1) Meat
Meat is something that has traditionally been available only on rare occasions for the non-super-wealthy. Society goes through cycles between what we want and what we can sustain, and in the 80s we thought that was going to collapse. It was actually just a down-slope that we're still on and probably won't come off until a new balance is achieved. In the Shadowrunverse, it's become something that should be available on a monthly basis easily, but the companies that
can aren't putting enough effort to fill demand. Raising chickens and rabbits indoors was considered impossible two hundred years ago but can be done in a modest-sized flat now. Now that's not saying that everybody's eating steak every night, but you could get an expensive, mostly-real meal with steak every month if you wanted to save up through that month and splurge on your food expenses. Or you could buy organic food every meal and have real meat once every couple of weeks and steak twice or so every year.
2) Paper
Paper hasn't been the crude wood construct people learn about in school for years, as technology improves we're only finding new ways to get more paper out of less (and different) materials. As J. Michael Straczynski wrote in
Babylon 5, "Every time someone says we're becoming a paperless society, I get ten more forms to fill out." Despite promises of removing hardware and hard copies, we're just too attached to the physical aspects and objects and I don't think paper is ever going to be ousted. Successfully doing away with that is more of a utopian than dystopian idea in my opinion.
Paper is just too important, cheap and flexible a material in too many products to simply vanish just because people don't write as much anymore.
ImaginalDisc already went over everything else I was going to say.
3) Alcohol from traditional sources (beer made with barley, whiskey made with rye, etc.) rather than soy substitutes
Alcohol is not very difficult to manufacture, hence why America had such difficulties in its poorly planned and executed "Prohibition Era". Alcohol is part of almost every human culture on earth and many are selective about the source matter (rice, hops, wheat, etc). Orson Welles and Aldous Huxley both predicted plausible societies that both still relied on alcohol to help control the populace. I think that it may be difficult for everybody to be selective about it, but I doubt that any general kind is going to be out of any individual's reach, particularly after the globalization we've already achieved and will never go back from.