something good

North Texas β€˜pay-what-you-can' restaurant celebrates milestone

The Taste Community Restaurant in Fort Worth serves its 250,000th meal

NBC Universal, Inc.

A restaurant in Fort Worth that operates on a pay-what-you-can model celebrated a milestone this week and it's something good.

The nonprofit Taste Project announced it has officially served more than 250,000 meals at its Taste Community Restaurant on South Main Street.

The restaurant prides itself on three things: healthy, quality meals made from fresh ingredients, a menu with no prices, and everyone dining together.

Guests can choose whether to pay what they can afford, pay what they'd typically pay or pay what they'd typically pay plus a little extra to help a neighbor in need.

β€œWhile it’s easy to count the number of meals we serve at Taste Community Restaurant, it’s harder to quantify the deeper changes we see in our community as a result,” says Jeff Williams, founder and chief executive officer, in a news release.

Another thing that sets the restaurant apart is its reliance on volunteers. Shifts are available in the kitchen, welcome, or service teams.

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The Taste Project will open its second Taste Community Restaurant at 200 N. Cooper St. in Arlington later this year.

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