Three Days, Three Chefs, One Message: The Future of Food at SAVOUR by LIV Golfđ±
At SAVOUR by LIV Golf Hong Kong, food took centre stage alongside world-class golf. Curated by Future Green, the programme brought together leading chefs to explore a simple but powerful idea: sustainable food can be delicious, creative and commercially viable.Â
Across three days of live chef demonstrations, audiences experienced how sustainability comes to life in the kitchen – from plant-forward innovation to colourful seasonal cooking and neighbourhood-inspired cuisine.
Each chef approached the challenge differently. Together, they showed how hospitality can play a major role in redesigning our food system.

Day 1: Reconnecting Food with Nature â Chef Christian Mongendre

The series opened with Chef Christian Mongendre, founder of TREEHOUSE, known for pushing plant-based cuisine beyond expectations.
His signature dish â The Forest Burger â was a perfect example of how creativity can transform humble ingredients into something memorable. Built around mushrooms, beetroot, oats and aromatic herbs, the burger delivered deep umami flavour while keeping its environmental footprint low.Â
Christianâs philosophy is simple but powerful: food should reconnect people with nature. Even the name âForest Burgerâ reflects this idea â reminding diners that what we eat comes from ecosystems we depend on.
During the demo, audiences saw how techniques like zero-waste cooking and thoughtful ingredient combinations can elevate plant-based food from niche to mainstream.
The message was clear: the future of food may look greener, but it will still taste incredible.
Day 2: Colour, Nutrition and Balance â Chef Shane Osborn

On day two, the stage welcomed Michelin-starred Chef Shane Osborn, the chef behind Arcane.
His demonstration centred on a vibrant concept: âEat the Rainbow.â
Rather than focusing on restriction, Shane emphasised abundance – encouraging people to cook with a wide range of colourful vegetables and seasonal ingredients.
The dish he showcased celebrated natural colours, textures and flavours while highlighting an important principle of sustainable food systems: diversity on the plate supports diversity in agriculture.
By choosing varied ingredients and seasonal produce, chefs can help drive demand for more resilient food supply chains.
Shaneâs approach demonstrated that sustainability in high-end dining doesnât mean sacrificing elegance or sophistication. In fact, it can inspire entirely new culinary possibilities.
Day 3: Neighbourhood Flavours and Cultural Identity â Chef Gavin Chin

The final day brought audiences into the world of Chef Gavin Chin, founder of House of Culture.
His cooking philosophy centres on âneighbourhood-to-tableâ cuisine – food inspired by the everyday flavours, markets and communities that shape local culinary identity.
Through his demo, Gavin showed how sustainable food isnât just about ingredients; itâs also about culture, connection and storytelling.
By celebrating regional flavours and local traditions, chefs can strengthen the relationship between communities and the food they eat.
In a globalised food industry, this approach reminds us that sustainability also means protecting culinary heritage and supporting local food ecosystems.
A Bigger Picture: Sustainability at Global Events
SAVOUR by LIV Golf demonstrates how major sporting events can become platforms for culinary education and sustainable innovation.
Food is responsible for around 30% of global greenhouse gas emissions, making hospitality an important lever for change. Events like this help bring the conversation out of policy rooms and into everyday experiences.
When audiences taste sustainable dishes, speak directly with chefs and see how food is prepared, the ideas become real – not theoretical.
Across the three days, one theme emerged repeatedly:
Sustainability does not limit creativity.
It expands it.
Looking Ahead
From plant-based innovation to colourful seasonal cooking and neighbourhood storytelling, the chefs at SAVOUR by LIV Golf showed that the future of food is already being built in kitchens today.
And if the reaction from the crowd was any indication, people are ready for it.
Because the next chapter of food isnât just about what we eat – itâs about how we grow it, cook it, and share it together.

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đ± Day 2 at Savour by LIV Golf: Fueling the Body with Michelin-Starred Chef Shane Osborn at our Chef Demo – Eat the Rainbow! đ
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đ„ą Day 3 at Savour by LIV Golf: Exploring âNeighbourhood to Tableâ Flavors with Chef Gavin Chin đ„ą
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