City Cast DC logo

DC’s Most Sustainable Restaurants

Posted on April 9, 2025   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

The kitchen at Shia. (Photo by Ashley Shadburne)

The kitchen at Shia. (Photo by Ashley Shadburne)

It’s Earth Month, and we’re celebrating the best way we know how: food! These local eateries are going above and beyond to support sustainability and promote eco-friendly practices in the kitchen. Not to mention they make some of the best grub in town.

Shia (Union Market)

Celebrity Chef Edward Lee’s newest D.C. restaurant is a case study for finding practical sustainability solutions that can be replicated across the industry. Shia — an upscale Korean restaurant — is building a zero plastic, zero gas, and zero waste kitchen and will publish data on their cost findings.

Chef Rob Rubba has been a long-time advocate of electric stoves in the kitchen for both environmental and health reasons. The plant-based restaurant also bans single-use plastics such as plastic bags, reuses food scraps, and uses primarily local ingredients.

Lost Sock Coffee Roasters (Takoma Park/Various Retailers)

Sadly, coffee is notoriously harmful to the environment, so it’s important to know where your beans are coming from. Lost Sock works closely with small farmers who prioritize environmental sustainability. Their beans also happen to be my favorite in D.C.

Catfish sliders at the Dabney. (Courtesy of the Dabney)

Catfish sliders at the Dabney. (Courtesy of the Dabney)

The Dabney (Blagden Alley)

Since opening 10 years ago, Chef Jeremiah Langhorne has made a commitment to preserving the Chesapeake Bay region, specifically raising awareness about the pesky invasive blue catfish. The fish is a staple on the Dabney menu, it's delicious, and helps eradicate it from the bay.

Smoke & Mirrors (Navy Yard)

This rooftop bar and restaurant has a new closed-loop food waste system that transforms food scraps into fertilizer. In less than a month, they’ve diverted 1.3 tons of food waste from the landfill. That’s the carbon offset equivalent of planting 99 trees.

Lutèce (Georgetown)

This French Bistro is working to reduce food waste through responsible sourcing and creative menu items. For example, they make a kombucha with leftover apples or rhubarb trimmings. And their cocktail “Tangelo Dream” takes advantage of excess juice from their citrus salad.

Share article

Hey DC

Get smart about D.C. with our news roundup and analysis.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.

Obsessed

See All

The latest in DC

The DC DispatchMay 15

Pirro Says She Will Prosecute Parents of Kids Participating in "Teen Takeovers"

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said parents could face fines or up to six months of jail time.

US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro and US Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. (Annabelle Gordon/AFP via Getty Images)
AnnouncementsMay 12

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann Is City Cast DC’s New Food and Culture Reporter

City Cast DC is undergoing an unprecedented expansion of its local newsroom, hiring a team of journalists to create original reporting ab...

The DC DispatchMay 12

"Downright scandalous:" Inside the NSFW text messages that got a top D.C. police official put on leave

An internal report shows ex-executive assistant chief Andre Wright repeatedly sent crude texts and mocked colleagues.

An internal report shows ex-executive assistant chief Andre Wright repeatedly sent crude texts and mocked colleagues. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)
The DC DispatchMay 5

Police Chief: 13 Top Officials Face Termination Amid Crime Stats Scandal

Jeffery Carroll also confirmed the restructuring of the department.

Interim MPD Chief of Police Jeffery Carroll.
The DC DispatchMay 4

Multiple D.C. Police Leaders Face Termination Over Crime Data Manipulation

The changes could constitute a sweeping restructuring of department leadership.

Metropolitan Police Department outside of Nationals Park on August 15, 2025. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)
AnnouncementsMay 4

We're launching two new newsletters

Sign up now to get the big stories Washington is talking about and our can't-miss guide to food and culture.

DC, ExplainedMay 4

The Obama musical returns Washingtonians to an old, hopeful DC

This raunchy love letter to 2008 D.C. by a former Obama campaign staffer left us weeping with laughter and nostalgia.

TJ Wilkins starring as Barack Obama sings “How Black Is Too Black?” (Courtesy of “44”)
DC Life HacksApril 30

Your Guide to DC in May 2026

So bust out your social planner, here’s our 🔥 super hot 🔥 monthly guide to the District for May.

Union Market drive-in movies. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)