Written by Nanthini Suresh
If you’ve scrolled through Instagram, TikTok or Facebook
lately, there’s a good chance you’ve seen a video of someone whipping together
sugar, instant coffee and boiling water. This concoction is spooned over iced
milk to create the foamy drink known as Dalgona coffee.
According to Google Trends, “Dalgona coffee” has become
the most searched type of coffee worldwide, overtaking previous highest peaks
for all other kinds of coffee.
Searches worldwide surged by 1,800% in mid-March and grew
a further 1,700% in mid-April.
So what is Dalgona coffee, and why is it taking the
internet by storm?
The food craze born of
isolation
I’ve never tasted it but it’s not hard to see the visual
appeal: the ingredients are mixed together to create a whole new foamy, silky,
pillowy substance, the kind of transformation that always does well on social
media.
Having studied food trends for almost a decade, I think
the Dalgona coffee craze has everything to do with our current COVID-19 induced
isolation. It’s a way to get a coffee that looks cafe-style but can be achieved
with the very cheapest instant coffee and some basic household ingredients.
Like so many social media food trends, it’s about what
can we share with our networks, what can we say we have done and
experienced even while stuck at home.
And that carries a certain amount of social capital,
especially when other kinds of foodie Instagramming (like photographing
beautifully displayed cafe foods) is off the menu. It might not be your cup of
tea, but to have these experiences recorded on your social media feeds is very
powerful for some people.
Not the first food
trend, won’t be the last
Dalgona coffee is the latest in a long history of
food-related social media trends, including mukbang videos in which the host consumes often vast amounts
of food while interacting with the camera.
There’s also food-related ASMR (autonomous sensory
meridian response, where certain audio stimulus is said to soothe some people).
In these videos, the host records the sound of every crunch, crackle, slurp and
swallow for the benefit of their online followers.
Food videos can be very satisfying to watch and many
users report getting lost in them for hours. In a world where so much of our
food thinking is around what we can’t eat or do at the table, food
videos offer a release - they’re a form of vicarious consumption. You get to
understand and feel the senses at play without the health implications.
Food trends online are often not really about real life.
There’s a great many people who may not really enjoy an incredibly sweet
instant coffee in real life but have watched a full Dalgona coffee video with
relish.
To me, the Dalgona coffee trend is part of this isolation
trend of “making do”. We can still have our Instagram-worthy treats while
staying home. To enjoy the satisfaction of watching ingredients transform into
something different and sometimes unexpected - and share the experience with
friends.



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