ABOUT CIRCULAR KITCHENS

Circular Kitchens is an emerging movement in the hospitality sector, driven by conscious consumers, food establishments, and their suppliers, who believe that our food and drinks should be plastic-free, organic or ecological by reputation (free from synthetic chemicals), as local, regional and seasonal as possible, ethical, and zero waste.

We have developed a shared brand and certification called Circular Kitchens for recognising and promoting exceptional restaurants including take-aways, food-trucks, cafes, bars, and pubs. We make it easy to become circular with the support of our curated Guides and enabling platform designed to help restaurants align to our 4 principles of a Circular Kitchen:

  • Plastic-Free
  • Organic/Ecological
  • Regional/Ethical
  • Zero Waste

So, what does “circular” mean?

A circular economy is the future!

Transforming our economy into a circular model means eliminating waste & pollution and allowing for a fully regenerative system. Products and materials are kept in-use for as long as possible through sharing and re-using, refurbishment and up-cycling. Non-biodegradable materials are recycled when a product is at end-of-life, and any items that cannot be reused or effectively recycled, such as plastics, must be replaced with sustainable alternatives.

A fully circular economy relies on an agricultural system that produces food in a manner that regenerates and maintains soil health and biodiversity, and the return of biological material (including natural textiles and food waste) to the soil as organic fertiliser (what farmers call ‘black-gold’ – the source of food for all living beings including us humans) or conversion to energy for lighting and heating/cooling.

A circular food system begins on farms that do not use synthetic chemical fertilisers, herbicides and pesticides that are bad for the soil and bad for human health. These farms are more diverse than conventional monoculture farms and the produce is incomparably more tasty than conventional monoculture farming.

Such organic/ecological farms can produce at a similar yield than conventional monoculture farms when food waste is taken into consideration. Food waste is minimised by serving local and regional markets through much shorter value-chains that also happen to emit less carbon into the atmosphere.

This requires a very different regional food system than our current globalised food system, connecting regenerative (organic/ecological) farms more directly with local and regional markets.

Conscious consumers and the hospitality sector can play a critical role in giving rise to an ecological, circular regional food system here in the UK. Our region is large and diverse, stretching from the UK to Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. We are blessed with a lush and fertile region that produces a wide variety of agricultural produce, starting right here in the UK.

As international development academics and professionals, we believe more inclusive, ecological, and circular regional food systems everywhere would also significantly tackle poverty in regions all over the world that import chemical-dependent food at the expense of local and regional farmers. Farmers everywhere from Kent to Calcutta have been indebted and driven to bankruptcy by the failed promise of global commodity markets and chemical-dependent farming models.

It’s time for change. Here is a simple and effortless step you can take right now to help make that change a reality:

Sign our petition inviting restaurants and their suppliers to become plastic-free, organic/ecological, regional/ethical and zero-waste. Our job at Circular Kitchens is to then help these restaurants align to the 4 principles of circularity within the existing cost structure and to make it easy for you, as a conscious consumer, to find great food that aligns with your values. By signing the petition, you are sending a clear signal to restaurants that you will favour their circular establishments.