The meals you grew up on is making a comeback! 70s favourites like tripe and corned beef are on the menu once more – however are stylish new recipes sufficient to present you nostalgic cravings?
It was the decade which saw salads encased in jelly and fruit mixed into savoury dishes with wild abandon.
So it might be surprising to learn that ingredients from the 1970s are making a comeback, with some even being touted as health foods.
While recipes such as prawn cocktail and spam fritters might not sound like an obvious staple for fitness fanatics some favourites from the decade are proving popular with gymgoers.
Health conscious Britons are whipping cottage cheese into pancakes and tinned fish – once a cheap way of getting protein into your diet – is now seen as trendy by Generation Z.
Tripe, a cheap butcher’s cut that was traditionally boiled and served with onions, is also becoming a trendy ingredient for foodies to incorporate into a curry or Korean-inspired BBQ.
Even cabbage is now Instagram friendly – as long as its charred wedges are artfully floating in broth, proving that presentation is everything.
So, if the thought of bringing back grocery staples from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s prompts a wave of nostalgia, here’s how to rediscover retro foods and actually enjoy them.
Corned Beef
A cheap and cheerful way to get your protein, corned beef was most often enjoyed in sandwiches in the 1970s – or at times served with mash and veg
The ingredient has become trendy this year, especially when cooked down into a crispy ‘hash’ and served with rice and eggs in a Filipino breakfast – such as this one served by Almusal UK
Then: A cheap and cheerful way to get your protein, corned beef was most often enjoyed in sandwiches in the 1970s – or at times served with mash and veg.
Now: Corned beef has become trendy this year, especially when cooked down into a crispy ‘hash’ and served with rice and eggs in a Filipino breakfast – such as one served by Almusal UK.
Condensed Milk
A can of condensed milk from Carnation was popular in desserts, often used as a key ingredient in creamy jellies or poured over them
Then: A can of condensed milk from Carnation was popular in desserts, often used as a key ingredient in creamy jellies or poured over them.
Now: Condensed milk is still used to make things nearly impossibly sweet – but now, the focus appears to have switched from desserts to drinks. One popular recipe is a Vietnamese inspired coffee.
Tripe
Tripe being produced in 19666 at Robinsons in Hull. The ingredient, which is produced from the lining of a cow’s stomach, was once considered a British comfort meal
Taking to TikTok, Zaay Kadi shared a Bengali-inspired Tripe Curry recipe with aromatic spices
Then: Tripe, the lining of a cow’s stomach, was once a British comfort meal. It was cut into pieces and cooked down in onions, milk and water. It was then thickened with butter and flour, and dressed with parsley, cheese and vinegar.
Now: With more young people turning away from meat cut snobbery and turning to more divisive animal parts like trotters and chicken feet, tripe is enjoying a comeback. However, boiling is no longer the go-to way to enjoy it. Now, it’s distinct taste is used in flavourful curries or grilled for East Asian inspired BBQs. Taking to TikTok, Zaay Kadi shared a Bengali-inspired Tripe Curry recipe with aromatic spices.
Tapioca
Nicknamed ‘frog spawn’ due to its pearly appearance, Tapioca Pudding was a popular school dinner staple from the 1950s to the 1980s
Then: Nicknamed ‘frog spawn’ due to its pearly appearance, Tapioca Pudding – tapioca mixed in with milk or cream – was a popular school dinner staple from the 1950s to the 1980s. However, while the dessert itself is enjoying a comeback too, it’s now more popular in another sweet treat.
Now: These days, you’d be more likely to buy tapioca to make your own ‘boba’ pearls – the key ingredient in cult-favourite ‘bubble tea’. It consists. in its most basic form, of black or green tea, milk, ice and tiny chewy balls of tapioca dough – shaken together like a cocktail and served with a wide straw. Originating in Taiwan in the 1980s, bubble tea ‘cafes’ and bars offering a dizzying array of creations have been on British High Streets and in shopping centres since the early 2010s and have become a fashionable hang-out spot for teenagers. But recently they’ve been experiencing a stratospheric growth – proliferating at an extraordinary rate, and all thanks to a surge in popularity on social media platforms such as TikTok, where these drinks have become a new viral trend.
Yoghurt
Pre-packaged yoghurts became popular in the UK in the 1960s, with Swiss brand ‘Ski’ coming producing many of the varieties on supermarket shelves
Then: Pre-packaged yoghurts became popular in the UK in the 1960s, with Swiss brand ‘Ski’ coming producing many of the varieties on supermarket shelves. Then in the 1980s, German Müller corners revolutionised the game once again.
Now: In 2026, yoghurt is largely scooped out into an aesthetically pleasing ‘bowl’, adorned with anything from fruits and nuts to syrups, jams, nut butters and seeds.
Beetroots
As part of a common ‘meat and two veg diet’, beetroot gained popularity because it was easy to grow in gardens or allotments. It could be enjoyed pickled or boiled
Then: As part of a common ‘meat and two veg diet’, beetroot gained popularity because it was easy to grow in gardens or allotments. It could be enjoyed pickled or boiled.
Now: Beetroot is being increasingly put into the blender and added into ‘whipped feta’ pastes and ‘pink pasta sauces’. Its striking colour makes it the perfect garnish.
Cabbage
Boiled cabbage has long been a staple of British cuisine, especially as a side dish with a roast and sometimes mixed in with mash
Before: Boiled cabbage has long been a staple of British cuisine, especially as a side dish with a roast and sometimes mixed in with mash.
Now: 2026 has been dubbed ‘the year of the cabbage’ by food influencers, with many doing everything to the vegetable other than boiling it. These days it’s been grilled, charred, made into a fashionable ‘slaw’ with other ‘microgreens’, used as a dumpling wrapper and fermented into kimchi.
Cottage Cheese
Cottage cheese has always been praised as a ‘healthy’ food due to its high protein and low calories
Before: Cottage cheese has always been praised as a ‘healthy’ food due to its high protein and low calories. But in the 1960s and 1970s, it was most usually enjoyed on top of a Ryvita cracker, with fresh fruit.
Now: Cottage cheese is still seen as a diet food, but is now much more utilised in everything from ‘protein pancakes’ to a ‘whipped pasta sauce’. At Tesco, demand has rocketed by 200 per cent over the last two years thanks to a surge in popularity on TikTok. ‘TikTok food trends often result in sudden sales spikes and we saw that happen last year with Italian bread and cheese,’ explained Elizabeth Tomkins, Tesco’s cottage cheese buyer. ‘But this is a fully fledged culinary phenomenon that has brought a lot of extra business to the UK dairy industry.’
Semolina
Another dish which will likely spark school dinner flashbacks, semolina was mostly used in creamy puddings, cooked down in milk
Then: Another dish which will likely spark school dinner flashbacks, semolina was mostly used in creamy puddings, cooked down in milk.
Now: Now, semolina is much more recognised as a flour that foodies like to use to make their own fresh pasta. It’s also used to make flatbreads and doughs, and sprinkled on top of pizza.
Tinned Fish
Tinned fish – including everything from sardines to tuna – became popular in the 1980s, as it was a quick, cheap way to get some protein into your diet
Then: Tinned fish – including everything from sardines to tuna – became popular in the 1980s, as it was a quick, cheap way to get some protein into your diet. However, recipes rarely stretched beyond sandwich spreads, or popping some sardines on top of toast.
Now: Since 2020, tinned fish has enjoyed a renaissance, becoming not only a fashionable grocery store item – now often sold with colourful artwork – but a popular ingredient in a myriad of different social media recipes. One is a ‘rice bowl’ which serves up the fish of choice – sometimes mixed in an oil or mayonnaise spread – on top of rice with fresh vegetables and a seaweed. Another is a tinned fish ‘board’ which serves up preserved fish on a stylishly laid out charcuterie style spread.
