The rise of locavorism has been a multi-year process -- and this year, several Denver restaurants made the national news for their use of local produce.
Here in Colorado, we've also seen a rise in restaurant gardens all over the Front Range. The Squeaky Bean, 3301 Tejon Street, has its own garden plot behind the restaurant and also procures produce from Aspen Moon Farms in Hygiene; Pizzeria Basta, 3601 Arapahoe Avenue, allocated part of its patio to growing; Boulder's Black Cat, 1964 13th Street, gets many of its ingredients from its owner's farm; Root Down, 1600 West 33rd Avenue, has long toyed with adding an urban garden to its rooftop; and Fruition, Alex Seidel's restaurant at 1313 East Sixth Avenue, acquires the majority of its produce from Fruition Farms, Seidel's ten-acre parcel of land in Larkspur.
According to the National Restaurant Association, that trend is echoed nationally, with new restaurants all over the country analyzing how they can reallocate space to growing food. And now that it's been named, we expect we'll be seeing the movement pick up even more steam.