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Purpose Consumer satisfaction in food markets varies substantially across product categories, yet a comprehensive understanding of the patterns and their determinants remains limited. This study aims to examine category-specific satisfaction differentials, the influence of health-conscious product attributes and the interaction between demographic and temporal factors shaping food-related preferences. Design/methodology/approach The research is based on the analysis of 568,454 Amazon Fine Food Reviews collected over 11 years (2001–2012). Employing quantitative techniques, the study evaluates satisfaction levels across 13 product categories, health-conscious and dietary attribute effects, demographic segmentation patterns and seasonal consumption dynamics. Findings Results reveal significant heterogeneity in satisfaction across categories, with cereals achieving the highest average satisfaction (4.39) and baby food products the lowest (3.91). Health-conscious and specialized dietary attributes demonstrate clear satisfaction premiums, most notably for gluten-free (+0.250), low-sodium (+0.165) and vegan (+0.165) products. Demographic analysis indicates that elderly consumers experience the highest satisfaction (4.46) despite being the smallest segment. Temporal analysis uncovers strong seasonal effects, particularly for baking products (+0.52 in December) and beverages (+0.13 during summer months). Research limitations/implications The dataset is limited to Amazon reviews from predominantly USA consumers and lacks explicit demographic identifiers such as gender and precise geographic location, necessitating computational inference approaches to demographic segmentation. Findings may not fully generalize to international consumer populations or offline purchase behaviors. Nevertheless, the findings advance theoretical understanding of satisfaction as a multidimensional construct shaped by product attributes, demographics and temporal contexts. Future research could extend the analysis to cross-cultural datasets and incorporate qualitative insights. Practical implications The study highlights the need for category-specific strategies that account for distinct evaluative criteria, health-conscious positioning, demographic targeting and seasonal consumption shifts. These insights can guide food manufacturers, retailers and marketers in evidence-based decision-making for product development, marketing communication and inventory management. Originality/value By integrating product, health, demographic and temporal dimensions in a unified framework, this study provides one of the most comprehensive empirical examinations of consumer satisfaction patterns in food markets. The findings generate both theoretical contributions and actionable insights, bridging academic research and industry practice in the evolving global food marketplace.