Kman wrote:Does it need to be exclusively sourced from "Midwestern" to qualify? For example Big Jones is a diehard snout to tail for almost everything and using local suppliers but also uses heirloom rice sourced from South Carolina and has engaged with other suppliers outside of the region to support such things as heirloom greens. So is the question are there Midwestern restaurants doing farm to table or are there restaurants exclusively sourcing from Midwestern sources? I'd think the latter would be severely limited on what they could offer.
chgoeditor wrote:Kman wrote:Does it need to be exclusively sourced from "Midwestern" to qualify? For example Big Jones is a diehard snout to tail for almost everything and using local suppliers but also uses heirloom rice sourced from South Carolina and has engaged with other suppliers outside of the region to support such things as heirloom greens. So is the question are there Midwestern restaurants doing farm to table or are there restaurants exclusively sourcing from Midwestern sources? I'd think the latter would be severely limited on what they could offer.
I think that many of the places mentioned would be eliminated using the strictly-Midwestern criteria. Oysters? Saltwater fish? Olive oil, for that matter? Out, out, out.
chgoeditor wrote:Kman wrote:Does it need to be exclusively sourced from "Midwestern" to qualify? For example Big Jones is a diehard snout to tail for almost everything and using local suppliers but also uses heirloom rice sourced from South Carolina and has engaged with other suppliers outside of the region to support such things as heirloom greens. So is the question are there Midwestern restaurants doing farm to table or are there restaurants exclusively sourcing from Midwestern sources? I'd think the latter would be severely limited on what they could offer.
I think that many of the places mentioned would be eliminated using the strictly-Midwestern criteria. Oysters? Saltwater fish? Olive oil, for that matter? Out, out, out.
EdE wrote:The original spirit of the discussion I was having - and the original spirit of this thread - was to identify those Chicago restaurants who really do "walk the talk" when it comes to sourcing locally to the greatest extent possible and, perhaps a little more generally, operate on the principal of knowing specifically where your food comes from.
Of course salt water fish, Italian olive oils, etc are not locally sourced. Restaurants that seek out specific purveyors of those products from the area they were produced vs picking whatever is in the Sysco/other giant distributor catalog and compose plates that incorporate those non-local items into dishes that are largely locally sourced (salmon with veg sourced from local farms, for example) certainly fit into the spirit of what we were trying to list.
I'm hoping that beyond satisfying my own curiosity about which restaurants really are committed to local/small-scale farm sourcing, that we could generate a list that could be a useful resource for (the many?) people in this forum who think it's important on some level to support local and/or smaller family farms by patronizing those restaurants who buy from them.
Jonah wrote:I know Rick Bayless doesn't source everything locally, but:
1. Even his fast food places, Tortas Frontera, list all the many local suppliers they use.
2. At the Outstanding in the Field meal I attended at a farm in Wisconsin, the farmer told me that they used to have a coop that sold together and Rick Bayless was their lifeline in the early years.
Just want to give Bayless some credit where credit is due.
chgoeditor wrote:Kman wrote:Does it need to be exclusively sourced from "Midwestern" to qualify? For example Big Jones is a diehard snout to tail for almost everything and using local suppliers but also uses heirloom rice sourced from South Carolina and has engaged with other suppliers outside of the region to support such things as heirloom greens. So is the question are there Midwestern restaurants doing farm to table or are there restaurants exclusively sourcing from Midwestern sources? I'd think the latter would be severely limited on what they could offer.
I think that many of the places mentioned would be eliminated using the strictly-Midwestern criteria. Oysters? Saltwater fish? Olive oil, for that matter? Out, out, out.