Farm-to-table hotels have on-site agriculture supplying their kitchens. The picks below are properties where the agricultural infrastructure is real and meaningful.
The seven
1. Borgo Santo Pietro (Tuscany)
300-acre estate with extensive on-site farming. Most ingredients are estate-sourced.
2. Castiglion del Bosco (Tuscany)
5,000-acre estate including vineyards and farms. Heritage Tuscan agricultural integration.
3. Singita Sabora Tented Camp (Tanzania)
On-site vegetable gardens supplying the kitchen.
4. Soneva Fushi (Maldives)
On-island agriculture supplying signature restaurant Fresh in the Garden.
5. Auberge du Soleil (Napa Valley)
Wine-country property with on-site garden supplying the restaurant.
6. Lapa Rios Lodge (Costa Rica)
Rainforest setting with on-site agriculture.
7. The Brando (French Polynesia)
On-island agriculture and aquaculture supplying multiple restaurants.
What real farm-to-table delivers
Three things:
1. Freshness
Vegetables harvested hours before service. Fish caught the morning of dinner.
2. Variety
Estate gardens grow varied produce. Restaurant menus reflect what is in season.
3. Story
Real farm-to-table restaurants share the source story. Guests can visit the farms.
What greenwashing farm-to-table looks like
Two signals:
Signal 1: vague sourcing claims
"Locally sourced" without specifying which farms or distance from the property.
Signal 2: limited menu items
Token "garden salad" while the rest of the menu is conventionally sourced.
The strong farm-to-table hotels source 50-80% of restaurant ingredients on-site or from immediate area.
Five rules for farm-to-table hotel selection
- Verify on-site agriculture exists (not just "local sourcing")
- The percentage of menu from on-site sources matters
- Tuscany and Napa lead globally for farm-to-table luxury
- Visit the farm if possible — real properties offer tours
- Combine farm-to-table with other sustainability priorities
For more, see the sustainable pillar.