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Food Identity Researched
Historic centre · Brugge · Belgium

Locàle by Kok au Vin

A sharing plates restaurant on Bruges' Ezelstraat where chef Hendrik Dequeker rebuilds the menu weekly around East and West Flanders vegetables and named regional suppliers.

The essentials, at a glance

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Impact score
3 - Endorsed
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Documented practices
Local sourcing
Seasonal cooking
Sustainable meat/fish

Style
Casual
Cosy
Trendy

The delicious details

Locàle is a sharing plates restaurant on Ezelstraat in the centre of Bruges, descended from the long running Kok au Vin and led in the kitchen by chef Hendrik Dequeker. The dining room sits behind a pared back interior of light wood and black metal, with table counts deliberately reduced to make room for slower service. Plates arrive as small dishes designed to be passed and shared.

The kitchen reassesses its menu every week with whatever the local growers have ready, and around 85 per cent of the vegetables come from East and West Flanders. Meat is sourced from Wild & Gevogelte Derycke, a city butcher with a long working relationship to the team, and Belgian cheeses come from Studio Smaak in Oedelem. Product origins are listed alongside the dishes on the menu.

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

À la carte and set experiences (three to five courses) featuring small plates of shellfish and cured meats alongside mains of beef, fish, and poultry. Spring menus highlight white asparagus, morels, and rhubarb. Vegetarian options are available on every menu; ice creams and components are prepared in-house.

Dietary options
Vegetarian options
Allergies handling

The kitchen accommodates nut and shellfish allergies only. Other allergens are not specifically managed; notify the restaurant at booking for any other dietary requirements.

What the restaurant explicitly accommodates
Tree nuts
Shellfish
Molluscs
Impact score
How this restaurant rates
3 - Endorsed

Local sourcing is the clearest signal. Around 85 per cent of the vegetables come from East and West Flanders, meat is traced to Wild & Gevogelte Derycke in the city, and Belgian cheeses are sourced from Studio Smaak in Oedelem. Suppliers are named on the menu and the team works on long term partnerships with growers who share their approach.

The menu itself rotates weekly with the seasons, with spring courses featuring white asparagus, morels, wild garlic, and rhubarb. Animal products are described as free range or farm raised where they appear, and foie gras is deliberately kept off the menu.

The impact dimensions
Local & direct sourcing✓
Seasonal cooking✓
Sustainable animal products✓
Social impact
Plant-forward menu

Around 85 per cent of vegetables come from East and West Flanders; meat from Wild & Gevogelte Derycke (city butcher); Belgian cheeses from Studio Smaak.

Chef Hendrik Dequeker has publicly stated that around 85 per cent of the vegetables used in the kitchen come from East and West Flanders growers. Multiple named city and regional suppliers feature in the operation: Wild & Gevogelte Derycke (meat and game), Studio Smaak in Oedelem (Belgian cheeses), and Chocolatier Spegelaere (chocolate).

Origins are listed on the menu, and the team builds long term partnerships with local growers and traders.

Strongest sourcejongkeukengeweld.be ↗

Menu rotates weekly with seasonal availability; spring dishes feature white asparagus, morels, wild garlic, and rhubarb.

The chef interview in Culinaire Ambiance describes the team reassessing every week what they can do with the menu based on local product availability. The current spring menus carry classic seasonal markers: white asparagus, morels, wild garlic, peas, rhubarb, and elderflower. The restaurant positions itself around local seasonal organic products, and Gault&Millau corroborates this focus. Menu rotation is at the weekly level, comfortably exceeding the quarterly benchmark for level 3.

Strongest sourceculinaireambiance.com ↗

Meat and game traced to Wild & Gevogelte Derycke (city butcher); poultry and eggs described as farm or free range; fish and seafood lack provenance claims.

Meat and game are sourced from Wild & Gevogelte Derycke, a named city butcher. Eggs and poultry are described as 'farm' or 'free range' on the menus, and the Holstein cattle origin is named for the sirloin main. The kitchen keeps foie gras and pâté off the menu.

Fish and seafood, however, are listed without provenance or certification claims: brill, langoustines, scallops, mussels, and Royal Belgian Caviar appear without MSC, ASC, or named-fishery information.

Strongest sourcevisitbruges.be ↗

Owner describes collaboration with neighbouring Ezelstraat businesses; chef is member of Jong Keukengeweld young chef community.

The owners describe working closely with neighbouring businesses on Ezelstraat and supplier collaborators, helping and supporting each other. Chef Hendrik Dequeker is a member of Jong Keukengeweld, a young chef community in Belgium.

Strongest sourcevisitbruges.be ↗

Vegetables are sourced locally but appear as sides rather than the foundation of mains; vegetarian options available on every menu.

À la carte mains are meat or fish led: Holstein sirloin, brill, mussels, beef tartare, langoustines, veal sweetbreads. Set lunch and dinner experiences carry roughly one vegetable-led course each alongside a meat or fish main. Vegetarian options are advertised on every menu but no vegan offering is documented.

The vegetable supply chain is strong (around 85 per cent from East and West Flanders) but vegetables sit as accompaniments rather than the foundation of mains.

Strongest sourcelocale.be ↗
Visit & practical info
Address, price, and more
Address
Ezelstraat 21, 8000 Brugge, Brugge, Belgium
Open in Google Maps ↗
Price
€€€
Format
À la carte and set experiences (3–5 courses); reservable online
Hours
MondayClosed
Tuesday18:30–20:30
Wednesday12:00–13:30, 18:30–20:30
Thursday12:00–13:30, 18:30–20:30
Friday12:00–13:30, 18:30–20:30
Saturday18:30–20:30
SundayClosed
Style
Casual
Cosy
Trendy
Web
locale.be
Reviewed by My Treats
Last reviewed 16 May 2026
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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.
This place
Recognised Strong practice across four or more dimensions, with independent corroboration.
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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