4 - Recognised
i
Caffé Cress sources the majority of its ingredients directly, naming suppliers across most categories: Fromagerie Kef for cheese, Stadsbakkerij Van As for bread, Zwarts' Coffee, dedicated meat and poultry suppliers (Pieter van Meel, VanNivo), and a named seafood supplier (Jan Veerman), alongside daily produce from the Albert Cuyp market.
The menu rotates every two weeks around what is in season, and the kitchen prepares much of what it serves from scratch: vinegars, kimchi, sauces, stocks, pastries, ice cream, jams and sausages.
Waste reduction extends to the dining room with tap water, bulk drinks, cloth napkins, returnable packaging and no single-use tableware. Egg sourcing follows certified organic and welfare standards, and seafood is sourced from independently assessed fisheries.
The impact dimensions
Low waste & circular practices✓
Sustainable animal products✓
Directly sourced across six categories, with 61–80% of ingredients named; three Amsterdam suppliers independently verified.
Fromagerie Kef (cheese), Stadsbakkerij Van As (bread), and Zwarts' Coffee are independently corroborated. The restaurant also names Pieter van Meel and VanNivo (meat and poultry), Jan Veerman (seafood), and Rungis (wholesale fruit and vegetables), alongside daily Albert Cuyp market sourcing.
The restaurant self-reports 61–80% directly sourced, meeting the Level 4 threshold. Wine is self-imported from nearby European countries. Rungis is a wholesale distributor rather than a direct producer relationship.
Strongest source Restaurant submission
Menu rotates every two weeks around daily Albert Cuyp market availability.
The menu is rebuilt every two weeks, shaped by what the chef finds each morning at the Albert Cuyp market. Multiple independent editorial sources describe market-driven sourcing as the founding principle of the kitchen and confirm that the menu is rebuilt around seasonal availability rather than running fixed dishes.
The chef is publicly associated with the daily-market ethos. The dimension stops short of Level 5 because no specialist sustainability or food-guide listing corroborates the seasonal practice.
Extensive in-house preparation and fermentation; six low-waste packaging practices confirmed.
In-house preparation spans vinegars, kimchi, ice cream, pastries, sausages, mushroom croquettes, cold and hot sauces, dressings, stocks, side dishes, jams and syrups. Fermentation is explicitly part of the daily kitchen practice. Multiple independent editorial sources confirm these named categories.
Waste reduction in the dining room includes tap water service, bulk drinks, cloth napkins, returnable packaging for drinks and supplier transport, and no single-use tableware or disposable containers. Leftovers are repurposed to minimise food waste, spanning two of the three sub-areas with independent corroboration on the food-waste side.
Named suppliers for meat, poultry, and seafood; certified eggs; fish and seafood certification claims documented.
The restaurant names specific suppliers: Pieter van Meel and VanNivo for meat and poultry; Jan Veerman for seafood. Egg sourcing is certified under EU Biologisch, Beter Leven 2 or 3 stars, EKO, or Demeter.
The restaurant reports using only fish from the WWF Fishguide green and yellow lists and only seafood labelled ASC, MSC, Friends of the Sea, or Visserij Verduurzamt. Multiple animal product categories now have named suppliers with some evidence of welfare or sustainability commitment. Meat and poultry suppliers are named but carry no welfare certification, which keeps the dimension below Level 4.
Strongest source Restaurant submission
Positions itself as accessible and family-friendly; ownership team publicly named.
The restaurant describes itself as 'laagdrempelig en betaalbaar' (accessible and affordable) and is documented by editorial sources as family-friendly and dog-friendly. The room features games and colouring sheets, a living-room atmosphere, and a south-facing terrace. The three co-owners are publicly named and their earlier collaboration at Floreyn is referenced. These references convey social themes but no specific employment practice, named charity, named community partner, or recurring social commitment is documented.
One vegetarian option per menu rotation; vegetables present on the plate.
The menu structure shows meat and fish as the dominant categories. One vegetarian appetiser or main appears on each rotation, such as mushroom croquettes or roasted cauliflower with curry foam and coconut cream. Vegetables are present on the plate but the menu is not structured around plants as the main event. Vegan options are not documented.
Sourcing signals
✓
Certified organic ingredients
✓
Direct named-farm sourcing
✓
Low-impact beverage program
40–60% of providers are organic certified. Eggs sourced under EU Biologisch, EKO, or Demeter certification.
Named suppliers: Pieter van Meel and VanNivo (meat and poultry), Jan Veerman (seafood); daily produce from Albert Cuyp market.
Extensive in-house preparation confirmed by editorial sources: vinegars, kimchi, ice cream, pastries, sausages, croquettes, and more.
Fair-trade or equivalent ethical-trade sourcing for coffee, cocoa and chocolate, and tea.
Natural wine imports from cooler European regions; specialty coffee via Zwarts'; craft beers, sodas, and local mineral water.
Six low-waste practices: tap water, bulk drinks, no single-use tableware, cloth napkins, returnable packaging, no disposable containers.