Farm-to-table

Planted rows with canopied tables behind
A "farm-to-table" dinner at Kendall-Jackson used produce from the winery's on-site garden.

Farm-to-table (or farm-to-fork, and in some cases farm-to-school) is a social movement which promotes serving local food at restaurants and school cafeterias, preferably through direct acquisition from the producer (which might be a winery, brewery, ranch, fishery, or other type of food producer which is not strictly a "farm"). This might be accomplished by a direct sales relationship, a community-supported agriculture arrangement, a farmer's market, a local distributor or by the restaurant or school raising its own food. Farm-to-table often incorporates a form of food traceability (celebrated as "knowing where your food comes from") where the origin of the food is identified to consumers. Often restaurants cannot source all the food they need for dishes locally, so only some dishes or only some ingredients are labelled as local.

The farm-to-table movement has arisen more or less concurrently with changes in attitudes about food safety, food freshness, food seasonality, and small-farm economics.[1] Advocates and practitioners of the farm-to-table model frequently cite the scarcity of fresh, local ingredients; the poor flavor of ingredients shipped from afar; the poor nutritional integrity of shipped ingredients; the disappearance of small family farms; the disappearance of heirloom and open-pollinated fruits and vegetables; and the dangers of a highly centralized food growing and distribution system as motivators for their decision to adopt a more locavore approach to the food system.[2][3]

  1. ^ Brain, Roslynn. "The Local Food Movement: Definitions, Benefits & Resources". Utah State University. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  2. ^ Gogoi, Pallavi. "The Local Food Movement Benefits Farms, Food Production, Environment" (PDF). Business Week Online. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 April 2017. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  3. ^ Harvard University, Culinary Institute of America (2016). "Menus of Change: The Business of Healthy, Sustainable, Delicious Food Choices" (PDF). Menus of Change. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 19, 2018. Retrieved April 15, 2017.