6 things you'll be eating in 2017
Cyrus McCrimmon | The Denver Post | Getty Images · CNBC

It seems clothes and haircuts aren't the only things that go out of style. The year was filled with food trends that will start to simmer come 2017, including rainbow bagels, quinoa and sushi burritos.

But don't worry — there are some interesting food trends to keep you occupied in 2017. Here are six foods you'll likely be eating next year.

1. Poke

This Hawaiian specialty has cruised to the mainland and is quickly spreading across the U.S. Traditional poke, pronounced "po-kay," is cubed, fresh raw seafood (usually tuna or octopus) mixed with soy sauce, green onions and sesame oil and served over rice.

"You will start to see more around the poke trend," Darren Tristano, president of Technomic, told CNBC, explaining that the specialty food will migrate from fine dining restaurants to niche restaurants and onto menus across the country.

The National Restaurant Association named poke a hot trend for 2017 after surveying almost 1,300 professional chefs to determine menu trends for the coming year.

Authentic ethnic cuisine and sustainable seafood were also among the top 20 anticipated food trends, according to the survey. So, expect to see more variations of traditional poke appearing in restaurants across the country.

"Menu trends today are beginning to shift from ingredient-based items to concept-based ideas, mirroring how consumers tend to adapt their activities to their overall lifestyle philosophies, such as environmental sustainability and nutrition," Hudson Riehle, senior vice president of research for the National Restaurant Association, said in a statement.

2. Pizza

There's nothing cheesy about the pizza sector's success in 2016. Both delivery and fast casual chains have seen massive sales growth that is expected to continue next year.

Domino's saw revenue grow 16.9 percent in the third quarter versus the prior year, due in part to strong same-store sales growth. The company said domestic same-store sales rose 13 percent in the latest period, marking the 22nd consecutive quarter of positive U.S. growth .

On the other end of the spectrum, fast casual pizza "has been growing pretty rapidly," Mark Kalinowski, managing director of U.S. restaurant industry research for Nomura Instinet, told CNBC.

Technomic's Tristano notes that Blaze Pizza and MOD Pizza are two chains to look out for in 2017.

"In the United States pizza is the second-largest restaurant category," Scott Svenson, co-founder of MOD Pizza company, recently told CNBC . "And there is a lot of saturation, but we are doing it in a completely new way."