Edmonton restaurants redefine the art and craft of dining out - Action News
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Edmonton

Edmonton restaurants redefine the art and craft of dining out

With local ingredients, adventurous menus and unique interiors, our restaurants are getting noticed

With local ingredients, adventurous menus and unique interiors, our restaurants are getting noticed

An upcoming wild game dinner at Three Boars features some flavours you won't find in your local grocery store. (Facebook/Three Boars)

Edmonton: The New Capital is a special series taking the pulse of the city. From Terwillegar to Castle Downs, CBC journalists are talking to people about how Edmonton is changing and what it means for the future.

When Brad Lazarenko opened Culina Mill Creek in 2004 and used products from local farmers with whom he'd established relationships, he wasn't doing it for the sake of any trend. He did it because it was the right thing to do.

Sourcing local got him noticed, but it wasn't just the food that was getting attention. It was the room, too.

Culina was small and quirkysort of "broody Paris meets modish Bohemia"and a far cry from the plethora of large, corporate steakhouses and garish chains that dotted the culinary landscape.

Knowing how the food was raised was also a guiding principle for Jessie and Darcy Radies whoopened their restaurant,The Blue Pear, in 2000. Food integrity mattered.

That way of thinking was a departure for many Edmonton restaurants owners in the early 2000s who generally ordered boxes of frozen product and ingredients sourced from foreign countries. Back then, no one could offer how the pork was raised or from what waters the fish was caught.

The exquisite macarons and pastries of Duchess Bake Shop. If it's good, people will buy it. (CBC)

Cindy Lazarenko, who shared her brother's principles in operating her restaurantCulina Highlands,impressed the judges atAir Canada's EnRoute magazine with her modern Ukrainian fare, securing aspot on its Best New Restaurant list for 2009.

That was the same yearDuchess Bake Shop set up on 124thStreet, bringing exquisite macarons and pastries to the city.

People were open to culinary creativity and showed they would pay wellif the quality was there.

Creativegenius turned heads atEnRoute

Carla Alexander had known this for years. Her tiny restaurant, Soul Soup, was the successful precursor to MRKT, the bistro on Jasper Avenue that Alexander opened in 2010. MRKT had a sleek, ultra-modern interior and a menu that highlightedseasonal andlocally sourcedingredients.

Alexander's friend, Daniel Costa, also opened a restaurant that year. His was a small, sleek Italian eatery calledCorso32 thatforever changed the wayEdmontoniansthought of Italian food no pizza or over-sauced pasta, just dishes that were simple, refined and had soul.

Something as uncomplicated as a house-made ricotta drizzled with good quality Italian olive oil made people swoon.

It was all about letting good quality ingredients speak for themselves. In fact, they spoke so clearly, that Corso 32 cracked EnRoute's top 10 list of best new restaurants in 2011.

Seven years later, it's still hard to get a reservation at Corso even though Costa has opened two more restaurants on the same block.

Brad Lazarenko created sparks with Culina Mill Creek that Daniel Costa fedinto a roaring blaze with Corso 32.The rest of the country was takingnotice.

In 2011, three friends helped to stoke the fire with six months of social media posts revealing tiny bits of tantalizing information about a taco joint they were building.

Restaurant magic in Edmonton

By the time Tres Carnales opened its doors that summer, people were already lined up to check out the attractive room one to see and be seen in andthe quality food. The lineups still haven't abated.

Small was proving to be mighty.

Three Boars set up shop in a tiny house on 109th Street, offeringsmall plates and whisky-focused cocktails. The menu was created around the harvested foods that farmers would deliver weekly to the back door. Chef Brayden Kozak introduced offal and diners lapped it up. Lamb neck, beef tongue, no problem. When it came to new ideas, Edmontonians were a very accepting audience.

And the love for local producers kept growing.

In 2013, Blair Lebsack and partner Caitlin Fulton opened RGE RD, a prairie-focused fine dining spot with a Canadian-centric wine list and ingredients sourced exclusively from a handful of farmers the two had worked with over the years.

Meals served at RGE RD pay tribute to Alberta's rural roads and roots. (RGE RD)

Lebsack knew how those ingredients were raised he'd even helped to grow and harvest many of them himselfand the restaurant's fare was described as rustic yet exquisite. Those same adjectives could be used for the room, which wasaccented with fur throws, iron hardwareand soft lighting. RGERDsecured the number fourspot on EnRoute's2014list, aremarkable accomplishment.

With that run of banner years, expectations in Edmonton becameunderstandably high. Mediocrity, once a ruling force, was being put in its place as vocal customers demanded quality. Thanks to chefs like Alexander, Costaand Lebsack, they'd gotten used to quality food and spaces with panache.

Then North 53 arrived and pushed the customer to their limits.

The room's walls and ceiling were dramatic black with spider-like lights reaching from the ceiling. The original food concept was a tasting menu featuring all-Canadian ingredients whipped up in ultra-modern preparations.

Edmonton customers like restaurants to push boundaries, but North 53 went too far - then quickly adjusted. (North 53/Facebook)

People balked.And owner Kevin Cam listened.

The menu changed to more approachable plates (though the cocktails thankfullyremained edgy and exciting, and to this day are still some of the city's most favoured.)

As long as there was value, patrons would swallowexciting creations made with quality ingredients. And Edmonton's stellar cast of restaurateurs was happy to oblige.

Food artisans are getting their due

Costa opened his second restaurant, Bar Bricco, a place for small plates and wine. The boys behindTresCarnales followed up with Rostizado, a place for Mexican roasted fare. More Mexican food appeared atElCortez, an east L.A.-vibedeatery that was the first of threeMichael Maxxis restaurants.

Rostizado's meat platters are primed for sharing. (Rostizado)

On the finer side, Solstice arrived, offering tranquillity and seasonal cuisine.

Kevin Cam's second restaurant, Baijiu, saw Chef Lex Boldireff modernizing traditional Asian dishes in a 1930s Shanghai-style speakeasy; Costa unveiled restaurant three,Uccellino.

Bespoke barmen opened the doors to Clementine; the elegant fare at Bndokby chefRyanHotchkiss made him the darling of local media.

Baijiu, the Shanghai speakeasy, pleases crowds with ornate cocktails and an inspiring menu. (Baijiu/Facebook)

Garner Beggs of Duchess Bakeshop revealed Caf Linnea and Ben Staley brought modernism to Jasper Avenue in side-by-side restaurants, ALTA (now closed) and Alder Room.

In 2017, four Edmonton restaurants made EnRoute's Best New Restaurant list. An unprecedented three Alder Room, Caf Linnea and Clementine placed in the top 10. Heads across the nation swivelled in the direction of Alberta's capital city.

Christine Sandford is making magic at Biera, the restaurant inside the Blind Enthusiasm brewery. (Twyla Campbell)

And they hadn't even heard yet of phenomChristine Sandfordand what she was doing at Biera, the new restaurant inside of the Blind Enthusiasm brewery.

The big rooms are gone. Vegetables are taking up more menu space. Servers can tell you how dishes are prepared and (for the most part) from where the ingredients hail.

Edmonton's Alder Room restaurant was named one of Canada's top 10 new restaurants in Air Canada's enRoute magazine. (Supplied/Alder Room)

And it's not just the restaurants that are shining, it's also the artisans: chocolatiers, bakers, cheese-makers, craft brewers, butchers andsausage makers.

Edmonton is enjoying a resurgence of craftsmanship. It's a wonderful time to live in this city.

Five years ago, I was part of a food panel and was asked the question, "Is Edmonton a food destination?"

I said, "No, not yet."

If I was asked today, I would happily, wholeheartedly, report the opposite.

Read more stories on our Edmonton: The New Capital series on cbc.ca/edmonton or listen to CBC Radio One, 93.9 FM/740 AM.