Posts Tagged ‘Menus’

World’s Largest Contract Caterer Bans 69 Endangered Fish From Menus

Friday, July 31st, 2009

In a move praised by environmentalists fighting to protect vulnerable species, thousands of restaurants across the UK and Ireland have taken 69 fish off their menus.

The Compass Group, world’s largest contract caterer, is setting an example in addressing fisheries’ sustainability and helping to reduce demand for over-exploited fish. According to today’s Guardian, the 69 species on the Marine Conservation Society’s (MCS) “Fish to Avoid” list will no longer be served at 6,500 outlets across the UK and Ireland supplied by Compass.

Head of conservation at MCS, Simon Brockington, in the same article, praised the company’s decision, calling it a “crucial step in ensuring the long-term survival of vulnerable fisheries.”

Currently, a decision on whether or not to offer “official advice” to consumers on eating ethically is under consideration by the government’s Food Standards Agency. If the agency moves forward with the decision, it will encourage consumers not to buy or eat endangered fish,as well as direct them to the MCS and the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC).

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Huffington Post Mashes Local Food with Community Participation

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
huffpo.jpg As Bonnie wrote last year, "Seasonal restaurants are all the rage, and they should be at this time of the year. With fresh from the field vegetables and fruits available on an hourly basis, chefs are featuring recipes on their menus that take advantage of these ingredients." Also all the rage are social media and community participation. So over at Huffington Post they are trying out what they call their "first citizen journalism mapping project." Forget the Red State/ Blue State stuff for a change; we are talkin...Read the full story on TreeHugger

Choose the Salad…But Beware Its Health Aura!

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

In early April, the New York Times briefly reported the results of an eating behavior experiment. Investigators asked college students to choose foods from menus that differed in only one feature: one menu offered a salad and the other did not.

The point? To find out whether the presence of a salad on the menu influenced what else the students ate.

It did....