FFS 029 - Carbon Neutral Restaurants
Listen now
Description
Restaurants around the world are taking action against Climate Change by going carbon neutral. A new generation of chefs – the modern-day ambassadors of the food movement – have a vision: radically transform the restaurant industry by turning sustainability into a culinary virtue. By sourcing differently, cooking creatively, and eliminating the by-products of their restaurant operations, carbon neutral restaurants are pioneering the sustainable dining movement. In this episode, we talk with ZeroFoodprint and two critically-acclaimed restaurants Amass and The Perennial leading the carbon neutral restaurant movement. We discuss: What it means and what it takes for a restaurant to go carbon neutral How The Perennial supports Carbon Farming to combat climate change How Amass Restaurant is eliminating its waste by turning food scraps into culinary gold How carbon neutrality affects your dining experience and what you’ll find on a carbon neutral menu How carbon neutrality can find ways to scale and conquer the fast food industry We interview: Elizabeth Singleton – former Executive Director of ZeroFoodprint Matthew Orlando – Head Chef and Owner of Amass Restaurant Karen Leibowitz – Co-owner of The Perennial   ZeroFoodprint works with restaurants to help them understand and drive down their foodprint by taking action on operational efficiency, ingredients, and carbon offsets. It works with restaurants all around the world including Noma, Mission Chinese Food, Pistola y Corazón, Amass and The Perennial. Amass opened in Copenhagen in 2013 by Matthew Orlando, former chef de cuisine of Noma. The world-famous New Nordic restaurant is radically rethinking the use of by-products in all of its operations. The Perennial is a restaurant in San Fransisco pioneering the sustainable dining movement. By supporting and sourcing from carbon farming initiatives, The Perennial highlights how regenerative agriculture and sustainable dining can become part of the solution to climate change.   Links: ZeroFoodprint Website, Twitter, Facebook Amass Restaurant Website, Instagram , Twitter , Facebook The Perennial Website, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook You May also like: FFS 024 – The Soilution: saving our soil, saving ourselves FFS 022 – The Bird is the Word FFS 017 – When Farms go Vertical  
More Episodes
To mark 50 episodes on the podcast, I share my own evolving thoughts on food. I reflect on the state of agriculture and on what sustainability might mean in the food movement today. My experience over the last half decade engaging with the food movement has been that debates are all too often...
Published 08/26/21
Published 08/26/21
Guilt and shame are deeply present in our relationship with food. How do we harness these emotions for good? When it comes to eating animals, can guilt and shame positively influence our behaviour or those of corporations to reduce our environmental foodprint?   We are joined by Dr. Jennifer...
Published 05/13/21