The topic of sustainable restaurants has been quite difficult to approach. Very often I have lovely experiences in restaurants: I eat delicious food, I ask or at least read where the products are from (and most of the time the answer is nearby the town where I am eating).
It is much more difficult to be informed about how the products are cultivated. In theory, it is easy to know what constitutes sustainable food. Sustain: the alliance for better food and farming defines sustainable food as food that should be produced, processed and traded in ways that:
– Contribute to thriving local economies and sustainable livelihoods in producer countries;
– Protect the diversity of both plants and animals (and the welfare of farmed and wild species), and avoid damaging natural resources and contributing to climate change; and
– Provide social benefits, such as good quality food, safe and healthy products, and educational opportunities.