At first glance, iced coffee, rainbow cupcakes, and drag brunches might seem like internet punchlines or overly aestheticized parts of queer culture, but food has long played an instrumental role in LGBTQ+ life. More than a meme or menu item, food has been a tool for survival, a symbol of joy, and a form of rebellion.
Throughout history, queer communities have been forced to find creative ways to carve out space in a world that often tried to repress them. One way they’ve done that is through food. Whether it’s the stereotype of “gay foods,” the evolution of queer-owned restaurants, or the colorful culture of drag brunches, dining has become a vehicle for empowerment and identity.
The “Gay Food” Stereotype
You’ve probably seen the memes about iced coffee being the unofficial beverage of gay people and that might be a harmless joke, but it speaks to something much deeper: how queerness is often portrayed through consumer choices. Foods labeled as “gay” are often those perceived as excessive, performative, or aesthetically pleasing. Think sweet, frothy drinks, colorful cakes, or the foods that might be associated with explicit imagery. “Straight” foods are often those described as more rugged, greasy, or meat-heavy. These culinary binaries are reflective of the gender expectations that queer people resist.
So, when someone jokes that ordering an iced coffee is “gay,” they’re not just talking about the drink. They’re talking about how queerness gets labeled and policed through taste, behavior, and even items on a menu.
Despite the fact that I am setting this up as an aggressively progressive statement on the oppression of the LGBTQ+ community, queer people leaned into these culinary stereotypes.
Food As Celebration
We see queer food culture most prominently in the restaurant scene. Gay bars and drag brunches are what most people recognize as queer restaurants. This goes beyond what is actually being served at these places and touches more on the community that is built through having a space that is accepting to all. Since their genesis in the early half of the 20th century, the vibrancy of gay bars or drag brunches has steadily continued on to become what we now know them as.
Historically, queer people couldn’t gather openly in most public spaces without risk of being hassled or terrorized. Gay bars became sanctuaries, and while early LGBTQ+ spaces were often kept underground, they also laid the base for today’s more celebratory queer dining scenes.
Drag brunches, in particular, have become cultural mainstays. Part performance, part community ritual. The food might be pancakes and mimosas, but what’s really being served is joy, self-expression, and safe belonging. Starting in the 50’s drag queens started to perform at nighttime gay bars because they were one of the few places where it was acceptable to be fully glammed, but with the unwelcoming climate of society, it wasn’t safe for them to make the trip from their home to the bar after dark. This is where the idea of drag brunch came from. Brunch was viewed as a lavish environment for the wealthy to drink while the sun was out, so it was the prime place for drag queens to incorporate their talent and profit off of their pizazz. These spaces allow queer people to come together and exist fully as themselves.
This history goes to show that queer culinary culture, while being fun and relatively new in the grand scheme of things, is not a trend. Its roots spread deeper and it is the foundation of many significant moments in LGBTQ+ history.
Reclaiming The Menu
If mainstream culture labels something as “too much,” queer people tend to turn it into art. This can be seen through specific foods like elaborate lunch spreads or colorful cupcakes, but it can more importantly be seen through the community that has been built through the LGBTQ+ use of dining out as a form of expression. In an era when nobody’s rights are set in stone, even something as simple as sitting down to eat together can be a form of resistance.
It’s easy to think of queer food culture as a recent, Instagram-ready phenomenon, but it became apparent far earlier. From feeding families during the AIDS crisis, to fighting for space in restaurants that refused to have LGBTQ+ patrons, to creating joyful and unapologetic public spaces, queer food culture has always been about more than what’s on the plate.
It’s about choosing community and joy in a world that tries to take it away. And yes, it’s about iced coffee because, even a joke in queer hands can become a symbol of something bigger.