Meet the environmentally conscious chefs taking local produce to a new level

Nowadays, we are now so accustomed to a globalised food industry that we have almost completely lost touch with the seasons. We consume bland, sour, fruit and veg that is picked before it is ripe, packed into plastic, and rolled into a cargo plane before zooming across the globe to our supermarkets.

But our desire to have everything we want, literally on a plate, is one of the many issues causing unsustainable damage to the planet. 

Preservation is key to making use of the British seasons

So let's talk about some restaurants that are so focused on local produce and seasonality that they have their own gardens and farms. 

These champions prove that you don’t have to live off turnips alone in order to fill your plate with British seasonal produce all year round. These are some of the best chefs in the country, and their menus showcase the exciting, varied and delicious stuff that can be grown right here in our gardens.


20190523 Lenclume Our Farm Garden Lettuces

L’Enclume

Sustainability trailblazer Simon Rogan’s restaurants are all furnished with produce from ‘Our Farm’ in Cumbria, where exciting varieties of fruit, veg, herbs and flowers are cultivated. If you’ve eaten at one of Rogan’s restaurants you’ll recognise the starring role that this stuff plays in his dishes.

You might find anise hyssop, lovage, magenta lettuce or purple kohlrabi on your plate. But it doesn’t stop there. Preservation is key to making use of the British seasons, so bright orange begonias are infused to make begonia gin, rose petals are pickled, and vinegar is infused with spruce.

L'Enclume, Cavendish St, Cartmel, Grange-over-Sands LA11 6QA


20190523 Where The Light Gets In Garden 1

Where the Light Gets In

At Stockport's Where The Light Gets In, Sam Buckley and his team create an ever changing menu depending on what the ‘weather patterns, sea conditions and the earth’s response’ allow - with as much as possible coming from their little farm.

You might expect things like heritage beets, borage, gooseberries or loganberries to make an appearance on your plate. A skinny carrot might even adorn your cocktail. Always keen to minimise food waste, some 'on the turn' apples were recently turned into cider. Their ethos extends to the wine list, which only includes wines from this continent.

WTLGI have been campaigning for a community garden for Stockport and have also recently committed to a hosting a regular vegetarian night due to popular demand. 

Where The Light Gets In7 Rostron Brow, Stockport SK1 1JY


20192205 Northcote Garden

Northcote

Northcote has had a Michelin star seemingly since the Jurassic age, and with the talented Lisa Goodwin Allen now at the helm, they are pushing boundaries and exceeding expectations all the more. By stepping away from industrialised farming, Northcote’s resident gardening expert Phil Dewhurst is able to put flavour, quality and nutritional content first. 

Their biodynamic kitchen garden provides much of the inspiration for the plate and, with over 90 varieties of fruit and veg to play with, you can expect colourful ingredients like scarlet rhubarb, racing green watercress and deep maroon lollo rosso to appear in unexpected manifestations.

NorthcoteNorthcote Rd, Langho, Blackburn BB6 8BE


20190523 Moor Hall Garden 2

Moor Hall

The stunning listed building Moor Hall, which houses two restaurants - the eponymous Moor Hall and its more casual sibling The Barn - is set in five acres of breathtaking gardens. These include a walled garden, formal gardens and a growing kitchen garden. You can even book one of their garden tours and go for a postprandial stroll to see where your dinner came from.   

Chef Mark Birchall works closely with the garden’s offerings wherever possible, adding other carefully sourced produce to complement the harvest. You might find vivid flowers like chrysanthemum, woodruff or nasturtium lighting up your plate alongside more conventionally culinary veggies like turnips and heritage carrots.

Moor Hall, Prescot Rd, Aughton, Ormskirk L39 6RT


170725 Forest Side Review Garden In Its Setting

The Forest Side

The Forest Side is a destination restaurant set against a backdrop of breathtaking Cumbrian countryside and head chef Kevin Tickle aims to shepherd this environment into his menus as much as possible. He does this most artfully (and with a northern accent) so you might find cuckoo flower, filthy mushrooms, celeriac 'that's knocking on a bit' or vintage birch sap in the descriptions of his tasting menus.

Locally sourced and foraged produce are essential ingredients in both food and cocktails, and their own one-acre kitchen garden provides them with around two thirds of the fresh fruit and vegetables they need. They have an impressive collection of flowering plants, herbs and nutrient-heavy, greenhouse grown micro-greens to boot. With no chemical herbicides or fertilisers, everything is ethically farmed and all produce is picked fresh daily. It doesn't get fresher, healthier or tastier than this. 

The Forest Side, Keswick Road, Grasmere, Ambleside

20192305 Chefs Table Gardens Flowers

The Chef’s Table

The team behind this 30-seater restaurant in historic Chester take care to ensure that everything from their herbs to their mushrooms come from a sustainable source. While they don’t strictly have their own kitchen garden, much of their product comes from very local small producers. One example, Growing at Field 28, is an indoor ‘urban farm’ that grows pesticide-free, nutrient-high micro herbs.

They also ensure that any palm oil in their food is sourced from sustainable sources, a move that contributed to Chester becoming the first sustainable-only palm oil city in the world in 2019. With green goals like this, they deserve a place on our list.

Chef's Table4 Music Hall Passage, Chester CH1 2EU