NYC’s first Make Food, Not Waste restaurant week aims to produce zero waste

Zero waste doesn’t mean zero taste, if you ask these top chefs.

A dozen of New York City’s most popular restaurants and bars have accepted the challenge to produce no food waste for an entire week as part of the first “Make Food, No Waste” Restaurant Week. In conjunction with the mandatory citywide composting program that begins next week, kitchens across the Big Apple are getting creative to reduce, reuse and recycle their ingredients in the tastiest way possible, from September 30 to 6 October.

In conjunction with the mandatory citywide composting program that begins next week, kitchens across the Big Apple are getting creative to reduce, reuse and recycle their ingredients in the tastiest way possible from September 30th to October 6th .

Participating countries include The Michelin-approved Musket Room, Loring Pace, Rezdôra and Win Son and newer hotspots like Bar Contra and Corima, among others.

“Food waste is almost inevitable in restaurants, but that doesn’t mean we can’t do better,” James Beard Award-winning chef Dan Kluger, owner of Loring Place and executive chef at Greywind, told The Post . “It felt like a great opportunity to push myself and explore new ways to reduce waste.”

Taka Sakaeda, chef and partner at Nami Nori, told The Post that Make Food, Not Waste helped spark “new ideas.”

“While we’ve been composting for some time … we pushed our creativity further.”

Food is the single largest item in landfills and produces methane, a greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide and a significant driver of climate change. It’s a matter very dear to many chefs’ hearts – and stomachs.

“For us, as a restaurant centered around fresh ocean cuisine, the state of our oceans hits particularly close to home,” Sakaeda added. “Imagine a future where overfishing and pollution have destroyed marine life – we couldn’t serve sushi without fish! It’s a grim reality that we want to prevent.”

Taka Sakaeda, chef and partner at Nami Nori, told The Post that Make Food, No Waste helped spark “new ideas” — such as their new lobster dip with yuzu gelée, celery and rice chips.

To highlight their commitment, each restaurant will serve a new dish or cocktail that embodies their innovative approach to zero-waste cooking.

Restaurants participating in Make Food, Not Waste and their exclusive items:

  • Bar Blondeau: Smoked salmon toast
  • Bar Contra: Stumble bee cocktail with Meyer lemon juice, gin and honey
  • Corima: Kampachi crudo and Kampachi “empanada”
  • Greywind: panzanella salad (in the bakery) and caramelized French toast with stone fruit sorbet
  • June: Corn Husk Polenta with Charred Corn, Sonoran Corn Mash and Corn Gravy, with Grilled Yellow Peaches Tossed on Chips and Jimmy Nardellos
  • Le Crocodile: Waldorf Salad and Apple Tart
  • Loring Country: Corn Husk Wrapped Halibut with Polenta Tomato Marmalade and Herbs
  • Musket Room: Fried plantain panna cotta with curry ice cream, plantain caramel shell, peanut praline snow and a rye peanut crunch and butter sassafras soda with maple sorbet
  • Nami Nori: Lobster dip with yuzu gelée, celery and rice chips
  • Rezdôra: Mozzarella di bufala con pomodorini with mixed cherry tomatoes and basil
  • Rhodora: Delicious fruit salad with supreme citrus, jicama, aguachile, chili, herbs and herb oil
  • Win Son: Marinated cucumbers, with garlic and cilantro
To highlight their commitment, each restaurant will serve a new dish or cocktail that embodies their innovative approach to zero-waste cooking. Win Son is serving Marinated Cucumbers, with garlic and cilantro. MELANIE LANDSMAN

“Each plate shows how we use things that would normally go to waste,” explained Kluger.

Bar Contra’s Fabian von Hauske told The Post that working with his team, including chef Jeremiah Stone, to produce zero waste has made their brainstorming sessions “more fun.”

“It makes you creative,” he said. “Now that we’re starting to think like that, everyone is constantly looking at what would be a waste and then trying to do something else with it.”

Bar Contra’s Fabian von Hauske told The Post that working with his team, including chef Jeremiah Stone, to produce zero waste has made their brainstorming sessions “more fun.”

Bar Contra offers the Stumble Bee cocktail, a special take on the Bee’s Knees that mixes Meyer lemon zest, infused gin and honey.

Make Food, Not Waste Restaurant Week’s new additions use trimmings, peels and scraps from other dishes to inspire new offerings.

“Corn husk charred ram is a great example as corn husks are usually the first thing in the bin in many kitchens. However, they actually pack so much flavor, especially when grilled,” Fidel Caballero, chef and owner of Corima, told The Post about his dish.

Along with being geniusly delicious with their ingredients, all restaurants participating in Make Food, Not Waste Restaurant Week will be using the Mill food recyclers, which dry and grind food scraps for use in a composting process or to be turned into chicken feed.

Make Food, Not Waste Restaurant Week’s new additions use trimmings, peels and scraps from other dishes to inspire new offerings – such as MELANIE LANDSMAN
And this Kampachi “Empanada” with kampachi collar, mushrooms, foie gras, celery root and quelites, served over pickled ramps also offered at Corima. MELANIE LANDSMAN

“New York is a city that cares deeply about food and has an amazing restaurant culture — and chefs deeply understand the importance of appreciating our food,” Harry Tannenbaum, Mill co-founder and president, told The Post.

The initiative comes just as the city will begin weekly composting for all apartment buildings in Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island on October 6.

The latest step in the citywide rollout of the program — which began in Brooklyn and Queens earlier this year — will turn collected materials into renewable energy to heat homes or compost that is sold to landscapers and given away free to New Yorkers.

Those with a sweet tooth can finish off their Musket Room meal with the rye peanut butter and sassafras soda with maple sorbet. MELANIE LANDSMAN
Le Crocodile is offering an apple tart made from excess apple chunks left over from their Waldorf salad and crab and avocado dishes.

“It’s important because the world, whether we deny it or not, is changing,” Aidan O’Neal, chef at Le Crocodile, told The Post.

“Parts of food systems will collapse, and continuing to run any business in the status quo will inevitably lead to failure. There is a real opportunity to reframe luxury, away from being expensive and wasteful, to being creative and lavish. There’s a whole history of squeezing flavor out of every ounce of food we have, and going back to that is a wonderful thing.”

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Image Source : nypost.com

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