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Adventures in Toronto: Brunch at Whitlocks in The Beaches

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Kew Beach in The Beaches

It was a splendid September Sunday morning and I felt rather peckish for a fine brunch. Winking at me rather roguishly, Pigcat said, “I know just the place, Toulouse! Besides, ‘Life’s the Beaches’.”

“You mean ‘Life’s a Beach’,” I corrected her, stressing the singular.

“No, I mean THE BEACHES,” she returned—rather forcefully, I thought. “Come on, you’ll see,” she added and grabbed the ignition crystal to my ToulouseMobile. She dropped it in my paw. “Let’s go!”

I guess she was feeling peckish too. I grabbed my beret and sunglasses.

Never argue with a hungry cat.

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Lion on the Beach at The Beaches

The drive down Toronto’s Queen Street is itself a sight-seeing trip. This commercial street runs east-west through many ethnic neighbourhoods, reflecting international influences of funk and glam with old and new architecture and original niche-style shops and cafes. We headed east on Queen through Leslieville then eventually into ‘The Beaches’. Where I had a little epiphany. Ah…. THE BEACHES… meow…

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Whitlock's Restaurant

The Beaches is, in fact, a bohemian-style neighbourhood in Toronto’s East end. Dominated by tree-lined streets and turn of the Century Victorian/Edwardian houses turned into cafes and shops, The Beaches is a popular destination for locals and tourists like me. It gets its name from the expansive sandy beaches that line Lake Ontario just south of Queen Street.

Pigcat directed us to Whitlocks Restaurant on the south side of the street, just across from a very inviting pub-style bistro called Lion on the Beach (I took note for another time).

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Whitlock's patio dining

Whitlocks invited with its pet-friendly side patio dining and original historical turn of the century storefront. Wood-framed windows opened up Italian-style to the breeze, providing indoor-eating with an intimate link to the outdoors. One set of windows had been converted into a buffet-style serving area for an elaborate brunch. Two chefs prepared savory custom omelets to a bevy of customers milling on the street and holding out their plates in anticipation.

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Kunam flips a savory omelet

We entered and seated ourselves in the outdoor patio beneath the blue and white awning, where Jose our friendly and attentive waiter took our order. He directed us through the restaurant to where the buffet spread out all the way to the front. There, we stepped back onto the street to order our custom omelets from Kunam and Suthan through the window. Kunam was pretty handy with the pan as he flipped his freshly made omelet into the air for a customer with the panache of a seasoned chef (I think he was showing off in front of Pigcat)…

Whitlocks serves its Sunday Harvest Brunch Buffet between 9 and 3 pm. For $20 you get all you can eat (kids half price), which includes a rich variety of delicious savories, meats, egg dishes and sweets that vary from week to week. Today Whitlocks offered: shepherd’s pie, eggs Benedict and eggs Florentine, custom omelet, roast beef, mussels, mixed vegetable rice, sausage, pancakes, tasty home fries, and renowned waffles, complete with fruit sauces and real whipped cream. And that was just the beginning! They also served Greek salad, chick pea salad, potato salad, coleslaw, fresh fruit, aromatic fresh-baked brownies, banana bread, and oh-so-exquisite tiramisu. Juice and coffee were included.  The food was tastefully cooked to perfection. And it filled my little belly to perfection too!

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One awesome omelet coming up!

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Jose takes Toulouse on a tour of the buffet

Sitting in the patio (ignoring the two dogs parked beside the next table), I leaned back and drank the richly brewed coffee over my Tiramisu and watched the trees rustle in the vigorating wind. Within a few minutes, it began to rain. A typical Toronto thunderstorm was brewing. The rain swiftly turned into a deluge and pelted down hard, pounding the awning and umbrellas like a drum roll. The wind gusted and the rain decided to fall sideways, soaking patrons who laughed gleefully—we were in The Beaches, after all! Jose ushered us inside out of the misbehaving rain. Pigcat giggled and pointed to one young couple, who were crawling inside through the open window, plates of food precariously balanced in their outstretched hands.

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Inside Whitlocks

We rescued our desserts and settled inside with a view of the refreshing downpour, and glad to be dry. The wood and brick walls and funky 1960’s lamps of Whitlock’s high ceilings provides a relaxed and cozy atmosphere inviting friendly chats over coffee or a main meal.

The building remains close to its original form when Philip Whitelocks, a clergyman from England, constructed it in 1891. The clergyman ran a grocery store and post office in the front and a Baptist church in the back. In 1925 it became the first Black Diamond Cheese Factory.

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Happy brunch buffet

Then in 1985 it grew a “Famous Nose” and ten years later it drew the attention of Dimitri Panayiotou, son of master chef Yianni, of the late King Farouk. The current owner, Radha from Sri Lanka, is also Whitlock’s main chef (“The Peoples Chef”), cooking up a storm of wonderful international dishes to an equally international clientele. During the short time that I was there, I recognized French, German and Italian, among more exotic languages spoken among the patrons. Whitlock’s serves quality food and drink with an international menu of soups, appetizers and main dishes, complete with friendly service and a relaxed cosmopolitan atmosphere, conducive to lingering.

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Kunam and Suthan, the awesome Brunch Team

I was reminded of Ramsis Café on the World in Louisville, KY, another bistro-style restaurant that showcases international cuisine of impeccable quality.

Whitlocks: go for the brunch; linger for the dinner.

Contact: 1961 Queen Street East, The Beaches (Toronto); 647-260-0604; http://www.whitlocks.ca/

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Fine Dining at the Main Street Inn, Georgetown

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Patio of the Main Street Inn

As part of our adventure in the environs of Toronto, Pigcat and I had been invited by one of Nina’s relatives to join her in Georgetown for lunch.  We whizzed in my ToulouseMobile onto the 401 toward the village, where I’d enjoyed one of the best espressos I’ve had the pleasure to sip with a view of an authentic Elektra coffee machine.  When we met Cheryl, she recommended the Main Street Inn for lunch. She met my inquisitive appraisal with a confident twinkle of her green eyes and a knowing smile. I was hooked. We were in for a treat.

Like Alice entering wonderland, she seemed a bit reluctant at first about entering my tiny ToulouseMobile (it appeared the ideal size for two stuffed animals, after all), but upon entering, Cheryl marveled at its spaciousness.

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The Main Street Inn

“How?…” she began and I recognized that she was not well-versed in the magic and science of inter-dimensional space and travel. I winked at Pigcat. The good Doctor isn’t the only one with a “Tardis”… (I must have given Cheryl my Cheshire cat-grin in response to her startled Alice-look). In keeping with her stature as a consummate adventurer, Cheryl swiftly regained her equanimity with a quip, “nicely decorated. I like the brocade,” and made herself comfortable in the luxurious seat behind me.

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Toulouse savors exquisite carrot soup

In no time we were whizzing down a country road to the village centre. Cheryl stretched back and found the champagne.

The Main Street Inn is located in the heart of historic Georgetown, nestled among mature ash, maple and chestnut trees. The converted Victorian home was built in 1855 near the forks of the Credit River, a stone’s throw from the Bruce Trail and a walk away from the farmer’s market and eclectic shops and cafés (see my earlier post on the best coffee in Southern Ontario, the Silvercreek Café).

My friends and I entered the foyer and were seated in one of the parlor rooms, rich and attractive with the bright paintings of local artists. The owners, Brian and Sharon Flood, have an eye for beautiful ambience, which included well lit rooms, fine sheers on the windows and fresh spring flowers on each table.

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Then comes the pasta

I began with the soup of the day, which was a delightful carrot orange and fennel cream soup. It tickled my little pink tongue with subtle notes of licorice and orange.

For my main course, I selected the Pasta of the Day, the daily creation of Chefs John Zollewski and Dave Shandelmeir. Today’s pasta dish consisted of penne with Pacific salmon and primavera vegetables in an asparagus cheddar cream sauce. The pasta was done to perfection and the sauce tasty but subtle enough to draw out the festive marriage of ocean and earth. The ocean taste of salmon mingled pleasantly with the indefinable earthiness of asparagus, broccoli and red pepper.

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Lemon cheesecake

I finished with the Inn’s cheesecake of the day, a lemon cinnamon honey cheesecake with a berry coulis and served with a vanilla and field berry sauce. Its creamy texture filled my palate with subtle notes of lemon and cinnamon. Bold yet subtle, confident in its character. The distinct edge of cheese, spiced with the zest of berry, captured my tongue and won my heart. Cheryl had wisely chosen the same as I. Pigcat ordered the Warm Boca Negra, a chocolate and brandy brownie served with French ice cream and a vanilla and field berry sauce. The brownie was as exquisitely smooth as it was soft and warm. She hesitated to share, which wasn’t in character—until I managed a bite. Then I knew why (giant smile).

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Warm boca negra

The Main Street Inn, as its name implies, provides quaint accommodation in addition to brunch, lunch and dinner service. Georgetown lies northwest of Toronto, about a 40 minute drive from downtown. Next time you’re caught up in the mindless rush—or incessant crawl—of the 401, veer north on Winston Churchill Blvd. Amble along the pastoral country roads, toward the village, and breathe in the green. Then stop and energize your soul with the elegance of another time and place.

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Toulouse shares with Cheryl and Ness

Contact Informtion: 126 Main Street, South, Georgetown, Ontario; Tel. no. 905-702-5411; mainstreetinn@bellnet.ca.

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French Pear Martini and Ode to St-Germain

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The French pear martini

After experiencing the French Pear martini at Ramsi’s Café on the World, I shared with my friend Sparky (with whom I’d recently had great success replicating the Kentucky Derby’s signature mint julep) that I was eager to share this latest find with my old friend Pigcat in Toronto, Canada. Bidding my good whippet friend Sparky adieu, I set off in my ToulouseMobile, eager for more adventure. The ToulouseMobile got me there in … well, good time (“Toulouse time”…meow).

Happy to see me and intrigued by my description, Pigcat cheerfully obliged in obtaining the key ingredients for our elixirs at the nearest LCBO (e.g., the Liquor Control Board of Ontario).Grey Goose LePoire lg 80x300 French Pear Martini and Ode to St Germain

The French Pear Martini oozes elegance and conjures a fragrant summer breeze under the shade of a Paris café. Why not? Its ingredients, like Paris, are sensually elegant and subtly complex: Grey Goose La Poire vodka and St-Germain Elderflower Liqueur.

st germain liqueur 125x300 French Pear Martini and Ode to St GermainI believe that every adventure conceals a hidden treasure for us to unravel and discover for ourselves. It’s usually not what we expect. For me it was St-Germain Elderflower Liqueur. And here’s why…

Why I  Love St-Germain Elderflower Liqueur

First of all, this refined artisanal French liqueur is made from 100% fresh handpicked elderflowers. Like Paris, it is a mélange curieux of flavors, styles and influences with a taste as rare as the first days of spring. Its subtle yet complex bouquet hints at pear, lychee and melon with a lingering aftertaste of honeysuckle. Its low sugar content, being roughly half of most liqueurs, also draws out its subtle and delicate expression. The statuesque Belle Epoch bottle reminds me of a noble Fritz Lang movie, tall and faceted with alluring art deco lines.

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Picking the elderflower blossoms

I had to contain a knowing meow when I discovered that this “Cadillac” of liqueurs is the creation of Robert Cooper, third generation distiller and former owner of Chambord liqueur (my other favorite liqueur). Using his considerable talents in the production of fine French liqueurs, Cooper created the world’s first elderflower liqueur in 2001. Since its launch in 2007, this beautiful elixor has won numerous awards including Monde Selections God Medal in 2007, 2008, and 2009. In 2009, the drink and its creator Robert Cooper were awarded one of the Hot 10 by The Bon Appétit Magazine “for giving innovative artisanal ‘flower power’ to the home bar.” Florence Fabricant, the Food editor of The New York Times, found it transporting: “… St-Germain elderflower liqueur is as compelling as the vial on the table in Alice in Wonderland. With its elegant belle époque bottle, its musky-sweet aroma hinting of Meyer lemon and its mouth-filling honeyed pear flavor, it is hard to resist.” Better than the blue pill…

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The elderflower blossom

Cooper refused to settle for cultivated, freeze dried or frozen blossoms, which is what the non-alcoholic cordials use; instead, he relied on 100% wild elderflowers to create a superior liqueur. This is in itself remarkable considering the ephemeral nature of the fragile elderflower blossoms; like most wildflowers, they lose their delicate fragrance and flavor within hours of being picked.

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Bohemian picking the elderflowers

Then there is the matter of their availability. Over a fleeting few weeks in spring when the elderflower blossoms peak, 40 to 50 bohemian farmers gather wild blossoms on the foothills of the Alps and transport them by bicycle to depots and private homes and then to the distillery (within hours of being picked) to make the St-Germain liqueur for that year. St-Germain is made in the traditional French style, a process which has been used by the finest liqueurs for centuries. This starts with a daily maceration using a secret technique to extract the delicate flavor of the elderflower without bruising them then marrying the elderflower maceration with eau de vie as artisanal distillers have done over three generations since 1884.  Finally, the essence is then blended with citrus and cane sugar for the end result. Because of the collection methods, St-Germain is available in limited quantities, and each bottle is individually numbered, reflecting the year in which the flowers were harvested.

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Bohemian farmer brings the elderflower to the distiller

The elder tree is steeped in folk lore and history. Every part of the elder tree was used in traditional societies. Hippocrates and Pliny the Elder relied on it. The elder was an important part of every monastery, garden or farm. The Druids thought it able to ward off spirits and threats of death and destruction. The White Goddess protected the elder. In Anglo-Saxon legend, if you fell asleep under the heavy scent of an elder in full bloom, you were carried off to the world of the fairies and protected from evil spirits.

Making…and Drinking…and Enjoying the French Pear Martini

The French Pear martini has been around a long time. If James Bond had been less fickle about his relationships with the fairer aspects of life, this might have been his signature drink…shaken, not stirred of course. The recipe for the pear martini varies a bit, depending on the bartender’s own biases, but the main ingredients remain the same: vodka, St-Germain and something else. So, Pigcat and I made our choices and proceeded to create our drinks.

Ingredients:

  • 1.5 oz Pear Vodka (we used Grey Goose La Poire Vodka, a high quality vodka with essence of Anjou pears)
  • 2 oz St-Germain Elderflower Liqueur
  • Top with lemon juice OR Champagne OR real Ginger Ale (which we chose for the ginger zest)
  • Super-fine sugar for rimming (I opted out of this one—I’m sweet enough!)
 
 
 

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Toulouse chills the martini glasses

Preparation:

Step 1: chill the martini glass with ice. Some bartenders suggest sugaring the rim of the glass but it really doesn’t need it and I prefer the clean floral nose of this cocktail with hints of pear, peach and grapefruit zest.

Step 2: fill a tall glass or shaker with ice (preferably large cubes—less apt to melt) then pour the pear vodka in, followed by the St-Germain liqueur.  Cover and shake vigorously (the best technique resembles the Ochs or Vom Tag guards in Medieval longsword fencing. Really).

Step 3: dump the ice from the martini glass (never use ice over again) and pour the cocktail through a strainer into the chilled glass.

Step 4: add either real Ginger Ale (ginger goes so well with pear), Champagne or dry sparkling wine (for a more tart

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Toulouse pours the St-Germain

 and elegant but fizzy taste).

Step 5: garnish with either an edible flower or a slice of lemon.

Step 6: drink slowly, breath in daydreams of La Belle Epoche and lounging with Parisian artists in an outdoor café under the fragrant shade of a pear tree.

As we sat beneath our own pear tree, sipping our cocktail, Pigcat pointed to our bottle of St-Germain liqueur. It was marked “P00506-10”; which meant that they’d harvested these elderflowers the same spring I was roaming the Alps of Switzerland and drinking café crème with SF writer Nina Munteanu — bonus! Oh, by the way, because St-Germain liqueur has no preservatives, it should be consumed within 6 months of opening. Pigcat and I agreed that this was just another bonus!

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Toulouse and Pigcat share their first martini

Because of its versatility, bartenders call St-Germain their “bartender’s salt”. Try marrying it with champagne or any good sparkling wine, dry white wine, or sauvignon blanc. With varied notes of pear, grapefruit zest the lingering aftertaste of honeysuckle and cherry blossom give it an all-round appeal. The St-Germain team suggest their own signature cocktail: 

  • 2 parts Brut Champagne or Dry Sparkling Wine
  • 1 ½ parts St.Germain
  • 2 parts Club Soda or Sparkling Water 

Stir ingredients in a Collins glass and mix completely. Think of Paris circa 1947. Garnish with lemon twist, squeezing essential oils from the outer peel into the glass. Think of Sartre circa 1947. Be the lemon twist.

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Feeling very good after a few...

Tips for Making the Perfect Cocktail (from St-Germain)

1. The world’s finest bartenders always measure each ingredient in their drinks, and we recommend you do so as well.

2. Unless a recipe specifically calls for crushed ice, always use large cubes of fresh, solid ice. Toujours, toujours, toujours. Small cubes or slivers melt too quickly and result in a diluted, watery drink. The same is true of the hollow, tubular variety. Wet ice that has begun to thaw is an equally bad choice. Comprenez-vous? Bien.

3. When a recipe does call for crushed ice, here is what to do: Place a scoop of ice on a clean bar towel and wrap it up. Crush by hammering vigorously with a wooden rolling pin or muddler. Trade the demonic glint in your eye for a look of calm satisfaction. Continue with your recipe.

4. Never use ice in a cocktail shaker twice, even to mix the same recipe. Empty it and begin again with fresh ice.

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...Visiting the fairies of the White Goddess...

5. When filling ice cube trays, use bottled or filtered water to avoid off flavors.

6. When serving a drink over ice, always fill the glass with ice – all the way to the top. This makes the drink colder, thus avoiding unwanted dilution.

7. When a recipe calls for wine or Champagne, as in the case of The St-Germain Cocktail, pour the wine first and then add the liqueur. This will aid the mixing of the two as the liqueur sinks and melds with the wine. If you pour the St-Germain first, it will tend to sit under the wine rather than mix. Which the wine may find rather rude, especially if it’s a good vintage.

8. When prepareing a shaken cocktail, always fill your shaker two-thirds full of fresh ice. This will provide just the right amount of dilution. Once you’ve added all the right ingredients, shake for 20 seconds. Not 10. Not 17. Twenty. Maybe even 30 if you tend to count fast. Then strain into a proper glass, preferably the chilled variety.

9. Remember never to shake fizzy ingredients. Unless you’re making a comedic film about bartenders. Then by all means.

10. A twist, while undoubtedly handsome, provides much more than good looks to your drink. It is an essential ingredient. To make the perfect twist, simply cut a quarter-sized disc of lemon peel. Then squeeze the disc into drink, peel side down, thereby emitting a lovely spritz of lemon oil. Finish by dropping the peel into the glass. Formidable.

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Keeping Louisville Weird: Ramsi’s Café on the World

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Awesome food at Ramsis Cafe

Picture that image of the world with cutouts of people from all races, sex, color and age standing on top and you have an idea of Ramsi’s Café on the World. Situated in one of the funkiest parts of one of the funkiest streets in Louisville, Kentucky—Bardstown Road— Ramsi’s is definitely on top of the world. “If America is truly the melting pot of the globe,” said reviewer Jessica Elliott, “then Ramsi’s Café on the World should be our national eatery.” The restaurant features late hours and a menu of international foods that includes a sampling of every sort of cuisine imaginable— 103 different items, I’m told.people on top of the world Keeping Louisville Weird: Ramsi’s Café on the World

When  I got there at midnight, they were still hopping with customers: a diverse and eclectic mix of diners, forming a boiling pot of cultures stirred into a fun cocktail of lively discussion and laughter over great food and drink.

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The cool library of Ramsi's Cafe

My new friend Manni would explain that this is because Ramsi’s has something for everyone. Owner Ramsi, a native of Jerusalem, is an engineer by trade but his love for food and his vision for a multicultural meeting place with affordable food for everyone translated into a café with incredible ambience.

The café offers a richly visual interior decorated with an eclectic mixture of fine art, sculptures, bookshelves and artifacts from all over the world.  My friend Snoopf said that the inside looked as though “a team of National Geographic photographers and world explorers had a day off and decided they would try out interior design.” The café also provides a classic European-style courtyard garden, complete with large overhanging plants, sculptures and a trickling fountain.

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Patio dining at Ramsi's Cafe

After seating me in the garden patio, the waitress suggested Ramsi’s evening finger-food platter—a kind of antipasto— and I agreed, realizing that I felt quite peckish after my long walk in the Highlands.

While I waited for the food, I ordered a Ginger Pear Martini. My first sip surprised me with midnight sunshine and my whiskers trembled. This elegant yet zesty cocktail tasted of “summer love”. Made with fresh pear and ginger and Grey Goose La Poire vodka, it scintillated like an exquisite aria.  I shall have to make this drink for a good friend, I thought to myself.

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Toulouse meets Magician Manni at Ramsi's

I leaned back and enjoyed the frisson of sipping an elegant drink in a cultured setting. My whiskers quivered as I hummed Mascagni’s Cavalleria Rusticana, when a distinguished looking gentleman approached me with a curious smile. No doubt, he recognized a classy cat when he saw one. He introduced himself as Manni the Magician in a pleasant NYC drawl. I invited him to join me and he happily took the seat opposite me. Manni explained to me that Ramsi had hired him to do magic tricks weekend evenings to entertain the crowd that packed his café pretty most every evening. Manni came to Louisville from New York in 1972. Using typical NYC vernacular, Manni told me about Ramsi’s. “You can go to anyone on the street,” Manni said to me, “and touch them on the shoulder and say, ‘do you know where Ramsi’s is?’ and they will say ‘that’s my favorite restaurant!’ ”

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Manny and waitress Alyson enjoy Toulouse's stories

Manni  reiterated my observation in his New York way: “Ramsi’s attracts every color, every income, every ethnicity, and every hairdo…”

I curbed a saucy grin and ran my paw briskly through my unruly fur coat.

The platter arrived and I devoured with gusto a variety of color, texture and taste with complex aroma. I helped myself alternatively to banana peppers, tomato and cucumber relish, feta, portabella mushrooms, roasted red peppers, falafel, calamata olives with baba ganoush and humus.

Despite my invitation to join in, Manni just watched me devour the assorted treats and talked. He informed me that Ramsi’s wife, Rhona, is a graduate of the University of Kentucky and involved in every aspect of the restaurant, particularly menu development. Ramsi’s twin brother Ramzi , who’s been involved with the restaurant since its inception, also helps with quality control in the kitchen as their head chef.

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Ramsi's Cafe looking like the set on Casablanca

Ramsi’s Café on the World is one of the most unique and likely one of the most vegan-friendly establishments in Louisville. Some of the more popular dishes include the roasted vegetable Panini – portabello mushrooms, roasted red peppers, yellow squash and red onions topped with crispy fried onions served on homemade Cuban bread. Try pairing this with a mojito or Ramsi’s signature Island Cooler to complete the vegan experience.

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fountain in Ramsi's outdoor patio

Ramsi’s is located fortuitously right next to Carmichael’s Bookstore. Why is this fortuitous? According to writer Jessica Elliott, this lets you browse there as you wait for a table—the only downside of Ramsi’s is it takes a while to get a table sometimes. Manni confided that some patrons come often enough to merit their own table place tags.

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Cherokee Road in the Highlands

Aside from its elegant tree-lined residences (like the one Sparky lives in), the Highlands is best known for three things: its eccentric stores, its funky bars, and its diverse selection of restaurants and cafés. Many of the very best restaurants can be found on Bardstown Road, like Avalon, the Bristol Bar & Grill, Kashmir Indian Restaurant, Le Gallo Rosso and Palermo Viejo. What makes Ramsi’s Cafe on the World unique is that its menu features not just one type of cuisine; it features popular dishes from all over the world. And the clientele to go along with it.

Contact Information: 1293 Bardstown Rd., Louisville, Kentucky 40204; Phone Number: (502) 451-0700; Website: ramsiscafe.com

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Sparky "sleepwalking"...

p.s. Perhaps you’re wondering where my good friend Sparky the show dog whippet was during my little outing… he was at home in bed, getting his beauty sleep, of course!… Or was he???

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

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Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

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The Historic Distillery District

The pleasant aroma of baked food seemed to permeate my soul“–InOntario

I wasn’t long in Toronto, when Pigcat—who understood my penchant for fine dining, great coffee and culture in unusual settings—took me to the historic Distillery District, just blocks from her apartment in downtown Toronto.

Set on 13 acres in the heart of downtown Toronto, The Distillery District is the single largest collection of Victorian Industrial architecture in North America and one of Toronto’s hottest “gastrozones”. I was in COOL Travel Cat Heaven. Wonderfully restored to retain its funky retro-industrial setting, The Distillery features a wide and eclectic tapestry of shops, cafés, restaurants and galleries including: chocolatiers who produce artisan chocolate directly from the cocoa bean itself; cafés that micro-roast Fairtrade beans; Canadian fine cuisine in industrial chic settings; and galleries and shops that embrace original funk-chic.

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The Potter's Shed

Founded in 1832 by brothers-in-law William Gooderham and James Worts, the Gooderham and Worts Distillery grew into the largest distillery in the world. They exported spirits and whiskey to ports around the world from New York to Rio de Janeiro and Montevideo. After 153 years of continuous production, the plant distilled its last drop of rum in 1990. Resident beer gardens, wine bars, an award-winning microbrewery (Mill Street Brewery) and even a sake distillery (which opened a few months ago) have amply filled the gap. The Ontario Spring Water Sake Company is the first and only sake brewery in Ontario. It’s prepared in the “Junmai” (pure rice) style, freshly pressed, unpasteurized and unfiltered. They have a lovely tasting room and several sakes to try along with Japanese food.

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Old meets new in the Distillery District

The Distillery was restored and developed into a pedestrian-only cultural “Victorian Industrial chic village”, opening in May 2003 as Toronto’s new centre for Art, Culture and Entertainment. Pigcat and I strolled along the brick lined promenades and European piazza-style squares in what the Globe and Mail calls “a picture postcard draw”. Where ever I turned, a paradox of hip sophistication and retro-industrial funk greeted me. I was reminded a little of Soho in New York

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Behar serves a customer at the Potter's Shed

 as my senses feasted on a range of motion, color, texture and fragrance: an old roadster parked in an alley overlooking the industrial punk sculpture of Dennis Oppenheim;  a collection of clay pots, dried lavender and ferns adding colorful texture to a red brick road.   As we strolled past eclectic shops and avant-garde galleries—once a distillery complex, flour mills and cooper shop—I inhaled the pleasant aroma of baked food and freshly roasted coffee. The Distillery, like a fine distilled spirit, is a feast of the senses. If Hemmingway was a Torontonian, he might have reserved his famous quote for this place.

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The sake distillery

Pigcat took me to Soma, where we savored a provocatively delicious Mayan hot chocolate over a Sparky chocolate (named after my good friend, Sparky, no doubt! LOL!)—a dark chocolate “half-moon” covering a “genache” of gianduja laced with paprocks. Eugenia served us our Mayan hot chocolate, made with ginger, Madagascar vanilla, orange peel, and their secret blend of spices. HA! I know that chili is one of them. The hot chocolate ran smooth over my tongue, rich with chocolate and a little heat.

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Soma's fleur de sel caramel chocolate

Soma is one of the few artisan chocolatiers in North America who make small batch chocolates directly from the cocoa bean (which they get from plantations around the world including the Dominican Republic, Madagascar, Costa Rica and Panama—with a preference for Fairtrade, Organic and flavor grade. You can see them making their chocolates in their micro-chocolate factory through the display window! Toronto Life Magazine and Now Magazine voted Soma chocolates as the best in town. And why not? Their exquisite chocolates are lovingly made by dedicated and friendly staff (probably intoxicated with chocolate-induced endorphins). You can’t go wrong with names and elegant ingredients like fleur de sel caramels, almond cluster dark Peruvian, Arbequina Spanish olive oil, cherry bomb, Gooderham and Worts Whiskey, Douglas Fir and Bergamot. Veni, vidi, vici!

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Enjoying the gelato at Soma's!

Soma’s gelatos and sorbettos are also extremely popular. We returned later to savor one of their 14 flavors.

We stopped for lunch at the Mill Street Brew Pub, a place to eat with character and its own micro-brewery. Mill Street Brewery is East Toronto’s first commercial brewery to open in more than 100 years, home to Ontario’s first certified organic lager, producing handcrafted beers and ales in historic Corktown area of the city. The pub was built around their open-concept brewery beneath 18 foot ceilings and huge skylights, successfully preserving the character and ambience of the century-old distillery district.

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Toulouse enjoys his Coffee Porter

We sat in their patio facing Tank House Lane. Pigcat decided on their English Tea Beer and I asked Natalie, our friendly waitress, for their Coffee Porter. The Coffee Porter features roasted beans from Balzac Coffee, down the street, and delights the palate with complex lingering flavors of nuts. With 100% certified ingredients in their stock ales, tank house ales, and porters, who can go wrong?

The Brew Pub opened in 2006, serving exceptional pub-style food that use the Mill Street brews, brewed on site. I ordered a Drunken Butter Chicken (the name somehow appealed)—an organic lager marinated chicken simmered in the Mill’s own butter sauce and served with basmati rice and naan bread. I found large chicken pieces bathed in a delicate “rose” sauce with complex flavors that lingered with a mild heat.  Along with their cob salad, which Pigcat smartly chose, and their signature fish and chips, it is a favorite among Brew Pub patrons.  

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Scrumptious Cobb Salad

Then it was time to exercise some of that butter chicken away. A little ways down Tank House Lane we felt drawn to the magic realism of The Potter’s Shed, whose earthy artworks looked like they’d spilled out from the tiny shop in artful chaos among the brick pavestones. Clay pots and gardening implements lay scattered among dizzying sprays of lavender, hydrangeas, and ferns.  Inside, Behar, in her rainbow sarong, added to a setting out of a classic fiction novel. When we finally stepped back into the sun, Pigcat asked me if I’d seen all the ferries sitting among the pots.

We ambled farther, poking inside eclectic shops, and ended up on Trinity Street. I highly recommend Cube Works Gallery, a fun shop that features original works created from Rubik’s cubes.

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Enjoying an espresso outside Balzac's

We followed our discerning noses to Balzac’s Coffee, the very establishment whose roasted beans provided the basis for my Coffee Porter at the Mill Street Brew Pub. The inside looked like the set of an old Bogart movie, with tall mirror, high ceiling, chandelier, staircases that lead nowhere and—what convinced me that this was a serious coffee establishment—an original nickel Elektra espresso maker, complete with soaring eagle. Although it was no longer used for espresso-making, according to the barista (they only used it now for frothing milk), its presence on the counter signified serious coffee intent. I wasn’t surprised when my single-shot espresso tasted exquisite, with a deep coffee nose and an attractive natural crema. We sat outside the coffee shop in the square that featured a kind of space-retro-industrial punk sculpture by Dennis Oppenheim. Called “Still Dancing” Oppenheim described it as “a combination of sculpture, architecture and theatre.”

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The acclaimed Pure Spirits patio

We took Case Goods Lane, past several galleries, toward Pure Spirits Oyster House & Grill and decided to have an early supper of fresh oysters and beer. Ah, the life of a Cool Cat… We settled on the outside patio—called “Toronto’s Best Patio” by Toronto Life—for an exquisite dinner of fresh oysters and salad. Ben, out waiter—who recognized me, because he is from Toulouse, France!—offered us creamy sweet Fanny Bay oysters from British Columbia andmore briny Beausoleils from New Brunswick. They came on the half-shell with shredded horseradish and sauces including a mignonette sauce of red-wine vinegar and shallots. I showed Pigcat how to throw the oyster to the back of the throat and bite into them to savor the full flavor of the creamy-sweet, sea-salt meat. Pure Spirit oysters are considered “the best” in Toronto by OurFaves.com. We slurped them down with panache, licking our little pink tongues, along with a refreshing baby spinach and arugula salad.
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Ben and Toulouse discuss oysters and "Toulouse"

It was Tuesday May 31st and Pure Spirits was launching its “Topshuck Patio” shucking contest at 6pm. Of course, we stayed and watched them shuck their little hearts out—well, actually their little oysters out …hehe… It turned out that all of Toronto’s best had come to compete for money and a huge bottle of Sky vodka. Contestants from Rodney’s Oyster House, Oyster Boy, Big Daddy’s, and Starfish (to name a few quality establishments) shucked as we gorged on oysters (Pure Spirits donated the shucked oysters to its patrons. Bonus!). Head chef Tim Miles put on the shindig.

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Toulouse and Pigcat about to devour the oysters

 He timed contestants on their ability to successfully shuck a dozen oysters. The fastest shuck against the least demerit points for quality won. Tim and his assistant Carlier Morejon (the “Cuban Missile”) judged each shuck. They added to the time if: the oyster wasn’t severed, the gut was still in the oyster, the shell was broken, the meat was out of shell, it was a bad oyster, it was scrambled, and the count was wrong. We didn’t leave until very late that night and we had actually had our fill of oysters. We felt a little like the “Walrus and the Carpenter” as we ambled home, bellies stuffed and happy.

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Luis from Pure Springs shucks against the clock

With more patio space than any other Toronto location, The Distillery is a favorite hangout among thirsty locals in search of a little bit of European flair. I was told that The Distillery District is destined to become the epicenter of the largest waterfront redevelopment in North America. The Pan Am Games athletes village is currently being constructed just east of the Distillery with accommodation for 6,000 athletes. Right after the games in 2015 they will be transformed into residential units along with others in the West Don Lands. Old Corktown and The Old City environs between St. Laurence Market and The Distillery are being revitalized in the old heritage vision that has made The Distillery District so chic.

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Judging the oyster shucks

  

World-class theatre and entertainment thrive in The Distillery District. I noted that several theatre companies have made The Distillery their home, including The Soulpepper Theatre Company and George Brown’s Theatre School, housed in the Young Centre for the Performing Arts. The Toronto Star calls it “Toronto’s new cultural hotspot.”

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Filming the day Toulouse was in the Distillery District

Pigcat informed me that over 1000 movies, television shows, commercials and music videos were shot in The Distillery District; some include X-Men, Chicago, Long Kiss Goodnight, The Recruit and Cinderella Man.

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The Potter's Shed

The Distillery Historic District, 55 Mill Street, Toronto, ON, Canada; 416-364-1177

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

 

If you want Toulouse to write up your place or activity, contact us at nina.sfgirl@gmail.com with your information.

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