Food

Game changers

Menus are pushing past traditional meat choices. Chefs are thinking outside the beef-pork-poultry box and putting more goat, rabbit and pigeon or squab in the center of the plate. Kazia Jankowski of the Sterling-Rice Group in Denver predicts that this will be a leading trend in 2014, as foodies increasingly seek alternative proteins, especially from small-scale producers. Here are some examples:

The Lazy Goat
Greenville, S.C.
Duck, Duck, Goat Pizza: Duck confit, drunken goat, farm egg, arugula, sour cherry vinaigrette; $13

Rouge Tomate
New York City
Thomas Farms Squab with red cabbage sauerkraut, pumpernickel-parsnip bread pudding, huckleberry, hubbard squash, foie gras; part of $89 tasting menu

Bar La Grassa
Minneapolis, Minn.
Cavatelli with Braised Rabbit; $9/$18

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Podcast transcript: Virtual Dining Brands co-founder Robbie Earl

A Deeper Dive: What is the future of digital-only concepts? Earl discusses their work to ensure quality and why focusing on restaurant delivery works.

Financing

In the fast-casual sector, Chipotle laps Panera Bread

The Bottom Line: The two fast-casual restaurant pioneers have diverged over the past five years, as the burrito chain has thrived while Panera hit a wall. Here's why.

Food

How Chick-fil-A's shift on antibiotic-free chicken signals an industry evolution

Chick-fil-A was a No Antibiotics Ever brand, but now its standards are more in line with KFC and others. Will consumers understand the nuanced difference?

Trending

More from our partners