Your weekly digest of Toronto food news

October 24, 2024

 

Dear reader,

For my partner’s first pandemic-times birthday, I pre-ordered a dozen freshly shucked oysters from Island Oysters, then a teeny takeout window in Bloordale. The idea was to bring them to a nearby park for a picnic. I thought I was being very cool and romantic, but the date quickly went south. First of all, each and every one of the benches and picnic tables were taken. I had failed to bring a blanket, so we squatted on a cement bollard and tried to find a place on the ground that wasn’t littered with cigarette butts to rest the tray. It was a pretty hot day for early June, so we felt the need to consume the oysters as quickly as possible, lest they cook in the blazing sun. It started to feel like work. Then, the pigeons arrived.

The moral of this story is that takeout oysters are better in theory than they are in practice. So it’s a good thing that Island Oysters’ owner, Jason Kun, went and opened a sit-down restaurant just a shell’s throw away from that temporary to-go window. You’ll read all about it below. 

Also in this week’s newsletter, what’s on the menu at Ceci Bar, Oliver and Bonacini’s colourful new cantina in the old O&B Café Grill space. Plus, a look at Affinity Fish’s sort-of secret, 16-seat lunch service. 

For more of our food-and-drink coverage, visit torontolife.com or subscribe to our print edition.

—Rebecca Fleming, food and drink editor

 
 

Our top stories

 
Toronto, Food and Drink, Island Oysters

  SHELL GAME

East-coast expat Jason Kun has brought a little piece of PEI to Bloor and Dufferin. After shucking oysters at farmers’ markets, breweries and catering gigs—then trying his hand at that aforementioned takeout window—Kun has finally opened a sit-down restaurant. Take a look at Island Oysters, the sweetest little seafood bar in Bloordale. 

 
Toronto, Food and Drink, Ceci Bar
 

WHAT’S ON THE MENU

O&B’s colourful new cantina at Yonge and Front is the more casual sister spot to Leña, the brand’s South American restaurant up the street. Where Leña is an invitation for a quiet sit-down dinner at Abuela’s house, Ceci Bar caters to a younger, livelier and louder crowd—one that likes spicy popcorn enhanced with liquid nitrogen, plant-based birria tacos and boozy paletas.

 
Food and Drink, Toronto Restaurants, Affinity Fish

 SORT-OF SECRET

Last month, Affinity Fish—Little Portugal’s super-sustainable seafood store—quietly launched lunch service at their 16-seat counter. The menu will rotate but right now it includes a trio of katsu creations featuring Lake Huron whitefish: a soba noodle set, a rice bowl and what might be one of the city’s best katsu sandos. Click here for a closer look at each of the fish dishes.

 

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NOVEMBER 2024: THE SPACE SAVERS

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