Survey Finds Cooking Oil Influences Where Americans Choose to Eat
New national data shows the type of cooking oil matters—and it's reshaping where Americans dine, with a generational divide driving the shift
When asked which cooking oil they want restaurants to use, nearly 1 in 4 diners (24.7%) prefer traditional animal fats — such as butter or Beef Tallow — compared with just 15.6% who prefer seed or vegetable oils. That represents a roughly 60% higher preference for animal fats. The findings suggest that what's in the fryer is becoming a deciding factor at the door.
The Generational Divide
The gap between younger and older diners is striking. More than half of diners ages 18–34 (52%) say knowing whether a restaurant uses Beef Tallow or seed oils affects where they choose to eat. Among those 55 and older, that number drops to just 33% — a 19-point difference that the restaurant industry may not yet fully appreciate.
The divide sharpens further when diners face a direct choice. When presented with two otherwise identical restaurants — one cooking with Beef Tallow, the other with seed oils — nearly 1 in 3 adults ages 18–34 (31%) pick the Beef Tallow option. Among those 55 and older, just 19% make the same choice. Gen Z diners choose Beef Tallow at 29%, Millennials at 28%, compared with only 19% of Boomers.
Among the youngest diners, butter preference alone rises to 25%, and Beef Tallow preference reaches 11.4% — compared with 5.8% among those 55 and older, who are less than half as likely to choose it.
"What we're seeing from younger customers is that they care about how their food is made," said
From Taste to Dining Decisions
Coast has tracked consumer attitudes toward animal fats for more than a decade. Earlier research found growing openness to Lard and Beef Tallow, particularly among younger diners who associate them with better flavor and old-school cooking. This latest survey moves beyond attitudes to actual dining behavior, asking not just what consumers think about cooking fats, but whether those opinions translate into where they spend their money. The results suggest they do.
A Broader Shift in Food Trends
The findings align with broader industry signals. Whole Foods Market's 2026 food trend forecast named Beef Tallow as an emerging ingredient gaining visibility on menus. Market analysts project continued growth in the global tallow sector through 2030. And while the survey does not suggest a sweeping change in restaurant kitchens overnight, it does indicate that cooking fat — long treated as a back-of-house operational choice — is becoming a front-of-house consideration for a growing share of diners.
For more information about Coast Packing Company or to download the "Back to Flavor, Back to Tallow" white paper, please visit: www.coastpacking.com/backtotallow.
About the Survey
The Coast Packing Company study was fielded Feb. 18–19, 2026, among 1,005
About Coast Packing Company
Now marking its 104th year in business, Coast Packing Company (www.coastpacking.com) is the No. 1 supplier of animal fat shortenings in the
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SOURCE Coast Packing Company
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