One Discount Grocer Is Expanding Faster Than Any Other Chain in 2026

Cheap groceries are no longer a niche promise. In 2026, they are one of the biggest growth engines in American retail.

And no chain is moving faster than Aldi, which has turned value shopping into a full-scale expansion strategy.

Aldi’s store growth is setting the pace

Aldi entered 2026 with unusual momentum for a grocery chain. In January, the company said it would open more than 180 stores across 31 U.S. states by the end of 2026, bringing its total footprint close to 2,800 stores. Reuters reported that goal keeps Aldi on track toward its broader target of 3,200 U.S. locations by the end of 2028.

That opening pace matters because most grocery competitors are not expanding at anything close to that scale. Kiplinger recently noted that Aldi’s 180-plus planned openings outstrip the grocery growth plans announced by many other national food retailers in 2026. Even large chains with major grocery businesses, including Walmart and Target, have focused more heavily on remodels, selective projects, or broader general-merchandise strategies than a pure rapid-fire grocery rollout.

Aldi is also layering new-store growth on top of conversion growth. The company’s 2025 plan called for more than 225 new store locations, including around 100 former Southeastern Grocers locations converted into Aldi stores by the end of that year. That gave the chain a rare combination of organic expansion and acquired real estate, helping it add units faster than traditional grocers relying only on ground-up development.

Why Aldi can grow when others slow down

Aldi’s model is built for speed. Industry coverage from FoodNavigator-USA has pointed to the chain’s smaller stores, roughly 20,000 square feet, as a major structural advantage over conventional supermarkets that can run from 50,000 to 200,000 square feet. Smaller boxes are cheaper to build, easier to staff, and quicker to slot into growing suburban trade areas.

Its merchandising strategy supports that efficiency. Aldi relies heavily on private-label goods, a tighter assortment, lean labor, and simple store operations. Those choices lower operating costs and make each new opening less complex than launching a full-service supermarket with sprawling perishables departments, service counters, and massive SKU counts.

The value proposition is also resonating with shoppers under pressure. Aldi said in early 2025 that it was the lowest-priced national grocer in a third-party price comparison and that it added 120 stores in 2024. By 2026, the company said it had brought in 17 million new customers during 2025, suggesting its expansion is being powered not just by ambition, but by real consumer demand.

What Aldi’s 2026 push means for shoppers and rivals

For consumers, Aldi’s rapid expansion means more than new storefronts. It means more neighborhoods will gain access to a discount-first grocery format that can put pressure on nearby competitors to sharpen pricing. That effect is especially important in fast-growing parts of the South and West, where population gains are creating demand for more food retail options.

Aldi is also using 2026 to deepen its position in newer markets rather than simply filling in old ones. The company said Maine became its 40th U.S. state in 2026 with a Portland opening, while it is continuing a westward push in places like Phoenix and building toward a larger long-term presence in Colorado. In Las Vegas, after opening four stores in 2025, Aldi said it plans to double that market’s store count by 2030.

For rival grocers, the message is clear. Aldi is not treating discount retail as a defensive play for hard times; it is treating it as the future of mainstream grocery. At a moment when some supermarket operators are trimming weaker locations and watching costs closely, Aldi is using scale, simplicity, and price leadership to expand faster than any other discount grocer in 2026.

A Beloved Florida Chicken Chain Is Losing Even More Ground and No One’s Stepping In

Restaurant bankruptcies and store reshuffling have continued to reshape the quick-service industry in 2026 as operators contend with higher costs and uneven customer traffic. In Florida, that pressure is playing out at Popeyes franchisee Sailormen Inc., which is shedding more locations after failing to line up buyers for dozens of restaurants.

Sailormen’s bankruptcy sale left dozens of Popeyes restaurants without buyers

Sailormen Inc., a Miami-based Popeyes franchisee, filed for Chapter 11 protection on January 15, 2026, while operating 136 restaurants in Florida and Georgia, according to bankruptcy filings and trade coverage of the case. The company’s restructuring plan centered on selling the stores through a court-supervised process rather than shutting down the entire business at once.

That process moved forward in late June. QSR Magazine reported that a federal bankruptcy judge approved the sale of 97 restaurants to five buyers, with the transactions covering markets including Miami, Orlando, Jacksonville, Tallahassee, Pensacola, Tampa, West Palm Beach and Savannah. Law360 also reported that the court approved a roughly $16 million sale on June 23.

But the sale did not solve the full problem. Multiple reports on the court record said 52 locations failed to attract buyers, leaving Sailormen to seek lease rejections on a portion of the unsold stores. Nation’s Restaurant News reported that the company told the court those stores had become a burden on the bankruptcy estate as its authority to use cash collateral was set to end on July 1.

On June 24, the court approved the rejection of 18 restaurant leases, including 15 in Florida and three in Georgia, according to coverage citing court papers. Those restaurants were expected to close by the end of June, while additional unsold locations still faced unresolved outcomes.

Florida is at the center of the fallout, but the full store list is still incomplete

Florida accounts for most of the activity disclosed so far. QSR Magazine reported that 50 restaurants in the Tampa, Jacksonville, Tallahassee and Pensacola markets were sold to Pulse Restaurant Group, 23 Orlando-area locations were sold to RFI Ventures, 16 Miami-area restaurants were acquired by Popeyes, and three West Palm Beach-area stores were sold to another buyer.

That means many Florida restaurants are set to continue operating under new ownership rather than disappear outright. Even so, the court-approved lease rejections show that Florida is also absorbing most of the immediate closures, with 15 of the first 18 rejected leases located in the state, according to Nation’s Restaurant News and TheStreet’s summary of court papers.

What remains unclear is which specific Florida stores are among the locations that did not find buyers. Public reporting has identified broad regions tied to the successful sales, but Sailormen has not released a comprehensive public list of every affected Florida restaurant that is closing or still awaiting a final disposition.

For customers, that leaves a mixed picture by region. Miami, Orlando, Tampa Bay, Jacksonville, Tallahassee, Pensacola and West Palm Beach all appear in reported sale transactions, but not every existing restaurant in those markets was publicly identified by address in the reporting reviewed.

Rising costs, debt and weaker traffic pushed the operator deeper into trouble

The company’s bankruptcy filings and subsequent reporting point to a combination of operating and financing pressures. Restaurant Business reported that Sailormen entered Chapter 11 after a heavy debt load, liquidity problems and a failed earlier effort to sell 16 restaurants, a transaction that later unraveled and left the franchisee exposed to lease obligations.

QSR Magazine said Sailormen cited a volatile macroeconomic environment and increasing lender pressure when it filed. Court filings reviewed by trade outlets also referenced inflation, rising operating expenses, higher borrowing costs and customer traffic that had not fully recovered from the disruption that followed the COVID-19 period.

Debt figures have varied across reports depending on the document cited. Restaurant Business reported roughly $130 million in debt, while Law360’s summary of the Chapter 11 filing said the company entered bankruptcy with more than $342 million in liabilities. What is consistent across coverage is that Sailormen was carrying obligations large enough to force a sale-driven restructuring.

For Florida residents, the practical takeaway is that Popeyes is not disappearing from the state, but some neighborhood locations are. Popeyes told Nation’s Restaurant News it was proud to see franchisees step up in Florida and Georgia, signaling that many restaurants will remain open under new operators even as more closures move through the bankruptcy process.

Maine Could Be Getting Something Texas-Sized Sooner Than Anyone Expected

As Buc-ee’s pushes deeper beyond Texas, the chain’s oversized travel centers are reaching more first-time states across the South, Midwest and Southwest. Maine, however, still has no confirmed Buc-ee’s project, and the available evidence suggests any arrival would take years rather than months.

Buc-ee’s is expanding, but Maine is not on the confirmed list

Buc-ee’s is in the middle of a multi-state growth push that industry group NACS reported on May 12, 2026, with first locations planned in at least six new states by the end of 2027. Broader recent reporting has put that expansion at as many as eight first-time states, including Arizona, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio and Wisconsin. Maine has not been included in any of those confirmed announcements.

That matters because Buc-ee’s openings are not quick-turn projects. Recent reporting citing company information says construction alone typically takes 18 to 24 months once a site is approved and work begins. Before that, a project generally needs land control, local planning approvals, traffic analysis, environmental review, utility work and road access agreements.

The result is a long runway even in states where Buc-ee’s has already committed to a site. In practical terms, Maine would need a publicly identified parcel and a local approval process underway soon for a 2029 opening to remain realistic. As of now, no such project has been publicly announced by the company or by Maine officials.

Maine’s highway geography could work, but the state has structural hurdles

If Buc-ee’s ever enters Maine, the most logical corridor would be Interstate 95, especially the Maine Turnpike stretch that carries a mix of commuters, vacation traffic and drivers entering from New Hampshire. Southern Maine would likely draw the most attention because it combines year-round population with seasonal visitor volume. That makes communities near major exits more plausible than more remote locations.

But Maine’s existing highway-service setup creates a complication. The Maine Turnpike Authority says it operates five service plazas on the turnpike: Kennebunk northbound and southbound, plus Gray, Cumberland and West Gardiner. Those plazas already provide fuel, food and convenience services directly on the toll road.

That means a Maine Buc-ee’s would likely need to be developed off an exit rather than within the turnpike’s existing plaza system. The company has not released a Maine site list, because there is no confirmed Maine project at all. No city, town or county in Maine has been publicly identified by Buc-ee’s as a future location, so any discussion of Biddeford, Saco, Portland or other communities remains speculative rather than confirmed.

Why the timeline points to 2029 at the earliest, and what Mainers should expect

The biggest reason for the long timeline is scale. A Buc-ee’s is not a typical gas station or convenience store; these projects require very large highway-adjacent parcels, major traffic planning and extensive infrastructure coordination. In a state like Maine, where large commercial projects often face close local and state review, that process can add substantial time before construction even starts.

Maine also differs from many of the states where Buc-ee’s has expanded most comfortably. In parts of the South and Midwest, standalone interstate-exit development can be simpler because there are more large undeveloped parcels close to major roads. Maine’s built-out southern corridor, combined with toll-road service infrastructure already in place, gives the company fewer obvious easy-entry options.

For customers and residents, the near-term takeaway is straightforward: there is no confirmed Buc-ee’s coming to Maine yet. Drivers in the state should not expect an opening date, a site announcement or a construction start until the company or local officials say a real project is underway. Until that happens, the earliest plausible opening remains around 2029, with a later date appearing more consistent with Buc-ee’s current expansion pace.

What Americans Actually Ate to Get Through the Worst Wildfires in History

Wildfire survival in America has never looked like a glossy pantry ad. It has looked like paper trays, bottled water, motel lobby meal drops, and donated sandwiches handed over in parking lots.

When whole towns burn, food becomes more than fuel. It becomes logistics, comfort, and one of the first signs that somebody is still taking care of you.

The first meals were built for speed, safety, and sheer volume

In the biggest wildfire responses, Americans did not live on artisanal emergency kits. They ate what disaster systems could move fast: shelf-stable snacks, bottled water, cafeteria-style hot meals, and simple grab-and-go food that could be counted, packed, and distributed under pressure. According to the American Red Cross, its Hawaii wildfire response had already served more than 625,600 meals and snacks by September 8, 2023, and that figure grew to more than 1.37 million by November 8. In the January 2025 California wildfires, the Red Cross said it served more than 154,500 meals and snacks within the first month, later rising to more than 188,500.

That scale explains the menu. The food most often available in shelters and temporary housing is designed to be reliable rather than memorable: sandwiches, fruit, snack bars, chips, juice, coffee, and hot plated meals that can be prepared in bulk. Red Cross reports on Maui described “nutritious meals purchased from local vendors” and hot meal delivery to survivors staying in hotels, showing how quickly disaster feeding shifts from congregate shelters to distributed lodging.

In Los Angeles after the 2025 fires, shelters doubled as food hubs where evacuees could get a warm meal, charge a phone, and gather information. That matters because in a wildfire, eating is tied to displacement itself: many survivors are not cooking, shopping, or storing perishables. They are moving between gyms, motels, cars, and relatives’ homes, so food has to travel with them.

Comfort food mattered because disaster eating is emotional, not just nutritional

The most revealing detail in major wildfire responses is not how many meals were served, but what kinds of meals people remembered. During the 2018 Camp Fire, one of the deadliest and most destructive blazes in California history, PBS reported that roughly 15,000 evacuees and rescue workers across Butte County sat down for a Thanksgiving meal of turkey, stuffing, and potatoes provided by volunteers. It was not survival rations in the cinematic sense. It was holiday food chosen to restore a sense of normal life.

That pattern repeats across disasters. Even when official reports summarize meals as a number, the lived experience tends to revolve around recognizable foods: hot breakfasts, donated coffee, sandwiches, burritos, pizza, and plate lunches that feel local and familiar. In the 2025 Los Angeles wildfire response, the Los Angeles Times described volunteers handing out more than 100 burritos and tortas, while food banks emphasized staples such as canned goods, pasta, and rice for families trying to reestablish basic routines.

This is why comfort food carries outsized weight in wildfire recovery. People who have lost houses, medications, pets, paperwork, and sleep are not simply hungry. They are disoriented. A warm, familiar meal does practical work, but it also signals continuity, dignity, and local solidarity in the middle of upheaval. That is as essential as calories.

The real wildfire pantry was a mix of institutions, donations, and local food culture

What Americans actually ate during historic wildfires came from overlapping systems rather than one pipeline. National relief groups provided mass feeding capacity. Government agencies and community partners supplied shelter space and distribution support. Local restaurants, churches, mutual-aid groups, and food banks filled the emotional and cultural gaps with meals people genuinely wanted to eat.

In Maui, that meant hotel-based deliveries and meals sourced from local vendors as survivors were moved out of congregate shelters and into temporary lodging. In California, it often meant shelters with standardized snacks and hot meals supplemented by community donations, restaurant drop-offs, and holiday spreads assembled by volunteers. The result was not one “wildfire diet” but a layered food network built from necessity.

The clearest conclusion is also the least glamorous. In America’s worst wildfires, people got through on ordinary food served at extraordinary scale: packaged snacks, cafeteria meals, rice and pasta donations, sandwiches, burritos, tortas, turkey dinners, and whatever hot meal could reach them that day. Disaster eating was not about scarcity theater. It was about getting enough familiar food, fast, to keep people moving until life became recognizable again.

I Road Tripped Across America and These 10 States Served the Worst Food I’ve Ever Had

Road trips promise discovery, but food is where a state either wins you over or lets you down. After crossing America by car, I found that the worst meals were rarely about one bad dish.

They were about patterns: tired frying oil, interchangeable menus, weak produce, and local specialties defended more by nostalgia than flavor. These 10 states earned a place on my personal worst-food list not because good cooks do not exist there, but because too many roadside meals felt forgettable.

What Made These States So Disappointing

The biggest letdown was not a lack of culinary identity. It was the gap between reputation and what actually showed up on the plate. Across many rural stretches of America, the USDA’s Economic Research Service has found a strong prevalence of national chain restaurants in nonmetro counties, which helps explain why so many exits begin to blur together after a few hundred miles. According to USDA survey findings updated in 2026, households with weaker access to large grocery stores also rely more on smaller outlets and restaurants, a pattern that can drag down freshness and variety over time.

That framework shaped my list. The states that disappointed me most were not necessarily the poorest food cultures on paper, but the ones where roadside reality felt dominated by frozen ingredients, overcooked proteins, and menu sameness. In several places, local pride centered on one iconic dish, yet the average traveler was far more likely to encounter a limp burger, canned gravy, or a heat-lamp buffet than anything memorable.

So which states landed here? In my experience: Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma, South Dakota, North Dakota, Indiana, West Virginia, Mississippi, and Wyoming. That sounds harsh, especially because every one of those states has defenders and at least a few worthwhile regional specialties. Eater’s recent coverage of iconic American dishes makes the broader point well: regional food in the United States is intensely local, emotional, and often much better at its best than at its roadside average.

The 10 States That Left the Worst Taste

Nebraska and Iowa frustrated me because both states have legitimate food heritage, yet too many road-trip stops leaned on heaviness without balance. Sandwiches were often bready and under-seasoned, sides felt pulled from freezers, and “homestyle” too often meant beige. Even when local institutions served beloved specialties, the quality gap between a great version and the average highway version was enormous.

Kansas, Oklahoma, and Wyoming suffered from a different problem: distance. Long driving stretches make convenience food king, and that usually means chain burgers, gas-station hot cases, and coffee that tastes scorched by noon. The USDA has documented how rural food-away-from-home landscapes often tilt toward chain options, and on the road that reality becomes brutally obvious when every town seems to offer the same fryer baskets and laminated menus.

The Dakotas also wore me down. South Dakota and North Dakota were not uniformly bad, but many meals felt built more for fuel than pleasure. Indiana and West Virginia disappointed for similar reasons: too many cafeteria-style plates, soggy fried foods, and a stubborn resistance to acidity, herbs, or texture. Mississippi may be the most controversial pick, because the state also has deep Southern food traditions, but the average roadside meal I found too often failed to live up to that history.

Why Bad Road Food Happens and What Travelers Should Learn

The fairest way to read this list is not as a final judgment on entire states, but as a judgment on what travelers most commonly meet near highways, truck stops, and small-town commercial strips. Travel and food editors routinely celebrate destination dishes that define a place, from cheesesteaks and lobster rolls to green chile cheeseburgers and hot chicken. The problem is that a signature dish does not guarantee a strong everyday eating scene across an entire state.

Infrastructure matters too. USDA has spent recent years investing in more resilient local and regional food systems, and its 2024 performance reporting highlights support for state infrastructure and local purchasing programs meant to strengthen access and supply chains. Those efforts matter because better distribution, more local sourcing, and stronger independent food businesses usually translate into better meals for residents and travelers alike.

My own lesson from the trip was simple: never confuse state pride with statewide consistency. Some of my worst meals happened in places with genuine culinary roots, while some of my best happened in states with no national food myth at all. If you are driving across America, trust crowded local counters over giant parking lots, order the dish people actually talk about, and remember that bad road food usually reflects access, scale, and repetition more than talent.

A New COVID Variant Called “Cicada” Is Spreading and Here’s What It Means for Your Grocery Trip

The nickname sounds alarming. The day-to-day reality is more familiar.

A new Omicron offshoot called BA.3.2, widely nicknamed “Cicada,” is being watched by scientists because it appears better at dodging some existing immune defenses. But for most people, the bigger question is not the lab data. It is whether a routine grocery run should change.

Why the “Cicada” variant is getting attention

Cicada is the informal name for BA.3.2, a SARS-CoV-2 lineage that resurfaced after earlier limited appearances, which is how it picked up its insect-inspired label. According to the CDC’s March 19, 2026 MMWR, the variant was tracked worldwide from November 2024 through February 2026 and identified through traveler samples, aircraft wastewater, patient testing, and community wastewater surveillance. That broad detection footprint is one reason experts took notice.

The second reason is its mutation profile. Scientific American, citing the CDC report and outside virologists, noted that BA.3.2 carried a striking number of spike-protein changes compared with recent strains, raising concern that prior infection or older vaccine-induced antibodies may recognize it less efficiently. That does not automatically mean it causes more severe disease, but it can make a variant worth closer monitoring.

Just as important, the available evidence has been more reassuring than the nickname-heavy coverage might imply. The WHO’s initial risk evaluation for BA.3.2 in December 2025 said the variant had not shown a sustained growth advantage over other circulating lineages and that there was no evidence of increased severity, hospitalizations, or deaths compared with other Omicron descendants. In other words, scientists are watching it carefully, but public health agencies have not treated it as a sign of a fundamentally new phase of the pandemic.

What this means when you shop for groceries

For grocery shoppers, Cicada does not change the core risk equation as much as crowded indoor air does. A supermarket remains a relatively brief, shared indoor environment where exposure risk rises when virus activity is higher locally, aisles are packed, and ventilation is mediocre. The CDC’s respiratory virus surveillance pages continue to emphasize that COVID activity can climb outside the traditional winter pattern, including during summer.

That matters because grocery stores combine close passing contact with high-touch surfaces and unpredictable crowding. Still, experts generally view inhalation in busy indoor settings as the primary concern, not touching a cereal box or produce bag. A faster trip at off-peak hours, good store airflow, and staying home when sick do more to cut risk than obsessing over every package you place in your cart.

Masks remain a practical tool for people who want an extra layer of protection, especially older adults, immunocompromised shoppers, and anyone heading into a store during a local uptick. If you are shopping for a vulnerable family member, choosing early-morning hours, using curbside pickup, or consolidating trips can meaningfully reduce exposure. The grocery trip itself is not uniquely dangerous; it simply reflects the same commonsense respiratory precautions that apply to pharmacies, airports, and public transit.

The smart, not panicked, way to respond

The most useful response to Cicada is not fear. It is updating your habits in proportion to your personal risk and the level of virus spread around you.

Vaccination still matters, particularly for preventing severe illness. While BA.3.2 raised questions about immune escape, the FDA’s vaccine advisers recommended that the 2026-2027 U.S. COVID vaccine formula target the JN.1-lineage XFG strain, reflecting the broader variants now dominating circulation rather than a pivot specifically to Cicada. That tells consumers something important: public health officials are responding to the full variant landscape, not treating BA.3.2 as the only threat.

For everyday shoppers, the checklist is straightforward: avoid the store if you feel sick, consider a high-quality mask in crowded indoor settings, wash hands after the trip and before eating, and use pickup or delivery if someone in your household is medically fragile. The headlines may focus on the name. Your grocery strategy should focus on timing, ventilation, and protecting the people at highest risk.

If Your Cucumbers Look Like This, Experts Say Throw Them Away Immediately

Cucumbers often seem sturdy, but they spoil faster than many shoppers realize. Once texture, color, or surface moisture changes in the wrong way, the safest move is often to throw them out. Recent food safety alerts have made that advice even more important.

Soft, slimy, or moldy cucumbers are no longer worth saving

The clearest sign a cucumber should be discarded immediately is a soft, wet, or slimy texture. Fresh cucumbers should feel firm and taut, not squishy at the ends or greasy on the surface. USDA food safety guidance says mold on soft produce can spread below the surface, which means simply trimming off the bad area is not considered a safe fix.

Visible mold is another hard stop. White fuzz, dark spots that are sinking in, or cottony growth are all signs decay has advanced past freshness and into spoilage. Extension guidance also warns that bruises, dark lesions, and water-soaked patches are signs cucumbers are breaking down internally, even when only part of the skin looks affected.

Shriveling and wrinkling are slightly different, but still important. A dehydrated cucumber is not necessarily dangerous in the same way a slimy one is, yet experts note that severe shriveling often comes with texture loss and quality decline that make the vegetable poor for eating. If wrinkling is paired with softness, leakage, or an off odor, it is no longer a judgment call.

Another warning sign is yellowing that goes beyond a minor change in shade. Cucumbers are best when evenly green and firm. According to extension advice, yellowing, withering, and soft spots all point to age and deterioration, and once those changes are combined, the cucumber should be tossed.

Why spoiled cucumbers can become a food safety problem

A bad cucumber is not just unappetizing. Cucumbers are usually eaten raw, so there is no cooking step to kill harmful microbes before they reach your plate. FDA sampling materials have noted that cucumbers are considered a ready-to-eat produce item, which raises the stakes when spoilage or contamination is present.

That matters even more because cucumbers have been tied to multiple Salmonella outbreaks in recent years. The FDA said its cucumber surveillance work continued after repeated outbreak links between 2012 and 2025. In May 2025, the CDC warned consumers about a multistate Salmonella outbreak connected to whole cucumbers, and specifically advised people to throw cucumbers away if they could not tell where they came from.

The CDC alert involved 26 reported illnesses across 15 states, with 9 hospitalizations. The affected cucumbers were grown by Bedner Growers and distributed by Fresh Start Produce Sales between April 29, 2025, and May 19, 2025. The FDA also posted a recall page covering additional cucumber-containing products tied to that investigation.

Spoilage does not automatically mean Salmonella, but the overlap between decaying produce and poor handling is enough for experts to take a hard line. If a cucumber looks actively broken down, there is little benefit in trying to rescue it for a salad, sandwich, or snack tray.

What to keep, what to toss, and how to store cucumbers better

A cucumber that is still firm, evenly colored, and free of slime or mold is usually fine after a rinse under running water. Foodsafety guidance has long advised washing produce before eating, cutting, or peeling it, because knives can drag dirt and bacteria from the skin into the flesh. Washing cannot reverse spoilage, but it does reduce surface contamination on sound produce.

If the cucumber is only mildly less crisp but otherwise dry, green, and odor-free, it may still be usable in cooked dishes or quick pickles. But once there is any sliminess, leaking, soft collapse, or visible fungal growth, it should go straight into the trash. Fresh-cut produce standards are especially strict on this point, describing slimy or oily-feeling pieces as signs the product is beyond acceptable condition.

Storage helps extend quality but does not give cucumbers endless life. Oklahoma State guidance says cucumbers generally keep about 10 to 14 days when held around 50°F, while Missouri Extension recommends choosing firm cucumbers without yellowing, shriveling, bruises, or dark spots to begin with. In a home kitchen, the best strategy is simple: buy firm cucumbers, refrigerate promptly, and use them before texture starts to change.

When in doubt, trust your eyes and hands. A cucumber should be crisp, clean-smelling, and solid. If it is soft, slimy, moldy, badly spotted, or impossible to identify during a recall, experts agree the answer is immediate: throw it away.

Two Beloved Chains Just Did Something Restaurants Rarely Do Together

Restaurant operators across the U.S. are still reshaping store formats as food, labor, and real estate costs remain elevated. That trend is now showing up in a highly visible way at Applebee’s and IHOP, where parent company Dine Brands is expanding a dual-branded model that combines the two chains in one restaurant.

Dine Brands is scaling a format that puts two national chains in one building

Dine Brands confirmed in its first-quarter 2026 results, released May 6, 2026, that it remained on track to reach approximately 80 domestic dual-branded Applebee’s and IHOP restaurants by the end of the year. The company said it had 35 dual-branded domestic locations as of March 29, 2026, marking a sharp increase from 27 such locations at the end of 2025. That makes the expansion one of the clearest examples of a major restaurant operator using two established casual-dining brands together at scale.

The format is unusual because it merges two full-service chains that traditionally compete for different dayparts. According to Dine Brands and prior company announcements, the restaurants share back-of-house operations while giving guests access to menu items from both brands in a single visit. That means pancakes, omelets, burgers, wings, and bar drinks can be ordered under one roof, a setup designed to capture breakfast through late-night demand.

Dine Brands first opened its initial U.S. dual-branded Applebee’s-IHOP restaurant in Seguin, Texas, in February 2025, according to the company. Restaurant Dive reported that the company had earlier said the format could generate stronger sales than a single-brand location while improving efficiency through shared labor and kitchen space. The company has since shifted from testing the concept to rolling it out more broadly across its domestic system.

What is confirmed so far, and what is not yet public, about local expansion

What is confirmed nationally is the pace of the rollout, not a full market-by-market map. Dine Brands has publicly disclosed total domestic counts and its year-end target, but it has not released a comprehensive list of every city or state slated for an Applebee’s-IHOP conversion or new build. That means readers may hear about the concept expanding without yet seeing their local market named in company filings.

Texas is the clearest confirmed geography because the first U.S. location opened in Seguin, near San Antonio, and the opening was announced by Dine Brands. Beyond that, public disclosures have focused more on total domestic unit counts than on a state-by-state breakdown. If additional local openings are planned in specific regions, the company has not published a complete roster in the materials tied to its most recent earnings updates.

For customers, the immediate local impact depends on whether an existing Applebee’s or IHOP is selected for conversion or whether a new combined restaurant is built. Dine Brands has said both approaches are part of the strategy. Until a franchisee or the company announces an address, however, it is not possible to confirm specific cities outside the locations already publicly identified.

The company says costs, daypart coverage, and franchise economics are driving the push

Dine Brands and trade publication coverage have tied the expansion to restaurant economics. In earnings materials and executive commentary, the company has pointed to its dual-brand strategy as a development initiative aimed at long-term growth. Restaurant Dive and Restaurant Business reported that the model allows operators to share staff and kitchen infrastructure while serving customers across more dayparts than either brand might capture alone.

The broader backdrop is pressure on the casual-dining business. Dine Brands has warned investors in filings that inflation, franchisee financial health, debt burdens, and other operating risks can affect performance. Those disclosures do not present the dual-brand model as a cure-all, but they do show why a company would look for a format that can spread occupancy, labor, and equipment costs across two recognizable brands.

For diners, the practical takeaway is straightforward: more combined Applebee’s-IHOP restaurants may appear in markets where a stand-alone location would be harder to justify. Dine Brands has not released a full list of affected communities, but it has publicly said the concept is central to its current domestic development plan and that it remains on track for about 80 U.S. dual-branded locations by the end of 2026.

The Gut-Health Trend Taking Over Grocery Shelves Isn’t What You’d Expect

Across the U.S. food industry, gut health has become one of the clearest drivers of new product development, with brands increasingly tying everyday staples to digestive benefits. On grocery shelves, that shift is showing up not in a new wave of fermented foods, but in fiber-focused ingredients like cassava, chicory root, and konjac that are moving into breads, snacks, beverages, and noodle alternatives.

Fiber ingredients are becoming the headline product, not the side claim

The clearest change in the gut-health category is that fiber is now being sold as the core functional benefit, not just a nutrition label detail. A February 3, 2026 survey from the International Food Information Council found that seven in 10 Americans believe fiber and whole grains are good for their health, and that the top reasons consumers seek fiber include general health, getting more fiber, and supporting gut health. That helps explain why manufacturers are placing digestive claims closer to the front of the package and expanding the use of specialty plant fibers in mainstream products.

The ingredients drawing the most attention are not all familiar to typical shoppers. Cassava is being used in flour blends and grain-free packaged foods because its resistant starch behaves like dietary fiber in the digestive tract. Chicory root is showing up for its inulin content, a soluble prebiotic fiber often added to bars, beverages, and other packaged foods. Konjac is being used for glucomannan, a highly absorbent soluble fiber that is already common in shirataki noodles and some plant-based texture systems.

That shift is visible in product formulation as much as in marketing. The reference report provided for this story describes cassava, chicory, and konjac as taking center stage in products ranging from tortillas and chips to prebiotic sodas and zero-calorie noodle alternatives, reflecting a broader grocery push toward functional fiber in routine purchases rather than niche supplements.

What shoppers are seeing in stores, and what is still hard to measure

For shoppers, the practical effect is that gut-health positioning is spreading well beyond the refrigerated probiotic set. Chicory-derived inulin can now appear in shelf-stable bars and beverages, cassava flour is increasingly associated with gluten-free and grain-free pantry items, and konjac continues to anchor low-calorie noodle products and gelatin substitutes. The result is a wider range of products making digestive-health appeals in center-store aisles as well as specialty sections.

What is confirmed is the broader consumer interest behind that expansion. IFIC’s 2026 fiber survey said nearly one in three Americans reported consuming fewer than 20 grams of fiber per day, below recommended intake levels, and also found that cost, taste, and lack of knowledge remain barriers to buying higher-fiber foods. That combination gives brands a clear commercial reason to build fiber into familiar products instead of expecting shoppers to change their diets dramatically.

What is not yet publicly quantified in one national dataset is exactly how many new grocery items now rely on cassava, chicory, or konjac specifically. Companies have rolled out these ingredients across multiple categories, but a comprehensive public tally by retailer, state, or brand family is not available in the source material reviewed for this article.

Why the trend is accelerating, and what it means for grocery buyers

The broader context comes from both consumer research and federal labeling policy. The FDA’s long-standing review of non-digestible carbohydrates recognizes inulin and inulin-type fructans, along with certain resistant starches, among fibers with physiological effects that can support human health. That regulatory framework has helped support use of isolated fibers in packaged foods, giving manufacturers a clearer basis for adding digestive-health ingredients to conventional grocery products.

There is also ongoing scientific interest in how these fibers affect the gut microbiome. A 2026 paper indexed by PubMed reported that fiber mixtures including chicory inulin, as well as tapioca dextrin alone, showed prebiotic effects in short-term colonic simulation work. That does not mean every product carrying a fiber-related message will deliver the same benefit, but it helps explain why ingredient developers and consumer brands continue investing in this category.

For customers, the takeaway is straightforward: gut-health merchandising in 2026 is increasingly tied to ingredient labels listing resistant starch, inulin, or glucomannan rather than only to probiotic drinks or cultured dairy. Based on the current reporting and survey data, shoppers should expect more everyday packaged foods to market fiber as a digestive-health feature as brands compete in one of grocery’s fastest-evolving wellness categories.

Families Are Saving More by Buying the Produce Stores Used to Throw Awa

Food waste remains a major national issue in the United States, with federal agencies and food-rescue companies pointing to large volumes of edible food that never reaches consumers. Within that broader trend, families are increasingly buying discounted boxes of cosmetically imperfect produce and surplus groceries through companies such as Misfits Market.

Food-rescue grocery companies are turning rejected produce into lower-cost weekly orders

The shift is centered on a simple retail idea: produce that stores or distributors might reject for cosmetic reasons can still be sold to households at lower prices. USDA says food waste in the United States is estimated at 30% to 40% of the food supply, and the agency notes that at the retail level, culling blemished produce is one source of food loss. That has helped create room for companies that buy “seconds” and resell them directly to consumers.

Misfits Market has become one of the better-known names in that business. The company says customers help save an average of 5.01 pounds of food from waste or lesser outcomes with every order, based on its 2023 customer-order average. Misfits Market also says its model is built around sourcing food that may be surplus, overstocked, or cosmetically imperfect.

The company’s scale has continued to grow. TechCrunch reported on May 30, 2025, that Misfits Market acquired delivery startup The Rounds, its second acquisition after buying Imperfect Foods in 2022. That deal showed that the rescued-food and discount-grocery category is moving beyond a niche produce-box concept into a broader grocery platform aimed at budget-conscious households.

The impact is broad, but company-specific local savings data is still limited

For families, the appeal is straightforward: lower produce costs, home delivery, and a way to buy fruits and vegetables that still meet eating-quality standards even if they do not look uniform. Consumer Reports previously found that the category’s pitch to shoppers centered on savings that could reach up to 50% on some fruits and vegetables, though actual value can vary by market, order mix, and what a shopper would otherwise buy at a local store.

What is confirmed is that food-rescue grocery services now market themselves as both affordability tools and waste-reduction tools. Misfits Market says its business offers “big savings,” and its 2025 impact materials say the company continues to frame rescued food as part of a lower-cost grocery model. The company also reported donating more than 200,000 pounds of rescued food during a SNAP-related disruption period in fall 2025.

What is not publicly clear is how savings break down by state, city, or metro area. The company has not released a comprehensive public list showing average household savings in specific states, and broad national reporting does not provide a verified city-by-city map of where families are saving the most. That means local readers can verify the general trend, but not a confirmed rank order for their own market.

Inflation, landfill pressure and supply-chain waste are driving the model’s growth

The broader context is a mix of household budget pressure and waste concerns. The original reference material for this topic pointed to produce savings of up to 40% compared with standard supermarket pricing, reflecting how lower wholesale prices for cosmetically imperfect produce can be passed along to shoppers. That kind of discount has become more relevant as grocery inflation has pushed families to compare produce costs more closely.

Federal environmental data also helps explain why the model has drawn attention. EPA says food was the single most common material sent to municipal solid waste landfills in 2019, accounting for more than 24% of landfill-bound material. EPA also says wasted food in landfills contributes to methane emissions, giving food-rescue and redistribution businesses an environmental argument alongside the pricing pitch.

For customers, the practical takeaway is that these programs are not selling spoiled food; they are generally selling food that may be misshapen, surplus, or outside conventional retail appearance standards. The exact savings will vary by order and market, but the category’s continued expansion, including Misfits Market’s May 30, 2025 acquisition activity, suggests retailers still see strong demand for lower-cost grocery options built around food that once had a high chance of being discarded.