Marian Gómez Marian Gómez

Sustainable Gastronomy in Hospitality: Navigating Global and Cultural

The revealing paradox materializes in the omnipresent "avocado toast," emblem of gastronomic globalization. Born in Australia but universalized by American culture, this dish occupies a privileged place in breakfasts at global establishments, despite requiring the importation of its main ingredient across oceans and continents. This juxtaposition reveals a fascinating dialogue between global and local when a Mediterranean establishment incorporates international culinary elements alongside the exquisite abundance of autochthonous products that define the gastronomic identity of the region.

When Identity Dissolves in the Global Menu

The revealing paradox materializes in the omnipresent "avocado toast," emblem of gastronomic globalization. Born in Australia but universalized by American culture, this dish occupies a privileged place in breakfasts at global establishments, despite requiring the importation of its main ingredient across oceans and continents. This juxtaposition reveals a fascinating dialogue between global and local when a Mediterranean establishment incorporates international culinary elements alongside the exquisite abundance of autochthonous products that define the gastronomic identity of the region.

This homogenization transcends borders and continents. From the skyscrapers of Dubai to the paradisiacal enclaves of Bali, we observe the systematic replication of a constellation of standardized dishes orbiting global menus.

The recent 2025 trends report from Baum+Whiteman illuminates this gastronomic duality, revealing how some market segments prioritize immediate sensory experience over considerations of cultural authenticity. This observation contextualizes the ease with which various global chains experiment with multicultural fusions that transcend geographical barriers and culinary traditions, while simultaneously Michelin-starred restaurants begin to revalue traditional preparations such as artisanal tacos at El Califa de León, Mexico.

The homogenization and authenticity transcends the purely gastronomic to become an existential question: Are we sacrificing cultural heritage on the altar of global accessibility? What implications does this uniformity have for environmental sustainability, product integrity, operational economics, and long-term financial resilience? How does this reshape the experiential authenticity that defines the transformative journey?

The Heritage into Competitive Advantage

Facing this homogenization emerges an equally powerful gastronomic counterrevolution. Australia presents a paradigmatic case: boutique hotels that have chosen to completely eradicate "international" gastronomic elements from their menus, reorienting their offering toward native Australian ingredients and ancestral aboriginal techniques. The result transcends the culinary to become a transformational experience that connects the traveler with the essence of the destination.

This strategic reorientation not only catapults the establishment toward a differential positioning in the hotel marketing ecosystem but simultaneously strengthens its sustainability credentials by significantly reducing its carbon footprint and catalyzing the economic development of the local environment.

The 2025 Baum+Whiteman report validates this emerging trend, signaling a renaissance of local and traditional flavors. The revaluation of ingredients like figs (proclaimed "fruit of the year") and the proliferation of concepts that celebrate culinary authenticity reveal a paradigm shift where local recovers its value as a strategic differentiator.

The UN Tourism initiative in Ubud, Bali, Indonesia, represents perhaps the most ambitious manifestation of this trend: an integral project that aspires to position the city as a global epicenter of sustainable gastronomic tourism, validating culinary heritage as a strategic asset with transformative potential for emerging economies.

Weaving Tomorrow's Gastronomic Ecosystem

Gastronomic sustainability, when conceived simply as an exercise in reducing environmental impact, loses its transformative potential. The truly visionary perspective recognizes that ecological, cultural, economic, and social dimensions do not exist as watertight compartments but as interconnected flows of the same vital ecosystem.

This organic interdependence manifests when a chef revalues an autochthonous variety in danger of extinction (environmental dimension), simultaneously preserves an ancestral preparation technique (cultural dimension), creates economic opportunities for local farmers (economic dimension), and democratizes access to culturally significant culinary experiences (social dimension). The magic resides not in each isolated dimension but in how these intertwine to create a regenerative fabric that transcends the sum of its parts.

The "Eco-Chic Diners" identified by Baum+Whiteman represent this integration in action: when renovating traditional establishments with contemporary sustainability approaches, these entrepreneurs are not simply implementing ecological practices — they are redefining the relationship between tradition and trend, creating spaces where cultural authenticity and sustainable innovation coexist in dynamic harmony.

The Ubud project exemplifies how this integrative vision can be systematically scaled: its approach does not segment sustainability into separate dimensions but recognizes how the preservation of Balinese culinary techniques (cultural heritage) simultaneously catalyzes inclusive economic opportunities while regenerating traditional agricultural practices that have maintained ecological balance for generations.

This holistic perspective invites us to reimagine sustainability not as a set of isolated practices but as an organizing principle that coherently integrates every aspect of the gastronomic proposition. From this perspective, the tension between global trend and local authenticity reveals itself not as a conflict to be resolved but as a creative field where truly regenerative gastronomic models can emerge.

The Trend Dilemma

The incessant pursuit of gastronomic trends represents a double-edged sword for contemporary hospitality establishments. From my perspective, this dynamic creates an existential dilemma: businesses find themselves perpetually obliged to choose between constantly transforming their offering to "stay relevant" or preserving their essence and risking perceived obsolescence.

However, this dilemma poses a false dichotomy. True strategic mastery does not reside in choosing between tradition and trend —between local cultural heritage or the ubiquity of avocado toast— but in the ability to navigate this creative tension to forge distinctive gastronomic identities that transcend this artificial polarization.

Visionary establishments are reimagining this tension not as conflict but as a generative opportunity. By integrating traditional and contemporary elements within a coherent gastronomic narrative, they create culinary propositions that respect cultural heritage while participating in the global dialogue, without diluting the fundamental concept that defines their value proposition.

Strategic resources such as the Food Sustainability Index, Baum+Whiteman analyses, or Slow Food International studies offer valuable conceptual frameworks, but true gastronomic wisdom emerges when these insights are filtered through the prism of an authentic brand identity and a clearly articulated gastronomic vision.

Designing the Sustainable Gastronomic Ecosystem

The UN Tourism project in Ubud, Bali, represents an inspiring archetype for destinations that aspire to develop a sustainable gastronomic tourism proposition. Its structured methodology comprises:

Holistic analysis of gastronomic resources that maps not only ingredients and techniques but also associated cultural narratives and traditional knowledge systems.

Design of gastronomic experiences that transcend the passivity of consumption to become transformational immersions where the traveler actively participates in the creation of value.

Development of business models that equitably distribute benefits among stakeholders, ensuring economic viability while maximizing positive impact on local communities.

Implementation of participatory governance systems through the Gastronomic Tourism Club, creating platforms for collaboration between public, private sectors and civil society.

Paradox into Opportunity: The Harmony of Intention

The transformative potential of sustainable gastronomy emerges not from rigid categorization but from intentional clarity. The strategic imperative isn't to universally embrace traditionalism or systematically reject global influence, but rather to orchestrate a coherent narrative where every culinary element serves the establishment's core identity and value proposition.

This clarity of intention manifests the reimagination of street food experiences across global destinations. These curated encounters don't merely juxtapose traditional recipes with contemporary presentations—they architect multidimensional immersions that collapse the artificial boundary between observer and participant. The traveler transcends passive consumption to become an active protagonist in a cultural narrative that feels simultaneously authentic and accessible.

What distinguishes visionary hospitality brands isn't their position on a simplistic spectrum between global homogenization and cultural preservation, but their capacity to create integrated experiences where every element—from ingredient sourcing to service choreography—reinforces a coherent brand philosophy. This alignment transforms seemingly contradictory elements into complementary expressions of a singular vision.

The emerging pattern suggests that tomorrow's most compelling hospitality concepts won't be defined by their adherence to tradition or embrace of innovation, but by the intellectual clarity with which they navigate between these polarities. When strategic intention replaces categorical thinking, the culinary experience transcends mere sustenance to become a transformative medium through which guests discover both destination and self.

Connect with me via email or LinkedIn to arrange your session. The journey toward more authentic engagement begins with a moment of strategic clarity, and I welcome the opportunity to contribute to yours without any investment beyond your time and perspective.

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Marian Gómez Marian Gómez

Beyond OTAs: Building a Winning Distribution Strategy

Discover how to build a winning distribution strategy beyond OTAs. Learn the key platforms and strategies that drive success in tourism marketing, with a focus on smart channel integration and audience targeting.

Let us address the million-dollar question that emerges in every hotel marketing meeting: "Which platform should we prioritize - Booking.com, Agoda, or Expedia?"

The simple truth? It depends on your market. But here is what nobody tells you about creating a truly effective distribution strategy.

Breaking the Online vs. Offline Myth

A fresh perspective: stop thinking about online versus offline marketing. These channels are not just necessary – they are complementary. While Online Travel Agencies dominate Google searches, your success lies in how smartly you integrate all channels into your distribution ecosystem.

Smart Market, Smart Platform

The secret to OTA success? Match your platform to your target market:

  • Asian markets thrive on Agoda

  • European and American travelers prefer Booking.com and Expedia

But here is where it gets interesting...

The Distribution Powerhouse: What Really Works

Your winning strategy should embrace:

  • Direct channels (your digital storefront)

  • Major OTAs (aligned with your markets)

  • Strategic partnerships with:

    • Luxury networks (Virtuoso, Fine Hotels & Resorts)

    • Industry powerhouses

    • Local DMOs for destination leverage

    • Corporate travel platforms for business segments

  • Channel managers and GDS systems

  • Metasearch platforms and aggregators

  • Regional platforms with local expertise

  • Travel consortia for expanded reach

  • Specialty marketplaces that match your unique offering

Let us face it: without investing in Meta and Google Ads, visibility in searches remains an uphill battle. As the Mexican saying goes, "Santo que no es visto, no es adorado" (A saint who is not seen, is not worshipped).

Note to Self?

A successful marketing strategy includes many ingredients—both online and offline. Digital campaigns are not as simple as they sound. They require deep audience targeting and an understanding of demographics, locations, interests, and behaviors. And no, simply selecting ages 18-90 is not segmentation. Major companies know this, which is why they invest heavily in digital marketing expertise.

The golden rule? Do not enter the game unless you understand the rules—otherwise, be prepared for disappointing results.

Building Your Success Formula

The real magic happens when you understand:

  1. Where your guests actually search

  2. Which platforms dominate your key markets

  3. How to maintain your brand voice everywhere

  4. When to invest in direct booking tools

Your Next Steps

Ready to transform your distribution strategy? Ask yourself:

  • Are you maximizing each channel’s potential?

  • Have you explored all relevant partnerships?

  • Is your direct booking strategy strong enough?

Looking to create a distribution strategy that actually delivers results? Let us explore how to optimize your channels for maximum impact.

Schedule a Consultation

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