A food trend eventually ceases to feel like a trend. It turns into furniture. It’s difficult to ignore the evidence when you walk into practically any mid-range restaurant in Britain today, whether it’s a fast-casual chain off a retail park in the Midlands, a gastropub in Leeds, or a pizza place in Shoreditch. Something is drizzled with hot honey. Kimchi is placed next to something it most likely wasn’t intended to go with in a tiny ceramic bowl. Additionally, any accompanying sauce has that well-known sweet-then-fiery kick that food writers have spent the last eighteen months referring to as “swicy.” It’s all over the place and arrived sooner than most people realized.
When you look back, the rise of hot honey makes a certain kind of sense. It was truly new five or six years ago, the kind of thing you’d come across at a stand-alone pizzeria and tell a friend about. Now it’s on a Walkers crisp packet, which, depending on who you ask, is either a warning sign or a coronation. Co-founder of Dr. Sting’s hot honey, Ben Lippett, publicly hinted in January that the market might be nearing saturation, which raises the obvious worry that mass production will flatten the quality curve. He might be correct. When anything begins to appear in supermarket multipack formats, its original appeal—something handmade and a little out of the ordinary—tends to be subtly obscured.

The hunger hasn’t subsided, though. The neuroscience underlying hot honey makes it durable rather than disposable. The brain compensates with dopamine and endorphins when capsaicin activates mild pain receptors, and sweetness at the same time lessens the intensity of the heat. As a result, quitting eating is actually quite challenging. People consume the bottle more quickly than they anticipated for a reason. The combination is a loop rather than a gimmick.
In this tale, Kimchi plays a different role. Kimchi has entered the British culinary discourse more subtly and possibly more permanently than hot honey, which debuted with great fanfare and is currently being questioned about its longevity. It is complex and fermented, with a distinct heat that builds gradually and sits in the background rather than striking right away. Kimchi fried rice, kimchi grilled cheese, and kimchi as a condiment have all been incorporated into UK restaurant menus with growing assurance. As this develops, it appears to be less about following trends and more about a real change in what British tastes are open to.
The larger category that lies beneath all of this, spicy sauces, is continuing to gain popularity in formats that fit people’s actual eating habits. sauces, glazes, pickles from the refrigerator, and condiments that are squeezed over cooked food. Swicy functions as an upgrade to current meals rather than a total cooking overhaul, according to consumer behavior data, which likely explains why it hasn’t retreated like some food trends do once the novelty fades. On the heat and sweetness scale, gochujang, mango habanero, and jalapeño honey each occupy a slightly different rung, allowing operators to adjust without upsetting customers who are heat-averse.
It’s still unclear if spicy sauces will eventually follow salted caramel into pleasant ubiquity—familiar, present, but no longer exciting—or if kimchi will reach the same level of mainstream success as hot honey. The comparison was made directly and fairly by Lisa Harris of Harris and Hayes Food Consultancy. The salted caramel didn’t go away; it just stopped making people bend over in their chairs. Maybe hot honey is on her way there. For the time being, however, these three flavors are making a significant impact on British menus by expanding the variety of what feels normal to order and changing the appearance of a standard plate. That is not insignificant. In actuality, that is a significant amount.
FAQs
Q1: What does “swicy” mean?
It combines sweet and spicy flavours into one layered eating experience.
Q2: Why is hot honey so popular on UK menus right now?
Its mild heat and floral sweetness work across pizza, chicken, and charcuterie.
Q3: Is hot honey at risk of losing its appeal?
Mass-market versions may dilute quality and flatten its original premium appeal.
Q4: How is kimchi different from other spicy trend ingredients?
Kimchi delivers slow-building fermented heat rather than the immediate sweetness-first sensation.
Q5: Where are spicy flavours most commonly appearing in the UK?
Gastropubs, pizza spots, fast-casual chains, and supermarket condiment aisles nationwide.
