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Food Identity by My Treats Researched
Kortenbos · The Hague · Netherlands

Bøg

A Hague fine-dining kitchen where chefs Thomas van Voorst and Luc Rensen interpret New Nordic cuisine through seasonal Dutch vegetables, in-house ferments, and biodynamic wines.

The essentials, at a glance

◐
Impact score
4 - Recognised
→
Documented practices
Local sourcing
Seasonal cooking
Low waste
Plant-forward menu

Style
Fine dining
Recognised by
We're Smart Green Guide·5 radishes

The delicious details

In a white mansion on Prinsestraat in The Hague, chefs Thomas van Voorst and Luc Rensen run a kitchen built on the principles of New Nordic cuisine. Two five-course tasting menus sit side by side at the same price: one centred on meat and fish, the other on vegetables and dairy, each prepared with equal intensity.

The approach is minimalist rather than maximalist. Most dishes are built around three or four core ingredients, treated through the Nordic techniques of smoking, pickling, brining, and fermentation. Vegetables sit at the centre of the kitchen's identity, recognised by the We're Smart Green Guide with five radishes.

The interior matches the cooking — pale wood and understated lines. The wine list is restricted to biological and biodynamic producers.

Menu
What's on the table, and what's left off

Two five-course tasting menus, one vegetable-and-dairy and one meat-and-fish, run at the same price with equal care. Dishes centre on three or four core ingredients, shaped by in-house smoking, pickling, brining, and fermentation. Wine pairings draw exclusively from biological and biodynamic producers, with non-alcoholic options available. À la carte and fully vegan menus are not offered.

Dietary options
Vegetarian options
Impact score
How this restaurant rates
4 - Recognised

Seasonal cooking is central to the kitchen. Menus rotate on roughly two-month cycles in line with Dutch produce availability, and foraging brings wild elements such as pine tips, nettles, and cornflowers in when they are around. Low waste is built into daily operations: vegetables are ordered each day based on guest counts to avoid surplus, and Nordic techniques such as fermentation, smoking, and pickling serve as preservation tools throughout the kitchen.

The vegetable and dairy menu runs alongside the meat and fish option with the same depth and attention, with vegetables as the structural focus of the kitchen's identity. Seasonal Dutch produce, named plum varieties such as Reine Claude and Reine Victoria, and foraged elements form the local sourcing base.

Bøg is recognised with five radishes by the We're Smart Green Guide and was nominated as Discovery of the Year in 2022 by the same guide.

The impact dimensions
Local & direct sourcing✓
Seasonal cooking✓
Low waste & circular practices✓
Sustainable animal products
Plant-forward menu✓

Dutch seasonal produce and foraged ingredients anchor the kitchen; a wholesaler is the primary supplier, with no named farms.

The kitchen positions seasonal Dutch produce as central. Chef interviews document year-round use of Netherlands vegetables, supplemented by foraging such as pine tips, nettles, and cornflowers. Reine Claude and Reine Victoria plum varieties are specifically named.

Rungis Nederland, a fine-ingredient wholesaler, is the primary supplier. Some Scandinavian imports are also present — lumpfish roe, specialty syrups, dill aquavit — and no individual local farms or growers are named.

Strongest sourcerungis.nl ↗

Menus rotate every two months in line with Dutch produce availability, supplemented by foraged ingredients when in season.

Seasonality is a guiding principle. Chef interviews document menu rotation roughly every two months in line with what is available, and the kitchen practises foraging — cornflowers, poppy flowers, pine tips, nettles — when in season.

Independent sources corroborate the approach. Gault & Millau cites 'local, sustainable, seasonal dishes,' and the restaurant's social channels highlight seasonal arrivals such as Dutch white asparagus.

Strongest sourcegault-millau.nl ↗

Vegetables are ordered daily to match guest counts, eliminating surplus; Nordic techniques serve as preservation and waste-reduction tools.

Daily vegetable ordering calibrated to guest counts is the core practice. Chef interviews confirm vegetables are ordered each day based on the number of guests, eliminating produce waste.

Nordic preservation techniques — fermentation, smoking, pickling, brining — are embedded in kitchen operations and serve dual purposes as both culinary methods and waste-reduction tools.

Strongest sourcerungis.nl ↗

Self-declared sustainable sourcing; lumpfish roe from Scandinavia; chefs deliberately minimise luxury proteins.

No named butchers, fishmongers, farms, or fisheries are identified for any animal product category. Lumpfish roe is sourced from Scandinavia by region rather than by a named fishery. No MSC, ASC, Beter Leven, or organic certification is named for meat or seafood.

The chefs explicitly avoid luxury proteins such as hamachi and duck liver in favour of vegetable-led minimalism. This signals engagement with the category, though it does not substantiate sourcing traceability.

Strongest sourcerungis.nl ↗

Two five-course menus — vegetables and dairy, meat and fish — run at equal price and intensity; five-radish We're Smart Green Guide recognition.

Plant-forward identity is the kitchen's clearest sustainability marker. We're Smart Green Guide awarded Bøg five radishes (the top tier) and nominated it Discovery of the Year 2022, ranking it number 89 in the Top 100 Best Vegetables Restaurants 2023.

The structural menu format embodies this positioning: two five-course tasting menus run side by side at the same price, one centred on vegetables and dairy, the other on meat and fish, each prepared with explicitly equal intensity. A chef quote from the We're Smart Green Guide profile states 'vegetables are the star attraction here, throughout all the meals.'

Strongest sourceWe're Smart Green Guide ↗
Sourcing signals
✓
In-house preparation
✓
Low-impact beverage program

In-house smoking, pickling, brining, and fermentation are core kitchen techniques, corroborated by independent and partner-vouched sources.

Wine list comprises exclusively biological and biodynamic producers; non-alcoholic pairings available; Belgian ciders also featured.

Visit & practical info
Address, price, and more
Address
Prinsestraat 130, 2513 CH, The Hague, Netherlands
Open in Google Maps ↗
Price
€€€
Format
Two five-course tasting menus, reservation required.
Hours
MondayClosed
Tuesday18:30–22:00
Wednesday18:30–22:00
Thursday18:30–22:00
Friday18:30–22:00
Saturday18:30–22:00
SundayClosed
Style
Fine dining
Web
bøg.com
Reviewed by My Treats
Last reviewed 11 May 2026
Reserve
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How we score
The My Treats impact scale

Every restaurant is assessed against SEERO, our six-dimension sustainability framework — covering sourcing, seasonality, waste, animal products, social impact, and plant-forward cooking. Each finding is weighted by how strongly it is corroborated. The combined result is translated into a planet rating from 1 to 5.

The five levels

SEERO is an acronym for Starting, Engaged, Endorsed, Recognised, Outstanding:

Starting First verified signals of sustainable practice.
Engaged Credible practice across two dimensions.
Endorsed Meaningful practice across three or more dimensions.
Recognised Strong practice across four or more dimensions, with independent corroboration.
This place
Outstanding Top-tier practice, confirmed by recognised third-party audit.

How a level is reached. Each level needs two things together: a minimum number of dimensions covered, and a minimum overall strength of evidence across them. A dimension only counts once its evidence is specific and substantiated — a passing mention doesn't qualify. Meeting only one of the two keeps a restaurant a level lower.

Ratings of four or five planets require human validation and, at the top tier, an external audit. Scores are based on publicly available evidence and restaurant submissions at the time of assessment.

Full methodology→
Impact dimension
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How this dimension works
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How evidence is weighted
Self-declared Stated by the restaurant on its website, menu or in a submission. Plausible, but not yet independently corroborated.
Researched Found through independent research; one credible third-party source backs the claim.
Vouched Corroborated across more than one independent source. Some gaps may remain.
Audited Fully corroborated across independent sources or by a recognised third-party certification.
What the sourcing checkmarks mean
✓ Full check — independently verified: corroborated across more than one source, or audited / third-party certified (vouched or audited).
✓ Light check — self-declared or from a single source. Not yet independently verified.
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