(CNN) — With the threat of rising sea levels hanging over the resort islands of the Maldives, the country’s hospitality industry is continually seeking out new ways to operate as sustainably as possible.
Among the areas currently under the spotlight: cuisine. With resorts trying to reduce their high energy and resource demands in a country where much of the food is imported, some restaurants have been stepping things up even further.
“At Roots, we are advocates of a plant-based diet. We’ve a special menu that is coming from our very own organic garden. We grow everything in our organic garden,” says Abdulla Rifzan, junior sous chef at Patina Maldives.
Born in Gemanafushi in the Huvadhoo atoll, the Maldivian chef trained in French and Japanese cuisines before joining Roots.
In the past, some of his favorite dishes to make were foie gras torchon and lobster thermidor.
But working at Roots has given him a new outlook on cooking.
“It’s really important in the Maldives, for our culture, to be more green,” he explains. “Maldives is (a low-lying country) made up of small islands. So by cooking plant-based dishes with homegrown ingredients, it helps the environment and the people.”
A sustainable dining option for guests
Roots, at Patina Maldives, serves plant-based cuisine made with ingredients from the restaurant’s own organic garden.
Patina Maldives, Fari Islands
Patina is not the first resort here to add a vegetarian restaurant to its lineup.
But a restaurant with a garden the size of Roots’ is rare.
“There are plenty of resorts in the Maldives doing farm-to-table and plant-based concepts for many years,” says John Bakker, executive chef of Patina and Roots.
“Roots is the next evolution of that…it’s taking what’s happening in the plant-based community globally.”
With little food being produced in the Maldives, restaurants often need to rely on imports.
While Patina tries to be thoughtful during the process — picking glass over plastic containers and sourcing from nearby countries, for example — having its own garden significantly reduces the carbon footprints of the ingredients on Roots’ menu.
Working in restaurants around the world for more than two decades, Bakker says that he has noticed a change in eating habits in the past 10 years.
“People want to eat healthier. People are starting to feel like what they eat is their personal responsibility and how that affects this sort of greater sustainability, global picture. It becomes ever present in people’s minds,” says the chef.
And that isn’t just limited to what’s served on the table.
Patina has its own biodigester that turns a large portion of the waste from around the island — including its 12 restaurants — into rich compost, which is then used in Roots’ garden.
A new concept of luxury
“Our barefoot luxury concept works in harmony with sustainability which gives our guests tranquility and a beautiful experience. They can find luxury in the small simple things Luxury is when you have the chance to eat fresh organic food from the garden.”
A visit to Gili Lankanfushi’s organic garden, which features local fruit trees and fresh garden greens, is among the culinary-focused experiences offered to guests.
The kitchen also sources local seafood to reduce its carbon footprint.
In addition to a waste digester, the…
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