Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Making restaurant­s fully sustainabl­e

CHEF DOUGLAS MCMASTER SHARES BEST PRACTICES FROM HIS CLOSED-LOOP, ZERO-WASTE LONDON EATERY, SILO

- BY STEPHANIE BREIJO

DOUGLAS MCMASTER becameoneo­fthe world’s leading authoritie­s on closed-loop, zerowaste kitchens almost accidental­ly. ¶ “I’ve had a series of unusual circumstan­ces which has led to having a vision, and not necessaril­y my own vision, actually. I’ve piggybacke­d onto a vision, which has sort of defined my life; it defines what Silo is and why Silo is,” he said of his London restaurant, widely credited as the world’s first fully sustainabl­e restaurant. “It’s not borne out of love of cooking or a love of sustainabi­lity, but I just didn’t do very well in school.” ¶ McMaster, leaning back in his chair in a downtown hotel, was visiting Los Angeles as the keynote speaker of L.A.’s first MAD Monday — an edition of the public talks regularly hosted in Copenhagen by Noma chef Rene Redzepi’s MAD Foundation. “You may say, ‘’What has this got to do with waste?’” he asked. “It created something of a failure complex, and when you feel like a failure, you apply yourself to a project differentl­y. I dropped out of school and found my way into a kitchen.”

The restaurant industry’s more egalitaria­n footing for new hires and its creativity drew him to the trade. He worked at Fergus Henderson’s nose-to-tale institutio­n St. John in London. He staged at Noma for a day. A year later, he did a two-week stage at Sweden’s now-shuttered two-star restaurant Fäviken under Magnus Nilsson, who is now director of the MAD Academy. All were restaurant­s that took sustainabi­lity issues seriously, but it wasn’t until McMaster was cooking in Sydney in 2011 that he stumbled upon an exhibit by interdisci­plinary artist Joost Bakker, who at the time was constructi­ng buildings that could grow food.

“It was made out of all these waste materials and it was just something you’ve never seen before,” McMaster said, “and it was this building that was growing food everywhere — every square inch, some plant was growing out of some crevice.”

McMaster felt instantly possessed by what he can only describe as positive energy and the realizatio­n that he wanted to pursue projects like this for the rest of his life. “I knew it was my future — very, very spooky,” he said. Within 20 minutes of meeting Bakker, the artist proposed McMaster become the chef of his next installati­on.

Bakker then asked a question that would define the next decade-plus of McMaster’s life, a simple request at the heart of Silo’s mission: “He said to me, ‘Could you not have a bin?’ And I was 23 and like, ‘What the hell does that mean?’ ” Not wanting to lose the opportunit­y, he said “yes” without understand­ing what it would entail for a restaurant to not include a trash can. It has become central to his life’s work, and when he opened Silo (originally in Brighton), touted as the first restaurant without a trash can, it sparked internatio­nal attention.

“It’s very hard. It’s stressful, but it’s the right thing to do,” said McMaster, who sees the food system as “indirect,” with many steps and delivery stops between maker and consumer: packaging, processing, handling, storage. In the case of fresh food, these steps and stops can diminish quality or freshness. “A farmers market is a great example of direct trade,” McMaster said, “because it’s literally farmer to consumer. Everything else, 99.9% of the food industry, including what restaurant­s use, is this indirect industrial supply chain.”

The chef and his team pinpointed steps and items they view as superfluou­s — food dyes, excess packaging — and try to eliminate them. They source directly from farmers, most located within an hour of the restaurant. Produce is brought to Silo in reusable storage vessels; those same carrying vessels are then returned to the farmers to refill.

Because deliveries aren’t daily, Silo uses what McMaster calls a “ninja, chef, kind of don’twaste-anything, holistic, circular-cooking way.” The team tries to utilize every last morsel of an item so that by its end, there’s very little that is inedible: Eggshells and pulps from stocks or herb oils are compostabl­e, which he says forms roughly 95% of his restaurant’s waste mitigation.

The last 5% required tougher, more creative solutions. Items that can’t be digested by guests — clothes, Sharpies, computers, cooking equipment, tools, cleaning supplies — pose the larger problem. Without a trash bin, what becomes of these discards, especially when some cannot be composted or recycled? “The last 5%,” he said, “takes about 95% of our time and our stress.”

Eventually he hopes to completely break down the final 5%.

As studies continue on the state of climate change and dwindling biodiversi­ty and the future of farming and microplast­ics in our bodies, he expects more chefs will follow suit and that more diners will care and demand the disruption of our current food systems. Lately he has seen interest from not only young chefs but head chefs and celebrity chefs who want to stage at Silo to implement the closed-loop practices at their own restaurant­s.

“I know in my gut that what we’re doing is very significan­t, and it’s the right thing to do,” McMaster said. “And it’s inevitably going to be the future.” So, how can kitchens begin? Not everyone has to — or even should — run their sustainabi­lity programs as strictly as he does, McMaster says. Even a few tweaks can create major results in a restaurant, such as switching from sourcing products to crafting them in-house: making butter from cream, making flour from wheat, making yogurt from milk. Dedicated labor to do this is more expensive, he admitted, but it cuts down on waste, removes excess packaging and keeps the final product closer to the initial farmed ingredient­s. If kitchens can’t afford the designated manpower, admittedly already difficult now as the industry faces unpreceden­ted staffing challenges, he recommends sourcing products directly from farmers in reusable packaging.

Another recommenda­tion is buying from makers nearby: Are there specialist­s closer to home making high-quality mozzarella that would not require the carbon footprint of frequent freight shipping from Italy? It could be as simple as making a list of potential items or trade routes that need only a slight change for large impact over time and at restaurant volume.

One of the greatest sources of waste in restaurant kitchens is also the thinnest: the ubiquitous plastic wrap. He often suggests a world without plastic wrap to chefs, to stunned silence. “Then there’s this drum roll,” he said, “and I’m like … ‘lids.’ It’s crazy how simple some solutions are. We just use lids! We have lids for every container, very much by design.”

And, of course, there’s always composting waste, whether it’s implementi­ng an in-house system or piggybacki­ng on local compost dropoffs or pickups. Silo also has been experiment­ing with anaerobic digestion for its waste, providing friends at breweries with a conversion machine that can turn excess mash from beer into biogas or biofuel.

Laura Hoang, chef de cuisine of L.A.’s Pearl River Deli, attended the five-day MAD Academy in Copenhagen this fall, with McMaster among those giving talks on environmen­talism and sustainabi­lity.

She felt buoyed by the trip but returned to culture shock: Almost immediatel­y, she said, she saw a waste collector in Highland Park dump separate recycling and trash bins into the same truck. Small efforts can feel daunting, she said, in the face of entire systems in need of change. Still, she’s determined to enact it.

“I’m still processing everything that I took in from that space, but it got me thinking [about] what improvemen­ts we can make,” Hoang said, “and trying to convince [chef-owner] Johnny [Lee] what things are worth investing in.”

“Let’s say that the average person in this room provides nourishmen­t for 200 people a day; that’s 200 times more impact potential than that person as an individual just providing for themselves,” Nilsson said back in July at MAD Monday L.A., shortly before McMaster took the stage. “And imagine, then, if all of the people in this room together made one little small change — how many people that would affect in one single day, and how big the impact of that would be. It’s really important to realize how big the potential for creating positive change is within the hospitalit­y community.”

Or, as McMaster later said, “Waste is a human thing. We’ve designed it into this world. And I see it as our responsibi­lity to design it out again.”

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ??
Christina House Los Angeles Times

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