Bakers Best Cafe
27 Lincoln St
Newton Highlands, MA 02461
(617) 332-4588
Newton Highlands, MA 02461
(617) 332-4588
Bakers Best Cafe
Business & Professional Services, Food, Bakeries, Cafe, Caterers, Catering & Bartending Services, Bakers, Caterers
URL:
www.bakersbestcatering.com
Green Tags: fresh, healthy, plastic, tasty
Good Tags: fresh quality, pastries, sandwiches
Upscale cafeteria style restaurant. Food is excellent and the selection is varied. Food appears fresh. I love the wraps (Athena my favorite) and the salad selections (teriaki salmon) are adventurous. Not much on atmosphere but hey, its an upscale sandwhich shop. Deserts look really good but I have avoided them! Soups, however tend to be far to salty.
On the green side, I'd have to say I was more than a bit disappointed. They do cary some "green" brands such as Odwalla but I would expect a lot more from a place like this in the location they are in. They imply fresh and local ingredients but they have far to much "plastic" going on and I see a lot of waste there.
Hoping for improvements because the food is good.
Bakers Best is a cafeteria-style restaurant with a Whole Foods vibe - and it comes with all...errr most....of the accompaniments of the vibe. The food is fresh, well prepared, tasty and well conceived - my favorite menu items are their Athena Chicken and Thai Chicken Wraps...great stuff!
But there's a hitch - in the same way Whole Foods has earned the nickname 'Whole Paycheck', Baker's Best seemingly deserves to add an N to their name....Banker's Best. Because it pretty pricey for what you get, Newton Highlands or not.
And here's the other hitch - despite getting a chunk of green cred for freshness and available healthy choices, Baker's lacks one key piece of the Whole Foods vibe: it doesn't appear to be very green at all. At best, I just can't tell if or how green the joint is. And that's not cool to me.
Fair or not, I expect a place like Bakers to respond to the desires of it's customers, and to me, that means 'I'd like a little local produce, organics and a side of recycling with my $8 wrap.'
Given the care and effort Bakers puts into their food service on the whole, I'd love to see them deliver it more sustainably. Until then, they're just another sandwich shop in a Whole Foods-ish wrapper.
Baker's Best is absolutely a fine establishment in terms of food quality. However, the restaurant is lacking in terms of environmental consciousness. There didn't seem to be any way of recycling empty bottles, and there were wasteful uses of resources like single sugar packets (rather than bulk containers.) That being said, it did seem as if they were encouraging dining in their establishment, which saves the use of 'to go' packaging. Overall, my experience here was excellent in terms of service and food, but sub par in regards to 'green' issues.
Baker's Best has some of the tastiest food around. If you are ever in the mood for a hearty sandwich or wrap, Baker's Best is the perfect choice. However, if you are looking for somewhere that not only serves great sandwiches and pastries, but serves it in a green environment, Baker's Best might not be the place for you. It was very clear from the moment I walked in, that going green wasn't exactly a priority. I did not seen any recycling bins or areas. Even the regular trash receptacles were quite inaccessible. This truly made me wonder what they do when everyone throws away their glass and plastic bottles; there's no where for them to go except in the regular trash. Also, another thing that caught my eye was their system for calling people up to order. Although it might be efficient from a management standpoint, from a green standpoint it was just wasting a lot of paper and energy. The system they use is based on those little paper numbers that you rip off and a series of pagers. You would then wait for your number to be called, order, and then you would receive a vibrating pager, to alert you when your food is ready. This did not seem very efficient in terms of greenness because the servers would call out numbers (when they could just eliminate the paper numbers and call out "next!"), and then they would remember what you looked like, to then give you your food as your pager went off (when the could just call out to you again, and skip the whole pager thing). Baker's Best has really great food, but it wouldn't hurt for them to work on their greenness a little.
Food
Big Picture
When you think of food, you may not always think of the environmental impact your choices have. By making conscious decisions when shopping, dining out, or growing your own, you can impact the environment directly, not to mention your own health. The old saying "it isn’t easy being green" really does not apply here – you just have to know what to ask and make sure to put your money where your mouth is!
Factoids n' Stuff
- Approximately 23% of the energy used in food production is allocated to processing and packaging food. (Murray, Danielle. Oil and Food: A Rising Security Challenge, May 9, 2005, accessed September 1, 2006.)
- 10% of the energy used annually was consumed by the food industry. (Heller, Martin C., and Gregory A. Keoleian. Life Cycle-Based Sustainability Indicators for Assessment of the U.S. Food System. Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Sustainable Systems, University of Michigan, 2000: 42.)
- An estimated 20-40lbs of nitrogen per acre of conventionally grown corn is released into the groundwater and streams leading to the Chesapeake Bay. Nitrogen starves water of oxygen, killing fish and other marine life. (“Biofuels and the Bay—Getting it Right to Benefit Farms, Forests and the Bay,” Chesapeake Bay Commission)
- An Ohio study revealed that 67% of water taken near poultry farms contained antibiotics, contributing to the growth and development of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. (www.sustainabletable.org, Jjemba, Patrick K. “The Potential Impact of Veterinary and Human Therapeutic Agents in Manure and Biosolids on Plants Grown on Arable Land: A Review,” in Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Environment, 93 (2002), pp. 267-78: 268.)
- On a factory farm containing 35,000 hogs, over 4 million pounds of waste are produced each week. (Loehr, Raymond. “Pollution Implications of Animal Wastes—A Forward-Oriented Review,” Water Pollution Control Research Series. Washington, D.C. Office of Research and Monitoring, Environmental Protection Agency, 1968, p. 26.)
- The agricultural industry was directly responsible for 6% of the U.S. impact on global warming in 2004. (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Agriculture,” in Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2004 (Washington, DC: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2006): 1.)
- Herbicide tolerant GE (genetically engineered) crops have created weed resistance, causing pesticide use to increase by 70 million lbs between 1997 and 2003. (www.sustainabletable.org)
What Goes In?
Make sure you are getting real food rather than a bunch of chemicals you can't pronounce. Starting at the bottom of the food chain, is your food au naturale or are you getting a bunch of things you didn't ask for, like pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, or steroids? The next step in bringing food to you, wherever you are, is transportation. How far did your food have to travel to get to your mouth?
What Comes Out?
Does the food taste good? Are the portions too big? How much food is wasted? What do they do with that wasted food? Throw it away? Of course, there's the packaging too. Is the establishment you are at using paper, plastic, real dishware? Do they recycle? Are they encouraging you to recycle?
How's it Run?
Do the employees seem happy and healthy? Do they take the time to explain what you are getting – i.e., do they know where the food comes from and are they happy to tell you about it? Do they have a genuine care for quality rather than quantity?
What They Care About
Do they understand the interest in organic and local foods and do they know why that’s important? Have they researched local suppliers and do they think about meeting the farmers or fishermen who provide them with food? Are they thinking of ways to offer more natural choices, or do they just care about making a buck?
What to Ask
- What's been added to my food?
- Where does my food come from?
- Is this food local, organic, or both?
- Does this meat come from a factory farm, or was it naturally raised?
- How far did my food have to travel to get to my mouth?
- What do you do with the leftover food that you have?
- What are you doing to help the negative impact that the mainstream food supply currently has on the environment?
- Do you know what your carbon footprint is (given all the different foods you are providing) and what are you doing to offset your carbon footprint?
What to Do
- Buy local – go to farmers markets, visit local farms, and ask whoever is helping you for the most local choices.
- Buy organic – ok, ok, this can get expensive so if you're tight on cash, at least buy organic for the dirty dozen.
- Grow your own – This is the single best thing we can do for the environment – this summer, pick one thing and grow it yourself.
- Eat a little less animal protein, and get high quality naturally raised meat from a small, sustainable farm in your local area.
- Avoid the center aisles at the grocery stores – they are full of chemically processed foods and drugs that are contaminating our water supply.
- Ask a lot of questions – you'll know what's up by how your questions are answered.
- Take your own reusable bag or container – pretty self explanatory but this makes a huge difference.
- Start composting – compost your unused fruits and veggies and take them to your local community garden – the gardeners will love the help!
Find Out More
- Eat Well Guide
- The Meatrix
- Environmental Working Group
- Sustainable Table
- "Unhappy Meals", by Michael Pollan, New York Times Magazine