013

The 10 Biggest Food Crazes of 2013

Hybrid foods, novelty burgers, borderline-insane juice cleanses: 2013 had it all.
This year we saw the rise of the Cronut — likely the biggest pastry to hit America since chocolate chip cookies. We also chowed down on the noodle-y Ramen Burger (and even tried our hand at cooking our own.) And we all probably know someone who suffered through three days of juicing and lived to write a blog post about it.
Look back at these trends and more in our roundup of the 10 biggest food crazes of 2013.
  • 1. The Cronut

    Cronut
    Chef Dominique Ansel's croissant-doughnut hybrid was arguably the biggest food craze of 2013. The pastry spawned nationwide knock-offs and countless overpriced Cronut-delivery postings on Craigslist.
    Image: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images
  • 2. Frozen S'mores

    Frozen-smore
    This ice-cold ice cream and marshmallow confection was Ansel's next-big-thing following his new-found celebrity status. Though frozen s'mores didn't reach Cronut-level success, Carson Daly did eat one on the Today Show, which is good enough for us.

  • 3. The Crookie

    Crookie
    This croissant-Oreo hybrid gained popularity as Toronto bakery Clafoutis' response to the Cronut craze. This pastry features soft, flaky croissant dough wrapped around your favorite cookie.
  • 4. Kale

    Kale
    Once considered boring, this leafy-green had a big year full of kale chips, cakes, salads,soups, pizzas and more. Maryland even hosted the first ever Kale-A-Rama festival in honor of this veggie.
    Image: Flickr, joyosity
  • 5. The Ramen Burger

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    Keizo Shimamoto, the blogger behind Go Ramen!, created the ramen burger for Brooklyn, N.Y. food fair Smorgasburg, but has since brought this food fad to cities all across the country, including Los Angeles and Chicago.
    This burger features a standard beef patty swaddled between two lightly-fried "buns" made of ramen noodles. Basically, its every college student's dream food.

  • 6. The Mac Attack Burger

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    Chicago's Rockit Burger Bar hopped on the novelty-burger bandwagon with this savory delight. The Internet's response? An emphatic, "OMG".

  • 7. Quinoa

    Quinoa
    Health-nuts love this grain for its protein-rich qualities and foodies love it for its versatility. Plus, the United Nations General Assembly declared 2013 the International Year of Quinoa for its role in the fight against world hunger.
  • 8. Cold-Pressed Juice

    Juice
    Juice has been climbing the rungs to food stardom for a few years now, and continued to do so in 2013. Celebrities like Olivia Wilde and Julia Stiles touted the supposed benefits of juice cleanses, while the rest of us plebes spent our hard-earned cash on fancy juice blends.
    Image: Flickr, kurmanstaff
  • 9. Cool Ranch and Fiery Doritos Locos Tacos

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    2013 was a big year for Taco Bell's Doritos Locos Taco. Though the original delighted fast-foodies in 2012, this year brought Cool Ranch and Fiery Doritos flavors into the mix. As of October, the chain had sold over $1 billion worth of tacos.
  • 10. Sriracha

    Siracha
    We know, we know - sriracha wasn't new for 2013. But that doesn't mean it didn't have one of its biggest years to date. This spicy chili sauce is so popular and versatile that its even inspired a brand-new UV Vodka flavor.
    It's also been an interesting year for Huy Fong Foods, the company behind that familiar green-capped rooster bottle you've seen on supermarket shelves. The company gave CBS News a look inside its Los Angeles factory, just before the city slapped it with a lawsuit regarding the strong chili odor.

    For now, the plant is partially shut down, but still churning out sauce. Here's to hoping 2014 is an even bigger year for sriracha than 2013.

 

Reddit's Biggest Moments of 2013

Reddit's Biggest Moments of 2013Reddit-2013

It's been quite a year for the front page of the Internet.
Big or small, Reddit experienced a lot of change within the past twelve months. Now serving 6% of online adults and, according to internal reports, averaging 5.1 billion monthly page views, Reddit seems to keep grabbing the world's attention, making the transition from a fringe network for the "Internet savvy" to a booming web metropolis.
Through high-profile AMAs to unfavorable media reports following the Boston Bombing witch hunt, Reddit has seen its fair share of peaks and valleys this calendar year. Here, we take a look back at the site's highest highs and lowest lows.
In 2013, Reddit hosted AMAs with astronauts and billionaires, divided the community in teams of Orangered and Periwinkle, and tried its very best to open a safe. Check out our year in review below.

Noteworthy AMAs


  • Bill Gates
  • In his extremely transparent and informative AMA, the chairman of Microsoft responded to user questions about Bing vs. Google, his relationship with Steve Jobs and his personal thoughts about world issues such as poverty and disease prevention. Another highlight came when a user asked the billionaire if he had anything left on his bucket list. Gates responded, "Don't die..."
  • Chris Hadfield
  • From aboard the International Space Station, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield answered questions about space policy, the industry and anything else that piqued his interest. Hadfield also made a mark when he posted his Space Oddity cover on the site in May.
  • /u/Unidan
  • Reddit's resident biologist, Unidan (known outside the Internet as Ben Eisenkop, a graduate teaching assistant at a New York State university), holds a demigod level status on the site, thrilling users with amazing ecology facts. His AMA lived up to expectations, eliciting nearly 14,000 upvotes and containing a plethora of fascinating science facts.
  • Snoop Lion
  • When Snoop Lion came back for his second AMA in July, he answered Reddit's hard-hitting questions with even harder-hitting responses. Hilariously, the musician and devoted redditor began answering several of his own questions, asking himself what kind of soup he would be and responding with "alphabet soup."

    Noteworthy Posts

  • The Safe:
    When user dont_stop_me_smee first posted about finding a safe on a friend's rented property, he likely didn't expect to incite such a level of manic interest in the Reddit community. After creating the subreddit /r/WhatsInThisThing and promising to keep users updated on his progress in cracking the safe, he all but disappeared. Reddit swiftly turned on him, accusing him of lying and "karma whoring." The safe has since become a recurring inside joke across the site.
  • Samuel L. Jackson's Monologue
  • In May, Samuel L. Jackson went to Reddit with a promise to read the most upvoted comment on his post in monologue form. Luckily for us, he delivered — twice. One of the winning entries had Jackson confessing that he was quitting acting in order to pursue his true calling: a life of vigilantism.
  • Racists and Skinheads Share What Changed Their Minds
  • Some incredibly powerful and honest comments fill this /r/AskReddit thread. Receiving over 10,000 upvotes, the top comments are stories of how formerly bigoted Redditors' perspectives changed over time.

    Noteworthy Site Updates

  • Removal of /r/Atheism and /r/Politics as Default Subreddits
  • Reddit announced the removal of two of its most subscribed-to subreddits, /r/Atheism and /r/Politics, in their official blog this July. In the post, Reddit's community manager Alex Angel stated that the two controversial subreddits "just haven't continued to grow and evolve like the other subreddits we've decided to add." The five subreddits added to the default list were /r/books, /r/earthporn, /r/explainlikeimfive, /r/gifs and /r/television.
  • April Fools' 2013: Periwinkle vs. Orangered
  • Image: RedditIn an April Fools blog post, Reddit announced it had purchased the popular online multiplayer game Team Fortress 2. Users site wide were divided into two teams, Orangered or Periwinkle — for the colors of the upvote and downvote arrows — and given several "inventory items." The event was mostly confusing to users not familiar with the game, which added to the fun of it.
  • Introducing Multireddits
  • new reddit sidebar
    Image: RedditAfter two months of beta testing, Reddit released a new feature called "multireddits" this July, allowing users to create specific groups of subreddits for more customized viewing of the site. For more information and instructions, check out our explainer article: "New Multireddits Customize Your Reddit Homepage".
  • Daily Gold Thermometer
  • In response to community interest piqued by a TIL post about the site's revenue issues, Reddit instituted a "daily gold goal thermometer" on the front page. The thermometer updates every 10 minutes and provides more incentive for users to support the site's "gold" feature.
  • Reddit and The Atlantic Partner for Video AMA Series
  • On Nov. 15, Reddit and The Atlantic's video channel announced the creation of a joint project called "Ask Washington Anything," in which Washington, D.C.'s insiders answer your questions. It's just one more example of Reddit branching out and becoming more than just a social network.

    Noteworthy Community Moments

  • The Tragic Death of Aaron Swartz
  • The Reddit community mourned the loss of Swartz, who joined the team in 2006 when his company Infogami merged with Reddit. Following his death, Swartz's life was celebrated throughout the community.
  • The Boston Bombing Witch Hunt:
  • In the search to identify and capture the Boston Bombing suspects, hundreds of redditors took part in an act of "Internet vigilantism," attempting to analyze and isolate those responsible. Several innocent marathon attendees were wrongly accused by users in the /r/FindBostonBombers subreddit, including missing Brown University student Sunil Tripathi, who was later found dead. Reddit quickly responded and apologized for the witch hunt on their official blog.