Thursday 31 May 2012

Hoof Raw Bar



1) For many Toronto food lovers, Hoof Raw Bar, the latest eatery in Jen Agg’s burgeoning Dundas West mini-empire, came out of left field when it opened a couple weeks back. But Agg tells us that she’d long wanted to open a space to serve oysters, and had been throwing around the idea for a seafood-focused restaurant since last September. She and her husband began the DIY construction work on the former Ferreira photography studio in November, but didn’t get down to the heavy lifting until January of this year—all while Agg was running the neighbouring Black Hoof and Cocktail Bar

2) The Commissary, a new Leslieville lunch spot, bucks the healthy hippie fare and burgers that dominate the area and opts instead for dishes like lobster bisque or shrimp flatbread pizza. When Sophie shut its doors, the Commissary’s four partners moved in and started the redesign, taking the 32-seat space from stark white and acid green to earthy warmth in russet, with exposed brick and reclaimed barn boards. Commissary chefs Andrew Bridgman and Rod Dannewald designed their menu around an unmet niche. “We asked the neighbourhood what it wanted,” says Bridgman, “and they said there’s nowhere to have lunch.”

3) The landlord of 1212 Queen Street East wasn’t the only one to lose out when the owners of Tomi-Kro packed up and left; the neighbourhood also felt the void. But with the arrival of The East Ender in the space, the healing has begun—after all, what can’t a pork belly slider make right? (That’s the hope, at least.) Chef and co-owner, Greg Argent (Rain, Cru, Forte Bistro), with co-owner Hieu Nguyen (Forte Bistro, Cru) have moved into the 55-seat space, and, says Argent, the team has “done a lot of cleaning, but didn’t change too much.”



4) This summer, a number of new ramen restaurants—from Japan and Vancouver—are scheduled to invade the city’s arguably lacklustre alkaline noodle scene. The first to make it to opening day: Kinton Ramen, a long and narrow noodle shop by the same group that introduced Guu to Toronto (along with its boisterous greetings, also present here). It opened last Friday in Baldwin Village, and has already seen lineups out the door. Managing the 46-seater is chef Nobuaki “Aki” Urata, who started as a ramen chef in Japan at the age of 19, before spending the next 15 years in Canada, seven of them managing Kintaro, a well-known Vancouver ramen restaurant (the upcoming Raijin Ramen on Gerrard Street is from the owners of Kintaro).


Buster's Sea Cove - Food Truck

With lobster rolls seemingly showing up everywhere this spring, the timing couldn’t be better for the city’s first seafood truck, brought to you by the owners of 20-year-old Buster’s Sea Cove fish fry in St. Lawrence Market. At present, the truck can most often be found during lunchtime (11 a.m. to 2 p.m.) at the corner of Queen and Jarvis. Owners Tom Antonarakis and Quinten Tran decided on a food truck concept for Buster’s Sea Cove about a year ago, after Tran spent time in California and saw the mobile dining trend picking up steam in Toronto. The vehicle was up and running at the beginning of May, just in time for the Street Food Block Party.

How to make Dahi Vada - Indian Recipe Video

The Food-Lover's Summer Travel Survival Kit

Rapoport and his family spend time in Montauk each and every summer. Their favorite motel isn't fancy--"my wife lovingly describes it as 'one step above camping'," he says--but it sits on the beach and has a communal deck with a bunch of grills out back. And really, what more do you need than that? Well, good olive oil and Parmesan, according to Rapoport. Below are some of the items he never leaves home without when taking a no-frills vacation. Plus, we couldn't resist peppering in a few cool travel items we scouted lately. Memorial Day, here we come!

1. "Nothing's worse (or more dangerous) than a dull, flimsy knife. I pack mine in bubble wrap or newspaper." Wusthof Classic Ikon 9" Chef's Knife in Creme, $170, cutleryandmore.com

2. "I can buy all sorts of wonderful products at Long Island farmers' markets, but not good olive oil." Frantoia Extra Virgin Olive Oil, $32 for 33.8 oz.; deananddeluca.com

3. "For sprinkling on sliced heirloom tomatoes, ears of boiled corn, grilled bone-in rib-eyes. It's the perfect finishing touch." Maldon Sea Salt, 8.5 oz. box, $7; saltworks.com

4. "Makes pretty much everything better, including the buttered pasta my kids eat nightly." Parmigiano-Reggiano, $30/lb; murrayscheese.com

5. "The best gift I've received from my father-in-law, a retired Army captain." AO Eyewear Original Pilot sunglasses, start at $51; aosunglasses.com

6. "Comically expensive, but without question the best swimsuit out there. Like tennis shorts for the beach." Orlebar Brown "Setter" Swim Trunks in Red, $230; orlebarbrown.com


Read More http://www.bonappetit.com/blogsandforums/blogs/badaily/2012/05/food-lover-travel-tools.html#ixzz1wWBMOXm6

Sir-ra-cha—a.k.a. rooster sauce is the new king of condiments.


SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO GOOOOOOOOOOOD!

New and Improved!

Witness the Sprayracha, Dealer of Spicy Justice



A Reddit user with some Sriracha and a spray bottle top created, in a flash of genius, the Sprayracha. Whether you want to apply a misting of Sriracha to a plate of noodles or simply to coat your house in the sauce's garlicky hotness, the power is in your hands. It could also probably qualify as a weapon--it's hip holster-ready--making you the "Sriracha Cowboy," or "Sir Racha."

http://www.bonappetit.com/blogsandforums/blogs/badaily/2012/05/sprayracha-sriracha-spray-bottle.html

25 Ways to Use Sriracha:

Chile-laced Sriracha sauce is a secret ingredient in many kitchens. Here are 25 ways to use it

Say it—sir-ra-cha—a.k.a. rooster sauce is the new king of condiments. This additively spicy chili sauce can kick up flavor and heat in any dish.

1) Sriracha Ketchup - ...or just mix into ketchup and spread on a burger or sandwich.

2) Sriracha Marinara Sauce - Skip the crushed red pepper flakes or cayenne pepper; add a spoonful of Sriracha and you've got instant arrabiata to toss with your favorite cooked pasta.

3) Bloody Mary - skip the hot sauce go for the Sriracha.

4) Sriracha Cocktail Sauce - Stir Sriracha into ketchup along with a spoonful of horseradish, a dash of Worcestershire sauce, and a squeeze of fresh lemon juice; serve with fresh shrimp, oysters, and clams.

5) Sriracha Mayo - Mix Japanese or regular mayonnaise with sriracha and lime juice. Spread mixture on sandwiches like Cuban or Banh Mi.

6) Sriracha Garlic Bread - Whisk Sriracha, minced garlic, and melted butter in a small bowl; brush over cut sides of bread. Sprinkle with grated Pecorino or Parmesan and broil until toasted.


Read More http://www.bonappetit.com/recipes/slideshows/2011/06/sriracha-recipes-slideshow#ixzz1wW97UpdB







Hot & Spicy 15th Anniversary Doughnut Giveaway

Who needs birthday cake when you can have a doughnut? Enjoy a Hot & Spicy themed doughnut in celebration of the festival’s 15th anniversary!jellymoderndoughnuts.com

For upcoming events at harbour front go to:

http://www.harbourfrontcentre.com/whatson/food.cfm?id=3938

Sales of alcoholic energy drinks jump 300 per cent. Are we too buzzed?

Forget fancy artisanal cocktails – some of the hottest drinks around are pre-mixed alcoholic energy drinks sold in cans. Between 2005 and 2010, sales jumped nearly 300 per cent, according to a new report from addiction experts at the University of Victoria.

The report reminds the public that mixing alcohol and energy drinks can lead to “longer and more active drinking sessions.” This can then lead to a higher risk of an elevated heart rate, injury, driving drunk and/or sexual assault.

Still, the report authors suggest banning the sale of pre-mixed drinks may not be the answer. It turns out “hand-mixed” energy cocktails – say, vodka and Red Bull – can be more dangerous, with up to 200 mg of caffeine per can as opposed to the maximum allowable 30 mg in a pre-mixed serving as regulated by Health Canada.

Removing these relatively safer products with regulated low caffeine levels from the market could lead to consumers shifting to more potent hand-mixed concoctions, the authors say.

It’s a trend mostly affecting young adults, who consume these beverages at four times the average rate. In a 2010 online survey of 465 university students included in the report, 23 per cent reported consuming a caffeinated alcoholic beverage in the past 30 days and on average, consuming two drinks in one sitting. About a fifth of students reported that the drinks helped them stay awake while drinking and “party longer” according to Canada.com.

While the authors urge caution around banning the pre-mixed drinks, they suggest prominent warning labels and regulations that discourage or prohibit sales of regular energy drinks and pre-mixed alcoholic energy drinks in “high-risk environments,” like bars and clubs.

Should we be more concerned about caffeinated alcoholic drinks?

Can a spoon help Champagne stay bubbly in the bottle?

The question: Does a half-empty bottle of Champagne keep bubbles longer if you leave a spoon inside the neck?
The answer: That’s a classic folk tale; you’ve just opened a can of worms with the opened bottle of bubbly. The short answer is no. Dangling a spoon inside the neck – with the oval portion sticking out – fails to stop carbon dioxide from escaping. The practice is common in European households, where they tend to specifically prescribe a silver spoon. But the metal doesn’t matter. Silver or stainless yields the same (ineffective) result.

A researcher at no less august an institution than California’s Stanford University tested the theory in the early 1990s, and I can almost guarantee you’re going to be surprised by the findings. According to blind taste tests, an opened bottle with no cork reinserted actually performed just as well as a bottle that was given the spoon trick. And here’s the clincher: That opened bottle also tasted better than one that had been resealed.

Chemistry professor Richard Zare, who specializes in watching molecules dance in chemical reactions, teamed up with well-known food-science writer Harold McGee for the myth-busting experiment. They tested five methods, each with a single glass of champagne removed from the bottle. One bottle was uncorked 26 hours prior to tasting and left open. Another was left with a silver spoon in the neck for 26 hours. A third used a stainless spoon in the same way. The fourth was opened and resealed the night before. The last was opened just prior to the test. (They in fact used two bottles for each treatment as a redundancy measure to safeguard against potential variations in flavour between bottles, which is always a possibility with a natural product such as wine.)

According to the eight amateur tasters, the spoon treatments were no more successful in maintaining sparkle than the bottle that was simply left open. But their least-favourite wine was the recorked sample. And by least favourite I am referring to flavour rather than spritz.

The result was a bit of a mystery at first, but Dr. Zare subsequently speculated that the unsealed bottles may have tasted better because, paradoxically, a loss of carbonation altered their flavour for the better. It’s known that gases such as carbon dioxide remove flavour components from a beverage as they move from the dissolved to gaseous state, percolating up in the form of bubbles. That’s the reason the head on a mug of beer tastes more sharply bitter than the beer itself; the froth extracts some of the bitter hop flavouring. In the case of champagne, the wines likely were rendered sweeter tasting, and that must have pleased the tasters.

For my money, though, I would not want champagne any sweeter. I tend to like its naturally high acidity and bitter-mineral quality. And I love tiny bubbles for their own sake. So I’ll continue to reseal my opened sparkling wines using one of those champagne stoppers you can buy in liquor and kitchenware stores. They do, in fact, trap the bubbles, an undeniable fact of physics and common-sense logic. (You can also use a regular wine cork, of course, just not the original mushroom-shaped champagne cork because it won’t fit back in after it has expanded.)

The most important consideration, in the end, is temperature. Keep the bottle cool. Opened champagne absolutely has to go back in the fridge because cold liquids retain dissolved gases better than room-temperature liquids, and even an unsealed bottle will retain a good amount of spritz for a day or so. I just wouldn’t store it in a fridge that also contains an unwrapped wheel of Ă©poisses unless you plan to enjoy the stinky champagne with the stinky cheese


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/food-and-wine/wine/ask-a-wine-expert/can-a-spoon-help-champagne-stay-bubbly-in-the-bottle/article2442530/?cmpid=rss1

Friday 25 May 2012

Wikipedia On Hyderabadi Biryani

Hyderabad biryani
Hyderabadi Biryani is a Hyderabadi biryani dish made with basmati rice and goat meat. Popular variations use chicken instead of goat.[1]

Hyderabadi biryani
Mirchi ka salan and Dahi chutney - Biryani Accompaniments
The blending of Mughlai and Andhra Pradesh cuisines in the kitchens of the Nizam, ruler of the historic Hyderabad State, resulted in the creation of Hyderabadi Biryani
Types
Hyderabadi biryani is of three types, the Kacchi (raw) Biryani,the Jappu (raw) Biryani and the Pakki biryani.[4]
Kachchi gosht ki biryani
The kachchi gosht ki biryani is prepared with meat marinated with spices overnight and again soaked in yogurt before cooking. The meat is sandwiched between layers of fragrant long-grained basmati rice,[5] and is cooked on dum (steaming over coals), after sealing the handi (vessel) with a layer of dough. This is a challenging process as it requires meticulous attention to time and temperature to avoid over- or under-cooking the meat.
Pakki biryani
In a pakki biryani, the meat marinating time is shorter, and the meat is cooked before being layered with the rice and cooked in a dough-sealed vessel. In Pakki Yakhni (with cooked gravy), the ingredients are already cooked before baking.
The gravy is redolent of mace, ittar and kewra. Saffron and cardamom are also used.
There is also a vegetarian version of the biryani, which is made from vegetables such as carrots, cashew, peas, cauliflower and potato.
Accompaniments
A biryani is accompanied with Dahi chutney (yogurt and onions); Mirchi ka salan[2] - a green chili curry. It may also be accompanied by Bagare Baingan (Roasted Eggplant). The salad includes onion, carrot, cucumber, and lemon wedges.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyderabadi_Biryani

It dont get no better than Vietnamese coffee

Everyone agrees that Vietnamese coffee is pretty darn good. And though the amount of sugar, caffeine, and the process don't lend to it being your go to coffee option, it's a nice thing to have on a Sunday afternoon.

Just thought I would give you a little background on Vietnamese coffee (thanks Wikkipedia!) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_iced_coffee:

Vietnamese coffee, also known as Ca phe da or cafe da (Vietnamese: cĂ  phĂª Ä‘Ă¡, literally "ice coffee") is a traditional Vietnamese coffee recipe.
"Vietnamese iced coffee with milk", also known as ca phe sua da or cĂ  phĂª sữa Ä‘Ă¡ It is also called ca phe nau da (Vietnamese: cĂ  phĂª nĂ¢u Ä‘Ă¡, "iced brown coffee") in northern Vietnam.
At its simplest, Ca phe da is made with finely ground Vietnamese-grown dark roast coffee individually brewed with a small metal French drip filter (cĂ  phĂª phin) into a cup containing about a quarter to a half as much sweetened condensed milk, stirred and poured over ice.

Coffee was introduced into Vietnam by French colonists in the late 19th century. Vietnam quickly became a strong exporter of coffee with many plantations in the central highlands. The beverage was adopted with regional variations. Because of limitations on the availability of fresh milk, the French and Vietnamese began to use sweetened condensed milk with a dark roast coffee.
Vietnamese-Americans introduced the practice of adding chicory to coffee, and many Americans today believe that all true Vietnamese coffee contains chicory.[1] One brand that uses chicory is Cafe du Monde, often cited as the coffee to use when brewing Vietnamese iced coffee. However, Cafe du Monde originated in New Orleans, and chicory coffee is an American phenomenon.[2] In Vietnam, coffee is never served with chicory [3][citation needed]. Thus, a "true" Vietnamese iced coffee will not contain chicory, but will instead be a Vietnamese brand such as Trung Nguyen or Indochine Coffee, both of which are headquartered in Vietnam and offer exclusively coffee grown in the central highlands.

The Saint: Hearty hipster fare done well

From Saturday's Globe and Mail (Published
Restaurant: The Saint

Caramel Wings Take on Biryani

I found this great Blog called Caramel Wings – its amazing and posts new recipes daily!
 http://www.caramelwings.in/2012/05/easy-peasy-chicken-biryani-especially.html
They posted a recipe for  Easy Peasy Chicken Biryani which sounds to die for….check it out!


This quickfix Biryani is a special dedication to all the guys (bachelors) out there who asked me to put up some simple recipes which they could easily make! (I have made a special Label called "Bachelor Cooking" at the bottom of the post so all such recipes can easily be tracked) So I'm gonna keep it short and sweet here. Oh but let me assure you, it's high on flavor and low on labor. Absolutely yummy!! And a new style of posting too, to keep it quick. I know guys don't like to read through a lot in a blog post!

Easy Peasy Chicken Biryani.
Serves 2-3-4 depending on appetite :P Seriously, but with a normal appetite it serves 4.
Recipe by Self.

Ingredients:

500 gm Chicken, cleaned.
1 Cup Rice (Basmati, or any will do)
2.5 Cups Water
1 Bay Leaf
2 tbsp Sugar, white or brown.
1 Medium Onion, thinly sliced
1 tbsp Ginger-Garlic Paste
1 tbsp Pepper Powder
1 tbsp Cinnamon Powder
2 tbsp Nutmeg Powder (Javetri)
2 Red Chilies, Dry, Crushed.
1 tbsp Garam Masala Powder
1 tbsp Rosemary Leaves, Dried (Optional)
4 tbsp Ghee/Oil
Salt to taste








Friday 18 May 2012

Dear LCBO, Monopolies are so last century! It’s time to dismantle the LCBO.


On a recent Sunday afternoon, I stopped by the LCBO’s flagship Summerhill store.
A glorious 35,000 square feet of creamy Italian porcelain floors and sparkling lights, the refurbished Canadian Pacific Railway station is adjacent to a cluster of gourmet shops that affluent shoppers call “The Five Thieves.” Here you pay dearly for ready-to-heat osso buco or a square of chocolate cake sprinkled with edible gold leaf. Despite its prime location, this outlet, the LCBO’s largest, is no pricier than any other location in the province. You pay the same fixed $12.60 for a 2009 Louis Bernard CĂ´tes du RhĂ´ne here as you would at Scarborough’s lowly Cedarbrae Mall.

Nice, huh? But wait—you and I are paying for those pot lights, the Martha Stewart–style test kitchen (used for cooking demos and wine appreciation classes) and the standalone tasting bar, not to mention the lease on this prime piece of real estate. We all pay—whether we’re teetotalers or boozehounds—because higher overhead reduces the annual dividend the LCBO remits to the province. That in turn means less money for everything from social services to infrastructure.

According to a recent report by Ontario’s Auditor General, Jim McCarter, the liquor monopoly is also minimizing profits by failing to use its enormous clout to negotiate the lowest possible wholesale prices from suppliers. Instead, the LCBO does something unique among retailers. It decides on the retail price it wants to charge for a product, and then asks suppliers to raise or lower their wholesale costs accordingly. Why? The LCBO claims it’s merely fulfilling its duty to be socially responsible—that by keeping prices high, it’s trying to discourage consumption. And yet, as McCarter reported, alcohol sales have gone up 67 per cent in the last decade.

LCBO. It rolls off the tongue like an unoaked chardonnay, lulling us into overlooking what the initials actually stand for: Liquor Control Board of Ontario. The LCBO’s motto might as well be, Drink lots! But not too much! To understand its conflicted ethos, you have to go back to 1927, the year Ontario emerged from Prohibition. Still fretting that unfettered liquor sales and low-priced alcohol would lead to alcoholism, crime and general chaos, Queen’s Park primly established a state monopoly with a
mandate: temperance.

Today, the LCBO downplays the control aspect while struggling to satisfy its dual mandate of turning a profit without turning people into drunkards. The subliminal message of Food and Drink, the LCBO’s free magazine, remains paternalistic: don’t drink on an empty stomach. The hypocrisy is astounding. The LCBO goes further than most stores in trying to persuade you to buy its product for every social occasion short of a toddler’s birthday party. What other retailer has dreamed up 300 styles of gift bags, boxes and bottle-friendly containers in the past five years? Chris Layton, an LCBO spokesman, says the gift bags earn $3.5 million a year—although consumer interest is now shifting to gift cards

According to Layton, Food and Drink is the LCBO’s single most popular marketing initiative. Six times a year, the LCBO prints 500,000 English copies and 20,000 French copies on glossy 60-pound stock. It turns a comfortable annual profit of $350,000 to $400,000 after expenses. Here’s one of the secrets to its success: wineries must submit marketing plans—including how much they will spend on advertising in Food and Drink—before they can obtain coveted shelf space at the LCBO. Food and Drink competes for scarce advertising dollars against private-sector magazines that aren’t bankrolled by government monopolies.

Truth be told, Torontonians would buy alcohol without any encouragement from fancy stores or glossy magazines. If we could save money, I’m fairly certain we’d shop at a no-frills warehouse with fluorescent lights. To get an idea of how monolithic the LCBO is, I checked out another monolithic retailer, but one that offers the warehouse shopping experience: Costco. First, consider that Ontario’s population is a tiny fraction of that of the U.S.—4.1 per cent. Then note that while Costco is one of the biggest wine retailers in the U.S., it must compete with thousands of private liquor stores. Now check out these numbers: last year Costco grossed $1.3 billion (U.S.) in wine sales; the LCBO’s wine sales grossed $1.58 billion, according to its most recent annual report. Despite its much smaller territory and consumer base, the LCBO actually eclipses that other monolith to the south, Costco.

In fiscal 2010–2011, the monopoly paid a dividend of $1.55 billion to the Ontario government. It was the 17th consecutive record annual dividend, and it does not include the various taxes levied (a total of $749 million). The annual report also lays bare the secret behind the LCBO’s profit margins: we’re paying double. At Costco, a bottle of Woodbridge sauvignon blanc costs $6.99; at the LCBO it’s $11.95. Costco sells Veuve Clicquot for $38.99 a bottle; the LCBO charges $66.30. When I asked for pricing examples for table wine, some markups were 137 per cent. For a wine that retails for $10.45 (the LCBO didn’t provide actual product names), it pays wholesalers $3.77 if it’s a U.S. or non-Ontario Canadian wine; $3.72 if it’s another imported wine; and $4.10 if it’s Ontario wine. And these wholesale prices may be inflated.

This is the LCBO’s 85th year in existence. Most Torontonians alive have only known a government monopoly, so it’s hard to imagine freedom. But we can look to Alberta, which dismantled its provincial monopoly 19 years ago. Pillaging and mayhem did not ensue. Instead, privatization led to greater consumer choice—eight times the number of products and double the number of retailers. Revenue collected by the province includes a government markup, which varies depending on the product type and alcohol percentage. In 2011, Alberta’s liquor revenue totalled $683.5 million.

Monopolies are so last century. To understand the absurdity of state-controlled liquor sales, imagine if Queen’s Park decided obesity was the number one health risk and established an Obesity Control Board of Ontario. It shuts down McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s. Only the OCBO can supply burgers because, you know, children might eat them. Without competition, the price of a meal deal soon doubles, then triples. With these—forgive me—fat profit margins, the OCBO begins decorating its burger outlets with crystal chandeliers. It publishes a glossy fast-food magazine. And everyone lives happily ever after because the province is raking in millions of dollars in dividends.

Profligate spending is how a monopoly behaves when it isn’t permitted to keep all the lucre for itself. And this at a time when the Ontario government is desperately trying to find ways to save money. In his recent report, the former TD Bank economist Don Drummond recommended selling the LCBO’s headquarters overlooking Lake Ontario. That would be but a drop in the wine bucket. In the coming fiscal year, the LCBO will open 37 new or relocated stores, bringing the total number of outlets to 636. Konrad Ejbich, a wine writer and expert, calls our state-run liquor monopoly “the last vestige of communism in Ontario.” It’s been 85 years since Prohibition ended and a quarter-century since the fall of the Berlin Wall. It’s time to dismantle the LCBO.

http://www.torontolife.com/daily/informer/from-print-edition-informer/2012/05/14/jan-wong-control-freaks/

How to Start Your Own Food Truck

Here is a quick-reference guide to help people understand what’s involved in getting a truck licensed and up and running.

Food Trucks Toronto - Website

Food Truck News

You must bookmark the link to Toronto Food Trucks and check it out at least once a day. You can see which food trucks is in your hood and at what time....how cool is that! Its you resource for Toronto Food Trucks and News!!!

http://torontofoodtrucks.ca/

The Star on Food Trucks

The Toronto Star recently wrote a blurb on the new food truck frenzy in the Tdot.

Toronto food trucks and carts could soon serve up a parking lot feast

Dedicated foodies know one of North America’s hottest gastronomic trends right now is the mobile kitchen — better known as the “food truck.” And Torontonians needn’t look far to see the immense potential of street treats served from the back of a vehicle.
To the delight of Steel City’s outdoor diners, Hamilton held a “rally” on Friday gathering 15 food trucks from across southern Ontario. Together they dished out fare that included wood-fired pizza, fish tacos, maple bacon doughnuts, exotic cupcakes, gourmet grilled cheese, pulled pork, variety poutines, beaver tails and schnitzel — all prepared and served from trucks.
It was the second such rally in that food-truck-happy town, and the biggest held in Canada. Where does Toronto rate in all this? Well, several of the trucks rallying in Hamilton appeared at a similar event here on Saturday. But when it comes to street food, Canada’s largest city hasn’t looked far beyond the humble hot dog. A well-meaning effort a few years ago to provide healthy curbside ethnic food was regulated to death. The “Toronto A La Cart” program proved an unmitigated disaster.
But Toronto city council this week is to consider a change in the right direction — cutting red tape that currently restricts the ability of food truck operators, and other licensed outdoor food vendors, from plying their trade.
A well-done motion from Councillor Adam Vaughan calls for a report on allowing food trucks and carts to rent parking lot space along sidewalks. That simple rule change would result in a huge increase in the number of potential marketing opportunities for street food in Toronto.
Right now, these vendors aren’t allowed to reach hungry diners by locating in a commercial parking lot. It seems a needless restriction. Food truck and cart operators deserve as much autonomy as possible when it comes to running their business as long as they meet health, safety and inspection requirements.
Toronto’s streetscape could use a bit of spicing up. And, judging from other cities, the public is ready for a larger helping of outdoor culinary adventure.

Friday 11 May 2012

Weddings : they can be so much cooler if you take my advice!

How to plan the perfect wedding... by forgetting everything you ever learned about the big day.
The result is a sort of unintentional matrimonial Groundhog Day, governed by the notions that:

1) all brides and grooms want the same wedding, and

2) all brides and grooms are operating on unlimited budgets. Blame Hollywood, blame the billion-dollar wedding industry, blame your future mother-in-law who almost had a stroke when you mentioned the possibility of a pink dress, then take a look at the smiling couple in the photo above….

They’re smiling because they managed to achieve the impossible—scratch that, the improbable: a beautiful, original, stress-free wedding on a budget that won’t require them to sell off non-essential organs to get back in the black. They did it all by avoiding the dreaded s-word. Because the only important “should” for would-be brides and grooms is that you really should love the person on the other end of those vows. That and you really should read our guide to the ultimate off-the-grid wedding: cost-efficient, cool and 100 per cent conventional wisdom–free.

Some food for thought
1) Stupid people think: A pre-nup means you’re planning for divorce. Reality check: Find out why signing on the dotted line can be downright romantic









2) Can't we all just get along? Myth: The bride/bridesmaid relationship should be fraught with drama culminating in a blow-up over an expensive dress. Reality check: You can find appropriate attire for under $100 at the mall—here are three such options.

3) Myth: Buy one expensive bottle for everyone to share. Whatever! Pop Bottles - Go cheap, buy more!



4) Myth: Make your guest pay for shit you dont need - register for China, a gravy boat, and a bunch of other stuff you don’t want and will never use. Reality check: using our handy flowchart, you can find a wedding registry that’s right for you.



5) Myth: You should get married at a fancy-pants location? Reality check: Try a cool, cost-effective venue or heck why not host a back yard fancy BBQ or pic nic wedding!






6) Buffets are back in style, but only if you do it right!

 

http://www.thegridto.com/guides/the-grid-guide-to-getting-hitched/

Food Trucks are on the way! Slowly but surely, food trucks are coming to Toronto’s streets.







Helooooooo Toronto - Here are some Food Trucks to keep a watch for:
1) El GastrĂ³nomo Vagabundo (@elgastronomo)
› Serving since: July 2010.
Based in: St. Catharines.
Who: Adam Hynam-Smith, a Melbourne, Australia–trained chef, and Tamara Jensen, a former analyst on Parliament Hill.
Where to find the truck: Food Truck Eats events, and periodically parked outside U of T and Ryerson for weekday lunch.
What to get: There’s plenty on offer, but this truck is best known for the tacos that feature an atlas of flavours: Southwestern, Middle Eastern, South Asian, Australian. The most popular items include the stupendously spicy tempura-cod taco and a pork belly one with jalapeno aioli and pickled cabbage.
Price range: $5.50 to $10.
Pro tip: Follow their Twitter feed for riddles that lead to passwords that’ll land you an off-the-menu item like zucchini fritters with labna cheese. Golden tickets good for free food are also hidden randomly under serving plates at food-truck events.

2) Blue Donkey (@bluedonkeytruck)
› Serving since: September 2011.
› Based in: Mississauga.
Who: Long-time hot-dog vendor Tony Vastis and his brother-in-law, Greek-restaurant veteran Manny Tsouvallas.
Where to find the truck: At the Molson Amphitheatre during concerts; in Liberty Village and at Jarvis and Queen for weekday lunches.
What to get: Blue Donkey’s take on street food comes with a Greek spin, including a grilled-cheese pita with feta, poutine with gyros meat, and zucchini chips. The first items to fly out of the truck are the fried calamari and chips, feta fries, and, for dessert, fried pita bread with honey and cinnamon sugar. Pair your lunch with their most popular sauce: garlic-and-ouzo mayo.
Price range: $3 to $9.
Pro tip: If enough customers clamour for it, Vastis has been known to create off-the-menu items like lamb gyros, quail, lamb chops, and pastitsio, a Greek lagasna.
› Based in: Mississauga.
Who: Long-time hot-dog vendor Tony Vastis and his brother-in-law, Greek-restaurant veteran Manny Tsouvallas.
Where to find the truck: At the Molson Amphitheatre during concerts; in Liberty Village and at Jarvis and Queen for weekday lunches.
What to get: Blue Donkey’s take on street food comes with a Greek spin, including a grilled-cheese pita with feta, poutine with gyros meat, and zucchini chips. The first items to fly out of the truck are the fried calamari and chips, feta fries, and, for dessert, fried pita bread with honey and cinnamon sugar. Pair your lunch with their most popular sauce: garlic-and-ouzo mayo.


3) Gourmet Bitches (@gourmetb1tches)
› Serving since: May 2012.
Based in: Toronto.
Who: Long-time friends Shontelle Pinch, who worked in the hospitality industry, and Bianka Matchette, a former medical esthetician.
Where to find the truck: Currently doing private events in Vaughan, with plans to spend evenings at 99 Markt at Queen and Sudbury soon.
What to get: The gluten-free smorgasboard includes the owners’ proudest creations: Balinese chicken on a corn tostada and the kale and arugula salad. There are also grilled Asian-Cuban wings, Korean yam fries topped with pulled pork, and a steak sandwich with a miso-tamarind-kiwi sauce.
Price range: $10 to $12.
Pro tip: Too hot for another taco? The truck will also start serving homemade juices in the summer.

4) Buster’s Sea Cove (@bustersseacove)
› Serving since: April 2012.
Based in: Toronto.
Who: Co-owners Quenten Chan and Tom Antonarakis and chef David Hoang, whose bricks-and-mortar Buster’s Sea Cove is a St. Lawrence Market fixture.
Serving since: April 2012.
Where to find the truck: At a semi-permanent location at the corner of Queen and Jarvis during the weekday lunch rush (11 a.m. to 2 p.m.).
What to get: There are travel-friendly shrimp po’ boys, calamari sandwiches, and shrimp and fish tacos. After a successful (read: sold out by lunch) test run, the truck has added a mighty grilled lobster roll with a side of kettle chips.
Price range: $7 to $15.
Pro tip: It isn’t all deep-fried: You can grab a daily grilled-fish special, like tilapia, marlin, and swordfish.

5) Caplansky’s Thunderin’ Thelma (@Caplansky)
Serving since: August 2011.
Based in: Toronto.
Who: Zane Caplansky, deli master and owner of College Street’s Caplansky’s Delicatessen.
Where to find the truck: Weekdays at Queen and Dalhousie for lunch until the end of June, then it’s on to a new route. There’s a daily schedule for the Thunderin’ Thelma at caplanskys.com/thunderin-thelma—or listen for the truck’s bells that play “Hava Nagila.”
What to get: The signature, succulent smoked-meat sandwiches are the go-to items, but Caplansky’s 300- to- 500 maple-bacon donuts usually sell out first in just two hours. You can also find poutine, grilled cheese, and barbecued brisket sandwiches.
Price range: $3 to $7.
Pro tip: Caplansky gives out special passwords on his Twitter account for freebies like fries.