Silo restaurant: pre-industrial food and "food interception"

What's that about you may well ask? That's the same question I asked myself when I visited their website.
So I decided to check it out.
Walking into the Silo, I'm greeted by a table laden with sourdough sandwiches stuffed with roasted veggies and behind it a large industrial installation.
Sebastian, one of the staff, explains that this is the heated composter – capable of aerobically digesting (processing) the restaurant waste within a day. Everything goes into the digester: the compostable cutlery, plates, food waste….and within a day is turned into a rich compost that goes back to the farmers that supply the restaurant or is picked up by enthusiastic Brighton allotment holders.

But where does the food come from?
Sebastian explains that the Silo "intercepts food" rejected by the supermarkets and on its way to landfill. This means that the menu changes everyday depending on what produce has been "intercepted". The Silo also has 5-10 regular suppliers of local fruit and veg. Although not necessarily organic or local, the Silo tries to source as much seasonal produce as possible from as close as they can. For example, the organic wheat comes from Sussex or neighbouring Kent and is stone ground on the premises.

What’s pre-industrial food? This is food prepared using "techniques both modern and ancient" to provide a more primitive diet. This means a lot of fermented foods, like the spelt (an ancient grain cultivated since 5000BC) or rye sourdough bread, fermented brown rice, fermented ramson (wild garlic) and porridge with activated grains.
Despite opening only in October 2014, the Silo seems to be doing well and is currently crowd-funding for extending the kitchen and installing a coffee bar.

We need more 'conscious' and ecological restaurants like the Silo where serving food is not only a business but also a contribution to our culture, our society and our planet.
The Silo is definitely part of the food movement composed of farmers, people, business and organizations that want to make the food system more ecological, healthy and humanised. You can be part of it too by challenging yourself to do something differently when buying, preparing or growing your food. Need some inspiration? Visit http://ift.tt/1JBpIjs and pledge something today.
Iza Kruszewska is a senior food campaigner (and proud allotment holder) at Greenpeace International.
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