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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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Chicago Gourmet Chocolate: Vosges Haut Chocolat

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Vosges Haut Chocolate exotic truffles

“…And it *melts*, God forgive me, it melts ever so slowly on your tongue, and tortures you with pleasure.”—Ivette Marceau, Chocolat

I am Toulouse LeTrek, the COOL Travel Cat, epicurean, sommelier, and gourmet of all things wonderful. I adore chocolate. However, for someone who loves chocolate as much as I do, I indulge in very little of it. You won’t see me in the 7-Eleven or Walgreens buying an over-the-counter candy bar like Kit Kat (edible Kat? How disgusting!) or Cadbury’s Caramilk Bar. You might call me a chocolate snob. I’d prefer to call myself a chocolate gourmet.

I treat chocolate like I treat coffee (that’s right, you won’t see me buying coffee at the local gas station or helping myself to free coffee at the bank or Tim Horton’s—sorry TH coffee fans; though their donuts are another matter). Chocolate—like coffee—is meant to be celebrated. Chocolate is a sensual gift: to be anticipated with delight, joyfully embraced, slowly inhaled and caressed with your tongue.

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Vosges Haut Chocolat's Red Fire Bar

When I’m not adventuring in Switzerland, loitering at Sprüngli on Bahnhofstrasse or Café Schober on Napfgasse in Altstadt  Zurich, or in Europe generally—in other words, when I am in North America—I continually find myself on a quest in the most unlikely places for something beyond the norm; something exotic. Something surprising.

I discovered such a gem at the Wine Store on funky Bardstown Road in Louisville Kentucky. There, on the front counter, along with other enticing wine accoutrements, sat a display of fine chocolate bars by Vosges Haut Chocolat. There was hope for good chocolate!

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Vosges Mountain Range in France

Vosges is the name of a mountain range in northeast France parallel to the Rhine River with rounded summits. But it’s also the name founder Kristina Markoff gave to her new chocolaterie that she opened in Chicago in 1998.

My gaze swept the bold selection of Vosges chocolate bars whose exotic names triggered reveries of world travel and adventure; names like Black Pearl, Red Fire, Oaxaca, Blood Orange Caramel, Goji, and Woolloomooloo. I let my gaze finally rest on the Marzipan Bar, made with Sicilian almond marzipan, amaretto and dark chocolate (62% cacao and at least 38% cacao solids). Marzipan is made by grinding sweet and bitter almonds with sugar to create a dense paste. Germans create a pig-figurine in the New Year to give them good luck and Italians often sculpt the paste into fruit shapes. Marzipan—good marzipan that is moist and smooth and not overly sweet—is an “Old World” confection that breathes out a complex and elegant sensual experience of aroma, taste and texture.

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Toulouse with his prize: Vosges Marzipan and Rex Hill

Curious about a North American’s version of a confectionary dominated by Europeans, I bought a bar along with a Rex Hill Pinot Noir and took it home to enjoy. I have to admit I was delightfully surprised: this chocolate bar was every bit as good as its foreign counterparts including Niederegger Lubeck Marzipan Classic, Schluckwerder Chocolate Covered Marzipan Loaves, Mozart-Wurtel Schocolade mit Marzipan, and the Anthon Berg marzipan line.  I felt my whiskers tremble at the complex fusion of almond, amaretto, and buttery smooth cacoa. The moist almond paste and amaretto enveloped in smooth dark chocolate sang an elegant symphony of flavors in my mouth. My nose twitched with pleasure and my little pink tongue licked my lips, gathering every last bit of heaven. I couldn’t help it. I thought: Oh, now I must go try Mo’s Dark Chocolate Bacon Bar, made with applewood bacon and alderwood smoked salt plus 62% dark chocolate! It is apparently the rage with chocolate lovers  in North America, besotted with Vosges. Expect the unexpected with Vosges.

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Owner/Chocolatier Katrina Markoff

If you live in Chicago you are indeed fortunate! Vosges Haut Chocolat set up shop in Chicago, with stores located on 520 North Michigan Avenue, 951 West Armitage Avenue and 2211 N Elston Ave # 203, and O’Hare Airport. Chicagoans can simply walk into a Vosges and drool over the shelves of exotic truffles (e.g., with exotic fillings of the essence of violets, curry, paprika, ginger and wasabi, coconut, Kirsch and star anise), drinking chocolates, soft bacon caramel, and flying chocolate pig. Vosges have since put stores in New York and Las Vegas.

Owner/Chocolatier Katrina Markoff takes her chocolate seriously. So seriously that on every chocolate bar, she prescribes a full-bodied sensual recipe on how to fully enjoy an exotic it. Her recipe on the marzipan bar went like this:

See: there should be a glossy shine to the chocolate bar indicating a tight bond between the cocoa butter and the cocoa mass.

Smell: rub your thumb on the chocolate bar’s surface to help release the fruity, cacao laden aromas. Inhale deeply.

Taste: place a small piece of chocolate on your tongue and press it to the roof of your mouth. Within thirty seconds the chocolate square will melt, releasing a bouquet of candied almond and vanilla amongst the finish of dark chocolate.

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Mo's Bacon Chocolate Bar

Katrina personally chooses every rare spice, flower and premium chocolate flown into their Chicago kitchen and utilizes the original methods of French confectionery artistry, which she learned during her training at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. Vosges chocolates have exotic influences of an “East meets West” theme. Their mission is to create a luxury chocolate experience rooted in a sensory journey of bringing about awareness to indigenous cultures through the exploration of spices, herbs, roots, flowers, fruits, nuts, chocolate and the obscure. Written on each 100% recycled chocolate bar wrapper is a unique story behind the exotic and often surprising mixture of spices and flavors that showcases an indigenous culture or people.

Seeing that we are fast approaching Valentine’s Day, here’s my suggestion: if there is a place in your town that sells Vosges Haut Chocolat, buy this cocaine of chocolates and offer a piece of this ambrosia to a loved one, even if it’s yourself. Your loved one will love you for it. And if that’s you, well, you’re going to love yourself all the more!

I recently sent my good friend Pigcat in Toronto a Vosges Haut Chocolat Marzipan Bar for Valentine’s Day, along with some gourmet coffee. I await her rapt response. Apparently, you cannot get Vosges chocolate in Toronto, to the great lament of many Torontonians. Perhaps someone should tell Katrina to open a store there…

The Search for the Best Chocolate in the World…

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Fleur de Sel caramel chocolate

Some professed chocolate experts adamantly insist that any search for the best chocolate in the world start with France. What makes France so important? They have a point: as with all things relating to food, the French government strictly legislates the production of chocolate. Regulations prohibit the use of any vegetable or animal fat in French chocolate and only pure cocoa butter is authorized. French chocolates must also contain at least 43% cocoa liquor, and a minimum of 26% pure cocoa butter. Most French chocolates now contain well above the government’s minimum of cocoa liquor. The best French chocolates boast up to 80% of dark rich cocoa liquor. And, since cocoa liquor gives chocolate its rich taste, it’s not surprising that French chocolates remain some of the best in the world. Names such as Valhrona, RICHART, Maison du Chocolat, Pascal Chaffet and Michel Cluizel come to mind.

Because the flavor and nuances of chocolate also depend on the quality and origin of the cocoa beans used to make it, it makes sense to see who uses the best chocolate beans. The best chocolates beans come from Venezuela, Brazil, the Ivory Coast, Madagascar, Central America and the Caribbean. Two of the top chocolatiers (e.g., France’s Valhona and Tuscany’s Amedei, both of which have won Gold Medals by the Academy of Chocolate in London in various categories for Best Chocolate in the World) use cacao beans from a small town in Venezuela called Chuao.

Why Chocolate is Good for You…

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Mayan chief protecting his pot of hot chocolate

Besides the sheer pleasure chocolate gives us, it’s also good for your health—if eaten in moderation (like all good things in life). Some researchers found that chocolate, eaten in moderation, can also lower blood pressure. Cocoa or dark chocolate can help your circulatory system. Chocolate may prevent coughs, act as an antidiarhoeal and anticancer agent.

Chocolate may also stimulate brain activity. A study reported by the BBC showed that melting chocolate in your mouth increases brain activity and heart rate more intensely than a passionate kiss, and the effect also lasts four times as long. Cocoa solids contain alkaloids like theobromine and phenethylamine, which have physiological effects on the body. These have been linked to seratonin levels in the brain.

Too much chocolate can lead to obesity. And, because chocolate absorbs lead from the environment during production, some types of chocolate—if eaten in great quantities— may contribute to mild lead poisoning—as well as obesity. Well, the solution to that is a no-brainer, folks.

Ok… some of you might be wondering how a cat like me could enjoy chocolate when it’s been proven that theobromine in chocolate is toxic to dogs and cats, who can’t metabolize it. But, I’m no ordinary cat! I’m Toulouse, the COOL Travel Cat. I’m stuffed with wonder, coolness and fluffiness. Meow!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

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Ness and Pigcat clutch their prize

p.s. It’s Valentine’s Day today and I wanted to share what the Vosges chocolate I sent did to my dear friend Pigcat and her Auntie Ness! LOL! You can see some of Ness, Jenni and Pigcat’s reactions in the comments section too.

“Unfolding the foil, I was captivated into an aroma of dense, rich sultry chocolate. It took my imagination to a far off place: the rain had just fallen, the grinding of the cocoa bean,  the warmth of the resting sun, while the sound of the ocean was like a quiet heartbeat.

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Ness in haut chocolat extasy

“As the senses of smell and taste came together, the flavor began to reveal all the characteristics of something rich.  Dancing notes of almond, exquisite with notes of soft sugar resting nicely but not overpowering. I had to close my eyes and both taste and sense came together.  I have never tasted something so refined, unless it was of course a wine that has been perfectly aged with great care.

Absolute perfection and highly addictive.”

p.p.s. BACON + CHOCOLATE??? The next day, I just had to try Vosges’ provokative Dark Bacon Bar… Not sure whether I’d like this admittedly strange combination of salty, savory and sweet, I did precisely as Katrina suggested: I closed my eyes, inhaled deeply, putting myself in the present moment. I rubbed my paw over the chocolate bar, releasing the aroma of smoked Applewood bacon flirting with Alderwood smoked salt and seductive dark chocolate. I snapped off a tiny piece, put in my mouth and let the “lust of salt and sweet” coat my little pink tongue. Yes, it was wonderful. A surprise. Katrina admits that she’d started experimenting with chocolate and bacon at the tender age of six. The wisdom of children, eh?… :-3

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 or places 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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Pampered Pet Treats

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Toulouse's Friend, Oli

When I first met Oli, my rather energetic cockapoo puppy friend in Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia, I had no idea that it would lead me to Alpine, California, where I met Nancy Anne of Pampered Pets USA.

It was partly because of my friendship with Oli that I came to Maverick Ranch in Alpine to help film Rachel Amado (accomplished dog trainer and breeder) and her whippets for some videos that will help my dog friends enjoy a better life and not end up in dog shelters. Through her, I met Nancy, who was visiting with her dog. I noticed that, among Rachel’s arsenal of training tools, she kept bringing out these rather delicious looking treats for the dogs.

Seeing my interest, Nancy informed me that treats from Pampered Pets USA are made with 100% natural products and none of those extra unknown things we animals don’t appreciate in our food. We like good things too, after all!

“Our dog cookies were developed with the combined knowledge of

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Low fat Pampered Pets treats

 veterinarians, nutritionists and bakers to create wholesome, healthy, tasty  treats,” said Nancy. She then reached into her pocket and let me see one up close. I thought, that was a dog treat? It was soft but not crumbly and gave off the enticing aroma of a freshly baked oatmeal cookie!

I tried one -

Now, I know what you’re thinking, you cool cats out there. I can see you cringing at the thought of a cat eating a dog treat. We cats are, after all, used to the delicate gourmet food that befits our elevated stature on the dining food chain. I have news for you. It tasted great! (Besides, they also make cat treats… Bonus!)

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Hypoallergenic tasty treats

Rachel Amado has been using these tasty treats with her dog clients for years with great success. I watched them. I know. I thought of my friend Oli and how he would relish them. As if reading my mind, Nancy handed me a small pack of peanut butter & honey treats to take home.

Okay, Oli… I have something wonderful for you… And I promise not to eat any on the way…  :-3

I’m Toulouse LeTrek, the COOL Travel Cat…meow!

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 or places 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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Toronto Adventures: The Old Country Inn in Unionville

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Winter garden of the Old Country Inn

Eager for more adventures further afield, I jumped on a Go Bus at the Front Street Station that took me right to the heart of the charming historic village of Unionville, about 33 km northeast of Downtown Toronto and west of Markham proper.

Developed in the early 1840s when Ira White built Union Mills, historic Main Street Unionville attracts thousands of visitors each year who enjoy the al fresco dining of over nine restaurants and pubs, interesting gift shops and “century homes” dating back to the 1800s. The Unionville Festival, which happens in early June, attracts thousands of visitors for live music, fun and games like treasure hunts, pet contests and

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The "Doctor's House", the Old Country Inn

karaoke sing-offs to the spectacular colorful parade of the Governor Generals Horse Guards.

I got there in time to catch the beginning of the jazz festival that featured local jazz talent in the various outdoor venues along Main Street. One local, tapping his feet to a tune, let me know that Main Street Unionville had been used as a stand-in for a fictional Connecticut town in CW’s Gilmore Girls as well as other television shows and movie backdrops.

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Old Country Inn Stubbe

After a stroll along Unionville’s picturesque Main Street, I chose The Old Country Inn for its historic “Old World” charm and flavor. The restaurant is part of a 140 year old house built in 1872 by Dr. R.P. Eckardt, the grandson of the original settlers of Unionville. Known as “the Doctor’s House”, Old Country Inn has been serving elegant Viennese food and drink since opening its doors more than thirty years ago.

I made my way past the cozy European stube (parlor) of the original house (complete with stained glass windows featuring

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Toulouse savors schnitzel on the terrace

Austrian heraldic shields and emblems) and through the bright and elegant “winter garden” room, with French windows, palm trees and ceiling fans—it was like something out of Casablanca or some exotic jungle hotel. I furtively looked for the proverbial stuffed “roaring” jaguar and sighed when I didn’t see one.  From there I stepped onto the terrace, shaded beneath trellised grape vines.

I perused the menu of fine Viennese cuisine that featured schnitzels, würste (sausages), bratwurst, rostbraten and schweinelende bakony,  accompanied by wines, spirits and beers and specialty coffees and deserts.

Sabrina came to take my order. I chose the breaded chicken cutlet, which was served on its own with a side of lemon and accompanied with a side gourmet mixed salad that included cucumbers in vinaigrette, pickled beets, vinegar carrot salad with herbs, vinaigrette potato salad and house salad. I paired the simple elegance of the schnitzel and diverse salad with a Chilean Santa Alicia Merlot, which satisfied me to the depths

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Sacher torte for Toulouse

of my soul and stuffed my tiny already “stuffed” tummy. :-3

As I lingered on the terrace beneath the grapevine trellis, listening to the classic carillon of Straus, Vivaldi and Mozart, the ladies at the next table cooed distractedly over their desert.

My tummy was stuffed—at least I thought it was—but the ladies, noticing my interest, leaned over and whispered enticements to me for the Double Chocolate Fudge Torte (a very chocolaty messy, gooy stick-in-your-teeth cake that they were enjoying a little too much, I thought). Tempted, I glanced at the menu and noticed my personal favorite: the Sacher Torte, a famous Viennese-style chocolate cake, known for its not-so-sweet but rich dark chocolate flavor. This viennesse chocolate

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Main Street Unionville

cake was invented by Franz Sacher in 1832, and is considered a Viennese delicatessen.

I saw that my Merlot was not finished and decided to compliment this elixir with some chocolate ambrosia. Ah… you didn’t know that chocolate and red wine go beautifully together? They’re natural companions. They both have complex flavors and share similar components and nuances. And, of course, like red wine, chocolate is full of health and promotes anti-oxidants. For more wonderful qualities of chocolate see my comments in a previous post.

There is even a science to this exquisite combination: the fat in chocolate cuts the sharpness of the wine, not unlike cheese. Generally, lighter, more elegant flavored chocolates match best with lighter-bodied wines. The stronger the chocolate, the more full-bodied the wine should be. A bittersweet chocolate will pair well with an intense California Zinfandel, for instance. There’s nothing quite like a dark chocolate—my favorite—paired with a rich mellow and flavorful Pinot Noir or Merlot. Mmmmmm! And when they marry in your mouth, what a celebration!

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Al Fresco dining on Main Street Unionville

Ah…. The life of the COOL Travel Cat!

Contact information: The Old Country Inn, 198 Main Street, Unionville, Ontario L34 2G9; www.oldcountryinn.ca.

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 or places 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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Toronto Adventures: Get Sizzling at the Hot House Café

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The Hot House Cafe with view of Flatiron Building

Shortly after I reached Toronto, I looked up an old British friend of mine, Pigcat—now residing near High Park in West Toronto. She invited me to the Hothouse Café next to the St. Lawrence market in downtown Toronto for lunch and to reminisce over a classy “hot” meal; she knew my tastes in food!

Pigcat isn’t her real name. Her human companion, Vanessa, calls her “Cat Teddy”. But Vanessa doesn’t know about Pigcat’s old friendship with me, and the endearing nickname she’d come by in her community due to the obvious…(little cat grin). I’d met Pigcat during my travels, when she was still in the UK, living in Brighton, West Sussex, where our mutual passion for travel, fine dining and dark chocolate cemented a long-lasting friendship. I was overjoyed to see her again here in Toronto.

Elinor, the smartly-dressed and graceful Maitre-d and general manager, welcomed us with a warm smile and took us to

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Toulouse meets an old friend

 our seats in the enclosed patio beneath one of the colorful umbrellas with a view of the historic Saint Lawrence neighborhood. After a lively discussion about cats, loyal companions and Stonehenge, Elinor left us to make our choices.

As Pigcat peered intensely at her menu, I gazed past the diaphanous fan of black locust trees to the rust-colored four and a half-storey Gooderham Building (Flatiron building), a wedge-shaped work of art that stands at the apex of Front, Wellington and Church Streets like the bow of a great ship. Designed by architect David Roberts Jr., the building was erected in 1892 to house the headquarters of George Gooderham’s large industrial and commercial empire. This Victorian building reflects a gothic revival and Romanesque style and predates the iconic Flatiron Building in New York by a decade. It is arguably the most photographed building in Toronto. Prominent features include the copper roof, decorative dormers, tower with ogee arch windows, textured façade and zig-zag fire escape stairway, which reminded me of the Chelsea district of New York City.  My eyes were drawn to the contrasting but pleasing backdrop of the modern Toronto skyscraper skyline with the trendy retro funk of Old Town, one of the best-preserved 19th century commercial blocks in the city. What an ideal place to dine, I thought, and was reminded of a café’ I used to frequent at Place Saint-Michel in Paris with a view past plane trees to the fountain of Saint-Michel slaying the devil.

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Toulouse savors his delicious meal

Krystel, our waitress, took our order. I chose the Sicilian Gnocchi, elegant hand-made potato dumplings with cremini mushrooms and pancetta bacon, swimming in a gorgonzola cream sauce that married elegant flavors with the zest of garlic and basil. The gnocchi came with a colorful mixed vegetable dish, cooked to perfect texture. I selected a 2008 Fontamara Pinot Griggio (Abruzzo, Italy) from their eclectic wine list. The Fontamara, with its sweet aroma and notes of peach and apple on a fresh acidic backbone, was ideal for the warm sunny day.  Pigcat ordered the Black Aberdeen Angus Rib Eye steak, grilled to her exact specification and topped with a slab of porcini butter. She wisely chose a Guinness with it.  I had fun watching her meow little sighing breaths with each juicy bite she took. It was the best steak she’d had in years—possibly ever! declared Pigcat.  The café staff pride themselves on the consistent excellence of its signature soups, salads, entrés, pastas, gourmet pizettes, sandwiches and burgers and vegetarian dishes. Oh, and exquisite deserts and coffees!

Five minutes later, the suave and charming owner of the cafe, Andrew Laffey—a young Cary Grant look-a-like —arrived with a beaming smile.

“I just had to meet Toulouse!” he said, extending his hand in greeting.

Between the main course and dessert, he and wife, Elinor, the general manager of the café, treated me to a tour of their cool—well, hot!— restaurant. 

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Owners Andrew, hostess Aaron and Elinor enjoy lively discussion with Toulouse

They had commissioned architect Dermet Sweeny to create the Hot House Café with a spacious art-nouveau European look, including multi-levels and high ceilings with drop lights and hardwood floors. The café was brightly elegant, from the stylized “clean”art of Russian artist Leon Belsky on the walls to the avant-garde interior design of Mary Winefield that included displays of vintage wines and spices, rich furniture and colours with clean lines.  The place blended nicely into the “persona” of the trendy Old Town/art-nouveau look of the St Lawrence Market neighborhood.

During my tour, Elinor took me round to the back of the restaurant, which housed several elegant rooms used for lunch meetings , workshops and mini-conferences. We then sidled past the bar run by the indominable Kevin, who can serve up practically anything from a Taylor Fladgate 20 year old Tawny Port to a HotHouse Martini, which consists of pomegranate and green tea liqueurs, pomegranate blueberry juice and fresh lemonade. Now, that’s HOT!

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Elinor gives Toulouse the special tour

Returned to the patio, I rejoined the patient Pigcat and we rounded out our culinary experience with a coffee and dessert. I ordered an espresso with the dessert we decided to share. It was a toss up between the tiramisu and the molten chocolate cake and guess which won out. Yup. Drizzled with fresh raspberries and a fudge sauce, Pigcat and I proceeded to dig into our delicious chocolate “volcano”.  The inside scintillated with a molten chocolate lava that flowed over dark cake into a sea of fudge. OMG! … Meow… :-3

Now I know why it’s called the Hot House Café!  The Hot House Café is open for lunch, dinner and late nights, serving up consistently wonderful food and an eclectic choice of wines and beers by friendly and efficient staff. Known particularly for their awesome Sunday brunches and pasta dishes and desserts, their clientele ranges from the Bay Street set to Leafs fans, area residents & theatre patrons. What’s there not to like! Go check it out and agree… meow… Oh, and say hi to Andrew, Elinor, Aaron and Krystel for me!

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Toulouse enjoys a "molten" experience

I’m Toulouse LeTrek, the COOL Travel Cat!

 

 

Contact Information: The Hot House Café is located on the corner of Church and Front Street in Market Square (35 Church Street) Toronto, Ontario; 416-366-7800; www.hothousecafe.com. The Hot House Café is open from 11 am

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Toulouse shares molten ambrosia with Pigcat

until 11 pm on weekdays and 1:00 am on weekends, including from brunch (9:30 am) to 11 pm on Sundays.

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 or places 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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