Animal Rebellion occupy Salt Bae’s celebrity hotspot and brand it ‘symbolic of a broken system’

Animal Rebellion occupy Salt Bae’s celebrity hotspot Nusr-Et in Knightsbridge and brand it ‘symbolic of a broken system’ in the latest stunt

  • Animal Rebellion supporters occupied Salt Bae’s restaurant on Saturday night
  • The ‘ultra-premium’ steakhouse serves gold steaks for a staggering £1450 each
  • Group claims actions will continue until the government takes ‘meaningful action’

On Saturday 3 December, Animal Rebellion supporters ‘peacefully’ entered social media celebrity Salt Bae’s famous Knightsbridge restaurant, Nusr-Et.

Eight protestors occupied reserved tables, calling for a plant-based food system and conservation efforts known as rewilding.

Salt Bae, the social media influencer and chef who rose to fame in 2017, has hosted the likes of David Beckham, Snoop Dogg and Leonardo DiCaprio at his ‘ultra-premium’ restaurants.

In November, Salt Bae was slammed on social media after bragging about a customer’s £140,584 bill in Abu Dhabi.

Protesters said staff at Salt Bae’s upmarket steak restaurant had physically removed demonstrators from the venue ‘tougher than police would do it’.

Student Ben Thomas, 20, said: ‘We’re in this restaurant to show the inequality in lifestyle during this cost-of-living crisis with people out in this fine dining establishment while others can’t heat their homes.

‘We’re a group of non-violent protesters also campaigning for a plant-based food system.

‘We just sat there, the wait staff were quite civil, but the members of the public – two of them got quite aggressive at one point.

‘The woman kept giving me really dirty looks just for being there. The customers clapped as we were picked up and taken outside.’

Orin Cooley-Greene, 21, said: ‘It was tougher than the police would do it.’

Salt Bae's 'Ultra-Premium' London restaurant was occupied by Animal Rebellion supporters

Salt Bae’s ‘Ultra-Premium’ London restaurant was occupied by Animal Rebellion supporters

Animal Rebellion occupied reserved tables in a peaceful protest on Saturday evening

Animal Rebellion occupied reserved tables in a peaceful protest on Saturday evening

Animal Rebellion claims these actions will continue until the government takes real action

Animal Rebellion claims these actions will continue until the government takes real action

Mr Thomas also said: ‘Restaurants like these are symbolic of a broken system.

‘Whilst 2 million people are relying on food banks in the UK right now, influencer chefs are selling gold-plated steaks for more than one thousand pounds.

‘Steaks, and other red meats, that we know carry the highest environmental impacts.’

An hour after the occupation of the London restaurant, 16 Animal Rebellion participants entered ‘Mana’, a Michelin Star Restaurant in Manchester’s Ancoats district.

The restaurant boasts a set-menu starting at £195 per person and refuses to cater for vegans.

Two weeks ago, Animal Rebellion staged a protest at Gordon Ramsay’s 3 Michelin Star restaurant in Chelsea.

The group claims these actions will continue until the government takes meaningful action on climate and ecological emergencies.

Animal Rebellion claims the meat served in Salt Bae’s restaurants is among the most carbon intensive foods to produce.

A study last year found meat alone accounts for nearly 60% of all greenhouse gases from food production, with beef and lamb some of the worst polluters.

Salt Bae was slammed online after sharing a £140,584 bill from a customer in Abu Dhabi

Salt Bae was slammed online after sharing a £140,584 bill from a customer in Abu Dhabi

Salt Bae's restaurants are hotspots for the rich and famous, racking up huge bills

Salt Bae’s restaurants are hotspots for the rich and famous, racking up huge bills

Student Ben Thomas, 20, said restaurants like Salt Bae's are symbolic of a broken system

Student Ben Thomas, 20, said restaurants like Salt Bae’s are symbolic of a broken system

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Michelin Guide releases ‘Bib Gourmand’ best value restaurants in Northern California for 2022

The Michelin Guide has released its first 2022 rankings for California, revealing new additions to its Bib Gourmand list.

These Bib Gourmand picks don’t include Michelin’s famous stars. The French guide tends to reserve that designation for fine-dining restaurants with a high standard for service. Instead, Bib Gourmand winners are what the guide’s anonymous inspectors consider a good value — typically under $50 for “two courses and a glass of wine or dessert.”

There were just three Northern California additions to the Bib Gourmand list this year: Good Good Culture Club in San Francisco, an offshoot of the wildly popular Liholiho Yacht Club; Hilda and Jesse in San Francisco, a sophisticated brunch restaurant; and Jo’s Modern Thai in Oakland, known for pushing boundaries with dishes like barbecue brisket drunken noodles.

This year’s list is much briefer than the 2021 group of new Bib Gourmands for the region. That’s at least in part because the guide took 2020 off due to the pandemic. The three newcomers will join a total of 141 Bib Gourmand designees for 2022, including 13 from Southern California, to which the guide expanded in 2019.

The full picture of Michelin winners, including Bib Gourmands, won’t be clear until all the stars are announced. The guidebook does not issue the entire Bib Gourmand list until next week; for now, it announced just the new additions.

“We don’t release the full list in advance because people can connect the dots and it ruins the big reveal,” a representative wrote. “Think of it as an appetizer before the full meal.”

Still, in a press release last month, the guidebook did share a list of the 37 new additions for this year, though without noting their ratings. It’s possible to spoil your appetite by consulting that list, whose members are still in the running to receive stars.

Those star winners will be announced on Monday, Dec. 5, at a ceremony at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles. The choice of venue is a handy reminder of the guide’s origins: The French tire company released its first promotional guide in 1900 to encourage auto travel, declaring restaurants worth a detour or special trip. The company’s supply of rubber, once cultivated on a plantation in French colonial Vietnam, is now sourced from farms it owns and co-owns in Brazil, West Africa, Thailand and Indonesia.

Caleb Pershan is The San Francisco Chronicle’s assistant Food + Wine editor. Email: [email protected]

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What a record-breaking Black Friday means for restaurants

Sales results from Black Friday and its younger sibling Cyber ​​Monday may have surprised a few folks this year given the stubbornly high inflationary environment we’re navigating. To recap, a record $9.12 billion was spent online on the Friday after Thanksgiving – known as “Black Friday” since the 1950s – while Cyber ​​Monday sales also hit a record $11.3 billion.

Notably, much of those sales were driven by the aforementioned inflation. That said, traffic metrics were also nominally positive, providing a fuller picture of consumer confidence in this strange moment. For Black Friday, in-store retail traffic rose by 7% versus last year, according to RetailNext. Placer.ai data shows some shopping malls, outlet malls and open-air lifestyle centers experiencing triple-digit traffic growth versus the daily average for Q1 through Q3. All told, the National Retail Federation reports that a record 196.7 million Americans shopped over Thanksgiving weekend – exceeding expectations by more than 30 million people. The total number of shoppers grew by nearly 17 million from 2021 and is the highest figure since NRF started tracking this data in 2017.

Doesn’t seem like inflation is slowing us down much this holiday season. But what does that mean for restaurants? Like everything the industry has endured this year, it’s complicated.

According to Fair Betting Sites, which analyzed data from Mastercard SpendingPulse and Adobe Digital, US consumers who were out shopping during Black Friday weekend spent 23% more at restaurants than they did last year. That number is likely driven by both inflation and the high demand for restaurant gift cards this time of year. According to Credit Suisse, the restaurant industry sells the majority of its gift cards from Thanksgiving through New Year’s Day. This period can account for more than half of the annual gift card sales for the average casual restaurant.

Good news, right? Well, simultaneously consumer confidence continues to dwindle, and November marked the fourth straight month of declines on this metric. So, maybe not “good” news as much as “mixed” news, which seems to be a theme this year in general.

That said, there are plenty of reasons to be hopeful, despite growing predictions of a recession. The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index cited higher gas prices as a reason for November’s decline, for example. Since that report was released, gas prices have fallen and are now at their lowest level since February. Earlier this week, GasBuddy projected gas prices could drop below $3 by Christmas. Lower gas prices tend to correlate with higher restaurant sales as consumers balance their spending wants and needs.

Consumers also have plenty of cash on hand to better manage inflation than they have at some time. According to the Wall Street Journal, US households still have about $1.7 trillion in savings they built up during the pandemic, perhaps explaining why they’re not shunning restaurants despite double-digit menu increases. The National Restaurant Association reported that consumer spending in restaurants increased in October, the last month reported, while traffic also ticked up slightly versus the previous four months.

The association notes, “Looking ahead, restaurant operators are slightly more optimistic about business conditions in the month ahead.” Sticking with the “mixed” theme, however, those operators, while bullish about their sales prospects in the near term, remain pessimistic about the direction of the economy overall.

Friday’s jobs report may also provide more reasons for optimism, at least right now. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, restaurants and bars added over 62,000 jobs in November, nearly doubling the industry’s gains from October. Granted, the industry remains nearly 400,000 positions short of pre-pandemic levels, but progress is hard to come by these days, so we’ll take it.

Contact Alicia Kelso at [email protected]

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