Going green without seeing red. [View on web]( [A collage of someone harvesting produce over a desolate and destroyed earth]( Photo: Lille Allen; see site for full credits Apathy and inaction are easy to fall back on when you feel overwhelmed by the state of the world. Thatâs doubly so when it comes to navigating the increasingly turbulent climate crises impacting the restaurant industry right now. From the literal and figurative storms forcing many businesses to shutter due to heat wave-driven power outages, hurricanes disrupting supply chains, and rapidly rising temperatures wreaking havoc on farming systems and devastating crops worldwide, the challenges to sustaining an environmentally conscious restaurant seem ever higher and more complex than ever. In contrast, thereâs something so captivating and galvanizing in seeing restaurant workers, chefs, and farmers actively working to both care for their colleagues while proving that a path forward can be more than empty optimism and greenwashing. Thatâs why we partnered with [Civil Eats]( on a five-part series called [Climate on the Menu](, highlighting [how climate change is prompting a tangible shift]( in the hospitality industryâs relationships with farms, the shapes of supply chains, how labor conditions in kitchens impact workers, and so much more. But before your eyes glaze over and you get back to your doctor-denounced, daily dose of doomscrolling, let me be clear: This isnât the man-behind-the-curtain, [Wicked](-style production that big brands with oil corporation ties might trot out. Nor is it a self-indulgent spiral into decision paralysis and fatigue. Rather, this is a deep and earnest exploration of the people and businesses who strive daily to make the world a slightly better, greener, and less wasteful place, from neighborhood haunts like Yardy Rum Bar in Eugene, Oregon, to Washington, D.C.âs swanky vegan and vegetarian restaurant Oyster Oyster, all the way up to international chains like Starbucks, where even the most grassroots changes driven by on-the-ground workers can lead to impactful progress. It sounds obvious and painfully simple, but there are so many nuanced considerations that go into every single ingredient that makes its way to your plate, from regeneratively farmed greens to the oyster mushrooms that shifted how ambitious restaurateurs approach and embrace fungi. (And yes, restaurants even have a little bit of fun with them. Sorry!) Along the way, youâll also get clear, unflinching looks at the conditions workers face, the ingredient and farming limitations that restaurants must accommodate, and the jaw-dropping costs that come with constantly adapting to an inhospitable climate. Still, the focus lies on the actionable realities of how chefs and restaurant workers are actively creating new pathways for securing environmentally sustainable ingredients, while finding new opportunities for menu innovation that goes beyond simply shopping from a farmers market down the block. As stories continue rolling out over the next few weeks, we hope they bring a new light to the undaunted persistence of the countless people, businesses, and communities redefining what a climate-conscious restaurant actually is, and raising the standards for what it means to truly be sustainable even in the face of the unpredictable. Apathy is easy; unwavering action, however, is much more difficult, yet all the more fruitful. â Jesse Sparks, Eater.com senior editor [Read More]( [a photo of a milkshake with the Chicago White Sox logo on it]( Photo illustration by Lille Allen; Photos of Campfire Milkshake by [Chris Peters](/Eater Chicago More for the table: - No one deserves a bigger shot of Malort than the staunch supporters of the Chicago White Sox after the baseball team ended an abominable 2024 season, featuring a 21-game losing streak. [Theyâre soothing their broken hearts with campfire milkshakes](. (Relatable.)
- As a caregiver to a neurodivergent loved one, few things made my week like reading this piece from Eater contributor Sarra Sedghi and edited by Nick Mancall-Bitel. Itâs a deeply [compassionate and celebratory look at the boundless ingenuity]( of neurodivergent cooks that often gets overshadowed by ableism.
- If you religiously or habitually shout, âWHO ASKED FOR THIS?!â at your phone screen and For You page when [inundated with Cinnamon Toast Crunch Bacon collabs and weird Oreo flavors](, then youâll love Eater.com correspondent Jaya Saxenaâs look into the uncomfortable world of unnecessary food collabs.
- Santa isnât real, but Eater Dallas editor Courtney E. Smith truly is a real one for annually dining through the Texas State Fair â and this year, she [upped the ante with a comic book-inspired tour of the many tastes of Texas](. (Yes, this is an Easter egg for the Texans among us; no, I wonât expand. Cheers!) If you like this email, please forward it to a friend. If you aren't signed up for this newsletter, you can [do so right here](.
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