Over 27,000 restaurants can be found in AAA.com's
Travel Guide, searchable by destination, price and Diamond Rating. Restaurants are also listed in TourBook guides available free to members from their local AAA club.
Restaurants receive a AAA Diamond Rating only after a visit from a AAA inspector and the process of
AAA Approval. The guidelines used to assign the rating have been updated to reflect current industry trends and the new AAA Diamond Rating Guidelines For Restaurants can be downloaded by interested establishments.
The new guidelines, effective immediately, reflect input from AAA’s professional inspectors, key representatives from the hospitality industry and member comments. Broader language is incorporated to embrace the increasing creativity of chefs and owners. AAA inspectors dine at more than 10,000 restaurants a year, which enables them to recognize and validate trends as they occur.
As an example of change that impacts the guidelines, AAA’s Director of Tourism Information Development Michael Petrone cites increased consumer awareness of food content. “Many of today’s restaurant customers seek healthier options and are more knowledgeable than ever before about the food they eat,” said Petrone. “As a result, restaurants are featuring more fresh-made options, smaller portions, healthier kid’s meals and local, sustainable ingredients. “The updated guidelines reinforce AAA’s longstanding pledge to provide members with reliable travel information through on-site inspections and accurate ratings for the restaurants we approve,” said Petrone.
Ten 2009 restaurant trends identified by AAA inspectors:
1.
Innovation: greater creativity and differentiation leading to more eclectic décor, menu items, styles of service and pricing policies.
2.
Healthier options: organic ingredients, hormone-free meats and smaller portions including bite-sized desserts.
3.
“Greener” restaurants: more establishments employing eco-friendly practices such as recyclable or compostable containers, energy efficient appliances and eco-friendly cleaning supplies.
4.
Attention to value and convenience: options such as fresh prepackaged to-go items and one-price meals.
5.
Regional ethnicity: increased focus on cuisines from smaller, regional areas such as southern Mexico or Piedmont, Italy.
6.
Fewer general cuisines: fare identified by specific country of origin such as Korea or Vietnam rather than a broader region such as Asia.
7.
Increased use of local ingredients: menus highlighting fresh, indigenous ingredients.
8.
Multiple serving sizes: options such as small plates, prix fixe dining (complete meal with several courses), shareable dishes, family-style platters and bar menus.
9.
Upgraded/expanded children’s menus: child versions of signature items and/or healthier options for kids.
10.
Diverse beverage menus: selections such as micro-distilled liquor, culinary cocktails and organic wine, specialty iced tea, organic coffee and flavored/enhanced water. AAA’s Diamond Rating System is the only ratings system that covers all of North America and uses professional inspectors to conduct on-site evaluations using published criteria available to all establishments. With some 32,000 Approved lodgings and more than 27,000 Approved restaurants, AAA rates more properties than any other rating system.