The scientific literature between from 2015 onwards (inclusive) with respect to foams and thin films in the context of foods has been reviewed. Proteins are the dominant foaming agents in foods and investigations of the classic, meringue-forming egg white protein still dominate the literature, since the unique properties of this system are still not properly understood. The current drive of many studies is to find suitable replacers of egg proteins, driven by consumer trends for more plant-based alternatives. This has led to investigations of the stabilizing properties of various protein aggregates, nanoparticles and microgel particles as Pickering-type stabilizers of foams (Pickering foams). At the same time, other work has sought to manipulate the surface properties of biopolymer-and non-biopolymer-based particles by chemical means, in order to make the particles adsorb strongly enough. Few, truly novel foam stabilizers have emerged, but two include saponin aggregates and bacteria as particle-type stabilizers. Author Comments: Dear Editor, Thank you for the positive response to our review. I note your minor editorial comment and have inserted any missing page numbers or article numbers in the references where these are available. I also thank the Reviewer for their suggestions, which I have addressed as follows, allowing the opportunity to improve the MS further. Below I repeat Reviewer 1 s comments/suggestions, followed by my response, in italics for clarity. It is not really clear where the Introduction ends and the material specific discussion starts. In the Introduction I have focused almost exclusively on the generic problems of stabilizing foams, though I have introduced Pickering foams as a special case. At the end of the Introduction I introduced Table 1, a sort of classification summary of the different types of stabilizer as a lead into the following sections, which discuss most of these in turn. However, to make this more clear, I have changed the last sentence of the Introduction to The main classes and sub-class of foam stabilizer covered in this review are summarized in Table 1 and these will be discussed in the following sections. The Abstract features abbreviations and parentheses, which impairs the optical and reading pleasure. Later on also some sentences are placed parentheses: In my opinion, the parentheses are not needed. There is only one abbreviation in the Abstract, for egg white protein (EWP), which I subsequently used only once. I think this was introduced this mainly to keep the word count down. Nevertheless, I have removed this. There is one set of parentheses, around Pickering foams. I think this is justified because the term is not entirely widespread yet, unlike Pickering emulsions. On page 7 there is a valid comment on the often-claimed link between foam stability