My Treats ← Food Identity portal
Search restaurants About Methodology Contact
Food Identity by My Treats Researched
Amsterdam-Oost · Amsterdam · Netherlands

Roef

A neighbourhood bistro on the Middenweg pairing Dutch produce with French technique, built around a kitchen garden and a menu that rotates every two to three months with the seasons.

The essentials, at a glance

◐
Impact score
2 - Engaged
→
Documented practices
Local sourcing
Seasonal cooking

Style
Brasserie
Casual
Cosy
Cuisine
Dutch
French
Good to know
Terrace
Garden
Bar
Private dining room
Child-friendly

The delicious details

Roef opened in September 2025 on the Middenweg in Amsterdam-Oost, a project from owner Eshwin Boetting and a tribute to his grandfather Roelof, who kept a large vegetable and herb garden in Drenthe. The kitchen is grounded in honest, seasonal cooking with a Dutch backbone and French influences, and the philosophy moves quietly through every part of the experience.

The space stretches across three former townhouses, giving the dining room its varied corners and natural divisions, and culminates in a cheese bar where guests choose their selections with staff guidance. Service makes room for dietary needs and pairings without alcohol, and the room is built for families, neighbours, and small groups as much as for dedicated diners.

Behind the building lies the restaurant's own vegetable garden, planted with herbs and edible flowers and intended as the heart of the kitchen as it matures across the seasons.

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

The menu changes every two to three months with seasonal availability and is built around small bites, à la carte plates, and larger sharing dishes, with a refined chef's menu in three or five courses. Cooking draws on Dutch and French foundations with regional meat and vegetables, including Baambrugse pork and dry-aged beef, alongside vegetable-forward plates. The kitchen works with whole ingredients, fermentation, and preservation techniques. Vegetarian and vegan options are accommodated, and the wine programme leans European with a strong organic selection.

Cuisine
Dutch
French
Dietary options
Vegetarian options
Vegan-friendly
Impact score
How this restaurant rates
2 - Engaged

Roef's approach to sustainability centres on sourcing and seasonality. Local and direct sourcing draws on the surrounding region, with vegetables and meat from Baambrugge and a kitchen garden behind the restaurant producing herbs and edible flowers for the menu. The menu rotates every two to three months in step with the seasons and the kitchen garden's harvest.

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

Regional sourcing draws on Baambrugge and the restaurant's own kitchen garden; the sous-chef trained in vegetables and horticulture in Spain.

Multiple independent Dutch culinary outlets confirm consistent regional sourcing, with vegetables and meat drawn from Baambrugge, about twenty kilometres from Amsterdam. A dedicated Baambrugse tomapork dish on the menu signals direct engagement.

Behind the building, the restaurant has established its own kitchen garden producing herbs and edible flowers, described as the heart of the kitchen. The sous-chef trained in vegetables and horticulture in Spain, reinforcing the kitchen's depth in ingredient cultivation.

Strongest sourceCuli Amsterdam ↗

The menu rotates every two to three months with the seasons; the own kitchen garden reinforces seasonal rhythms.

The menu changes every two to three months in step with seasonal availability and the kitchen explicitly builds around what is in season at any given moment. Multiple independent editorial sources confirm this cadence and describe seasonality as structurally central to the concept.

Behind the restaurant lies its own kitchen garden, producing herbs and edible flowers that reinforce the seasonal rhythm at the ingredient level and anchor the menu's seasonal rotation.

Strongest sourceOost-Online ↗

The kitchen employs fermentation and preservation techniques as part of its scratch-cooking approach to seasonal produce.

Editorial coverage describes heavy use of fermentation and preservation techniques in the kitchen, corroborating a scratch cooking approach with circular handling of seasonal produce.

Strongest sourceCuli Amsterdam ↗

Meat sourced from Baambrugge; fish dishes include oysters and red gurnard.

Meat is regionally sourced from Baambrugge, with a dedicated Baambrugse tomapork dish on the menu and dry-aged côte de boeuf. Fish dishes include Asian oysters and red gurnard.

Strongest sourceCuli Amsterdam ↗

Vegetable-forward plates and refined vegetable preparation; the sous-chef trained in vegetables and horticulture in Spain. Vegetarian and vegan options accommodated.

Independent culinary coverage describes vegetable-forward plates as a strength of the kitchen. The sous-chef trained specifically in vegetables and horticulture in Spain, reinforcing the kitchen's depth in vegetable preparation.

Vegetarian and vegan options are explicitly accommodated on the menu.

Strongest sourceCuli Amsterdam ↗
Sourcing signals
✓
Own-grown produce
✓
In-house preparation
✓
Low-impact beverage program

The restaurant's kitchen garden, behind the building, produces herbs and edible flowers, described as the heart of the kitchen as it matures.

The kitchen emphasises fermentation, preservation techniques, and scratch cooking with whole ingredients.

The wine programme is mostly European with a strong share of organic bottles in the regular selection.

Visit & practical info
Address, price, and more
Address
Middenweg 35, 1098 AB Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Open in Google Maps ↗
Price
€€€
Format
À la carte and chef's menus; dietary needs accommodated on request.
Hours
MondayClosed
Tuesday16:30–00:00
Wednesday16:30–00:00
Thursday16:30–00:00
Friday11:00–01:00
Saturday11:00–01:00
Sunday11:00–00:00
Style
Brasserie
Casual
Cosy
Good to know
Terrace
Garden
Bar
Private dining room
Child-friendly
Web
roef-amsterdam.nl
Social
@roef.amsterdam
Reviewed by My Treats
Last reviewed 13 May 2026
Reserve
Link copied
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.
This place
Endorsed Meaningful practice across three or more dimensions.
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
—
How this dimension works
—
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.
About• Contact• Methodology•