Sunday, April 27, 2008

By The Way Café (400 Bloor St. W & Brunswick)



By The Way Café’s whimsically muralled-walls, dark oak tables and Middle-Eastern inspired menu have become a landmark for weekend brunching in Toronto’s Annex. From 10:30 am onward the place is packed, and the background chatter of happy brunchers is a surprisingly-fine substitute for music in this music-free environment (at least the morning we brunched). Brunchtime seating can be “intimate”, but the café has done a great job maximizing seating indoors when it is too cold to sit on the glorious patio (heated with gas heaters from early spring onward). The café is a fantastic locale for people-watching as its floor-to-ceiling windows, and patio, hang over one of the Annex’s most trafficked corners, Bloor and Brunswick.

As far as the food was concerned, this was the first time that we have been divided.

Karina ordered the Shakshuka ($9.00), described on the menu as “two poached eggs in a rich and spicy tomato broth” with pita. Nothing in this dish wowed Karina. While the dish was flavourful, had the right amount of spice, and was most certainly unique on the brunch scene, the yoke in the poached eggs was not runny, and Karina was just not overwhelmed.

Rachelle ordered the goat cheese and sun-dried tomato omelette with zatar ($9.00). The dish came with hashbrowns, what the menu called a “Montreal bagel”, and sliced fruit. The omelette was delicious. Where else can you get zatar in an omelette? The zatar complemented the goat cheese and highlighted its sour undertones, but to our dismay, the bagel was not a Montreal bagel! To add insult to injury, it was not well-toasted as she had requested. This was disappointing to Rachelle, our well-toasted-Montreal-Bagel-lover.

Leora and Mark both ordered the Eggs Benny ($9.00). The classic order also came with hashbrowns and sliced fruit. If you like dill, this is the Eggs Benny for you. This dill hollandaise sauce made the dish. While we were a bit thrown off by the substitution of sliced-ham in the place of pea meal bacon, the dill hollandaise was so good that it almost did not matter. There’s no doubt that a Benny should be made with pea meal, but Leora would go back just for the dill.

Deconstructing the rest of the meal, the hashbrowns were delicious. They were fried with onion, well-seasoned, and were really soft – to the point that part of the portion begins to resemble mashed potatoes after a while.

In terms of coffee, the drip was really good. They make a mild, but flavourful cup: not watery, but not too intense.

We also disagreed on the staff. Leora liked the service and Karina found it curt.

Price-wise, their prices were a little lower than your average hip brunch place where Eggs Benny run around $11-$12.

RATING: All-in-all it’s a good, solid, satisfying brunch. Based on our rating system (see below) Leora would have given the brunch a 3.7, Karina would have given it a 2.8. We’ve compromised on 3.25/5.


Many factors go into a truly sublime brunch experience….

Rating Scale

1

2

3

4

5

Innovation of menu

BORING!

Wow! Did Susur Lee create this?

Would you go out of your way to go back?

Out of my way? You couldn’t drag me…

Yes…I’d even walk it if I had to.

Service

Rude and slow

Did I just have sex?

Atmosphere

Uncomfortable/

tacky/ugly/dirty/Too loud/too quiet/

Perfection balance

Taste

Bland, under/overcooked

…bad.

Manna from heaven

Sunday, April 13, 2008

B Restaurant (2210 Dundas Street West & Roncesvalles)



There was pretty much nothing that we didn't like at B Restaurant. This sunny, friendly, casual joint serves some really great food. The restaurant hangs over the intersection of Dundas West and Roncesvalles, with bar seats lining the westward-facing windows. Light walls, cacti on all the tables, open-kitchen concept, Feist and the Postal Service, chalkboard menus, thermos refills, communal seating and tables upholstered in comic strips, scones in a pyramid-formation on the counter, happy brunchers and friendly service, the vibe at B was both hip and relaxed.

The food was truly fantastic. B takes classic, and not-so-classic brunch favourites, and gives them creative and sophisticated twists. Karina ordered the Eggs Benny ($12.00). This brunch classic came on a peppery scone, and was layered with fried tomato, grilled corn, cilantro, and jalapenos. The accompanying hashbrowns were crisp, seasoned, fried potatoes, and the green salad was fresh and garnished with a "B" made out of radish. Delicious flavours and great attention to detail.

Leora ordered the Cornbeef Hash ($11.00). The hash involved two poached eggs topped with melted chili-brick cheese, corn beef, sauteed onions, peppers, zucchini, sourkrout and another radish-B. Again - truly delicious. Simple ingredients daringly matched.

Such interesting and complex dishes were almost unexpected at a place where the bill arrived in a tomato-paste can.

The service was super friendly, the vibe was great, and the food was so interesting it left us wanting to return - especially since neither of us tried the omelette with duck, apple sausage and brie. Based on innovation, service, taste, atmosphere, and our desire to go out of our way to return, we gave B Restaurant a 4/5.

Note to brunchers: this place is a cash & debit only.