Oatly Aftertaste

Where drinks & culture collided

Part forum, part drink extravaganza—we brought together the best in the biz to talk about what’s next in beverage.

It was a day of hot takes, cold beverages, and installations we spent way too much on. For one day in New York City, a curated mix of cultural operators across Coffee, Media and Food & Beverage came together to explore how culture is shaping what and how we drink. 

Life’s pressing questions were debated, like, “Have we reached peak matcha?” and “Are fashion brands the new coffee brands?” And we served up lattes, teas and undefinable drinks that made everyone question the sanity of our R&D team.

There was also an automat serving Jell-Oat shots, a matcha drinking fountain, contraband cafe merch, and unnecessary amounts of bevies with tortilla infusions and clarified oats. Yeah, keep scrolling.

EVERYTHING'S
A CAFE NOW

Bonbon

Cafés are popping up in unexpected places—whether at your neighbor's house or inside your favorite fashion retailer—and they're serving as venues that transcend traditional coffee service. 

This conversation moderated by Feed Me’s Emily Sundberg explored how the desire for community and third spaces is alive and well — from viral LA cafe Granada opening its home to the public, to Air Mail’s audience craving a physical gathering space, to Montauk General building community through pop-ups before opening a brick-and-mortar.

Everything's a cafe now panel on the Oatly Aftertaste stage
 MODERATOR 

Emily Sundberg
Founder, Feed Me

 GUESTS 

Anjali Lewis
Partner, Gravity Strategic Partners (Formerly of Air Mail)

Sydney Wayser
Co-Owner, Granada Echo Park

Kate Diament
Founder, Montauk General

Black and white grainy photo of a crumpled up Oatly Barista Carton

FRENEMIES DEBATE
THE FUTURE OF COFFEE

As drink preferences expand into matcha and other on-trend lattes, a new wave of cafés has emerged. The divide reveals a deeper tension around identity: tradition vs. experimentation, craft vs. culture, product vs. lifestyle. 

This friendly debate between operators from Onyx, Bueno Days, and Dayglow, unpacked the tensions shaping modern coffee culture, including the rise of matcha, the pop-up-to-brick-and-mortar pipeline, and how flavor, expansion, and identity are reshaping what consumers expect from cafés. Bueno Days also shared the exciting news that they’ve found their first permanent location.

 MODERATOR 

Nethra Rajendran
Beverage Experience Developer, Oatly

 GUESTS 

Alma Blancarte-Mora 
Co-Founder, Brand & Operations Lead, Bueno Days

Andrea Allen
Co-Founder, Onyx Coffee Lab

Tohm Ifergan
Founder, Dayglow

The Frenemies Debate the Future of Coffee panel on the Oatly Aftertaste stage

PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF
BEVERAGE WITH OATLY

Bonbons

What exactly is an Everything Bagel Jell-Oat? And why is this Tortilla Agave Latte so f'ing good?

Through an interactive presentation from Oatly's Global Head of Food & Drinks Experience, guests learned straight from the source what it takes to experiment with new combinations in a trend-driven world—and tasted them for themselves.

Rowena Roos on the Aftertaste stage
 SPEAKER 

Rowena Roos
Head of Food & Drinks Experience, Oatly

Latte

MY LATTE JUST WENT VIRAL

Supercharged algorithms, and the right content at the right moment, can turn a global chain into the culture's most relevant drinks brand overnight. 

This one-on-one convo between Link in Bio’s Rachel Karten and Nitro Bar founder Audrey Finocchiaro looked at how cafés are building parasocial relationships with customers, and how viral attention only matters if it converts into real action, loyalty, and product love. They also discussed why serialized content builds community, why eye-catching drinks stop the scroll, and why Nitro Bar stays true to its brand rather than chasing every trend.

 MODERATOR 

Rachel Karten
Author, Link in Bio

 GUESTS 

Audrey Finocchiaro 
Co-Founder and Creative Director, The Nitro Bar

My Latte Just Went Viral panel on the Oatly Aftertaste stage

GEN Z DIDN'T KILL DRINKING CULTURE, THEY JUST CHANGED IT

Strawberry

Despite the myth that Gen Z is drinking less (coffee and booze) than every previous generation, the truth is that their drinking behaviors are simply different: matcha over coffee, THC/CBD over alcohol. They're also interested in flavor and functionality—think fiber and gut health. 

Dan Frommer of The New Consumer explored how younger consumers are reshaping beverage rituals, from protein and alternative caffeine to customization and identity. A few favorite takeaways: “there is no more thrilling 30 feet in retail than Erewhon’s beverage case,” oatmilk won the alt-milk race according to Square data, and today’s novel flavors are tomorrow’s nostalgia.

Gen Z didn't kill drinking culture, they just changed it panel on the Oatly Aftertaste stage
 KEYNOTE SPEAKER 

Dan Frommer
Founder, The New Consumer

Gum

FIRESIDE CHAT WITH
HASAN MINHAJ

Comedian Hasan Minhaj joined Food & Wine’s Kat Kinsman for a conversation on chai as ritual, identity, and cultural memory—and what happens when something deeply personal becomes part of a modern consumer brand. 

The conversation flowed from chai as a form of love and post-event bonding, to the question of which traditions millennials choose to carry forward. Hasan also spoke about his involvement in Kolkata Chai Co., the inevitability of chai’s “matcha moment,” and what it means to honor roots while allowing traditions to evolve.

SPEAKERS

Kat Kinsman
Executive Features Editor, Food & Wine

Hasan Minhaj
Comedian, Writer, Actor & Producer

Kat Kinsman and Hasan Minhaj on the Oatly Aftertaste stage

the future tasted delicious

The AFTERTASTE AFTERPARTY

Nothing like hearing about a party you weren’t at…

The panels ended, the drinks got boozier, the music got louder, and the Knicks were nice enough to deliver a win for the occasion. You kinda had to be there, but please enjoy these photos anyway. 

The Original Oatly