Food Notes for August 5, 2024

Openings

  • Calgary-based Deville Coffee opened a second Edmonton location at West Edmonton Mall in early July near the Santa Maria.
  • Oak Berry is a Canadian chain specializing in acai bowls. They just opened a location in Edmonton in Old Strathcona at 10406 82 Avenue.
  • Also coming soon to Old Strathcona – a Smoke’s Poutinerie franchise. It’s been years since I was introduced to Smoke’s in Toronto, but I do remember enjoying their poutines (and eventually, their offshoot burrito chain, too).

Upcoming Events

  • Serengeti BBQ on Alberta Avenue is hosting the Savannah Twilight Serenade, a celebration of East African food, music, arts, and culture on August 9.
  • Workshop Eatery is hosting their 7th annual Garden Party on August 15. Tickets are $115.23.
  • Leduc Rib Fest is taking place August 23-25 at the Leduc Recreation Centre.

Local News

What I Ate

  • Dalla’s patio is one of my favourites when dining with kids. We love that it fronts onto a plaza (a useful place for young ones to play while waiting for food) but still offers great people watching opportunities. Service is always great, and the $10 kids portion of pasta is very generous.
  • Dalla

On the Dalla patio

  • It’s become a family tradition for us to visit Rosy Farms in the summer for haskap picking. I grew up going to u-pick farms in the Edmonton area, and am so happy I can continue this with my own children. Ellie did great picking her own berries, and definitely had her fill of them that afternoon.
  • Rosy Farms

At Rosy Farms

Food Notes for July 29, 2024

Openings

  • Epic’s Station Yards food hall opened this past weekend, offering five concepts over two floors, including Italian, French Canadian, Mexican, Asian fusion, and chop house options. It is located at 8115 Gateway Blvd.
  • Seoul Fried Chicken’s third Edmonton location is now open in North Town, 9314 137 Avenue.
  • The Colombian will soon be opening their fifth location, in the storefront formerly occupied by Fleisch in Forest Heights.
  • Edmonton will soon have another gelato spot to visit, called Crafted Gelato. Until the storefront is open, their gelato will be served from their gelato cart.
  • Tipsy Moose Pub is now open at 6464 Cartmell Place SW.
  • Another restaurant serving Chonqing cuisine opened a couple of months back, called Mahjong Noodle Spot, at 10415 80 Avenue.
  • I missed the opening of Le Tramway back in April, in the former Red Ox Inn space at 9420 91 Street. It offers French and Balkan specialities.
  • Tesoro, the “newest member of the Italian Bakery and The Canadian Brewhouse family” will be opening in Windermere this fall.

Closures

  • Vish on 124 Street announced that due to a “political boycott”, they will be forced to close as of September 30, 2024.
  • After opening in May, Diced announced their forthcoming closure in August: “we have found it challenging to generate consistent business at this new location. With other projects on the horizon, we’ve decided to let go of Diced so we can regroup and focus on the amazing ways we can support the amazing boardgame community in our city.” Diced is a project from the folks behind Waffle Bird, which closed their previous location on July 14 as they will be relocating to a sit-down restaurant in Old Stratcona. They also opened Dining Car Cafe earlier this year downtown.
  • Mandolin Books and Coffee Company in Highlands has announced their closure, after 21 years. The building was sold and they were served with notice to vacate the building by September 30.

Upcoming Events

  • I missed sharing about this year’s YEG Food Fiesta, which highlights restaurants in the North Edge. This year’s event has 8 participating businesses, and runs July 5-31.
  • It’s one of my favourite times of year – the return of Sabor/Bodega’s Fish & Chip Fridays, taking place on Fridays at their downtown location in August. Proceeds support Santa’s Anonymous and the Ronald McDonald House of Northern Alberta. Make sure to head down early, as they will sell out!
  • The Edmonton Heritage Festival returns to Borden Park/Edmonton Exhibition Lands for a second year, running August 3-5.
  • Leduc County has organized Food & Farm Trail tours that showcase 4 area businesses, including Chartier, Righand Distillery, Beau Bella Winery, and Old Station Honey and Mead. Tours will run August 3, 24, and September 7 and 14. Tickets are $79 per person.
  • I’m a little surprised it’s returning, but Diner in Blanc will again be hosted in Edmonton on September 7. The picnic events have taken place in cities all over the world; attendees dress in white and are led to a location kept secret until that evening.
  • Eats on 118 returns September 19, 26, and October 3. Tickets are $50 and will include bites at 3 neighbourhood restaurants.

Local News

  • The images of devastation from the fire in Jasper have been hard to absorb – and I am only an avid visitor and not someone who lives and earns my livelihood in that community. Many Edmonton restaurants, including Meuwly’s, Greta, and Fu’s Repair Shop, are offering free meals for evacuees, with many others offering discounted food. There are also several options to support those displaced, including the Jasper Hospitality Fund, and the Roasti coffee sold for the Jasper Barista Fund.
  • KDays experienced an increase in attendance this year compared to last year, while Taste of Edmonton saw a 20% decline from 2023.
  • Alberta and BC reached a one-year deal to allow wineries to ship directly to consumers.

What I Ate

  • It was great to be back in Toronto after many years! I live for the energy in the city, and love the urbanism and character apparent in individual neighbourhoods and streets. And while we couldn’t hit up as many places with two young kids in tow, we still managed our share of good eats, including at institutions Sugo and OddSeoul. But my favourite bites were closer to our home base, including pie from Pizzeria Badiali, and smash burgers from Burger Drops.
  • Badiali

Cacio e pepe pizza from Badiali

Burger Drops

The best burger I’ve had in some time from Burger Drops

  • Back in Edmonton, I bid adieu to my favourite arepa in the city from Alberta Ave gem El Fogon. The restaurant closed July 28.
  • El Fogon

One last arepa from El Fogon

Food Notes for July 15, 2024

Returning chefs launch Vagabond pop-up

Chefs Christine Sandford and Roger Letourneau have returned to Edmonton from Europe to share a taste of their travels through their pop-up venture, Vagabond.

Vagabond will take over Take Care Café at 9621 82 Avenue NW in Ritchie from Fridays to Sundays, starting July 21 and running until the end of September. It will offer 40 indoor and outdoor seats. “It is a pretty small space, like a backyard barbecue,” Sandford said. “That’s our vibe.”

Sandford and Letourneau, who are also life partners, initially met in Edmonton 13 years ago through a chef-driven pop-up called Staff Meal. Vagabond is a way for them to continue to collaborate while gaining the skills necessary for their next endeavour.

“Our big plan is to open something together, more of a tourism-driven food experience rather than a restaurant, probably in the Okanagan,” Sandford said. “I love hospitality, but I don’t want to open a restaurant. For example, we’ve stayed in cool places where the food is important, like a winery, and when you wake up, a beautiful basket of food comes to your door.”

Vagabond is “taking a step that is manageable, learning more business stuff and exploring those collaborations. It’s a stepping stool,” Letourneau added.

Ritchie is familiar ground for both. Sandford helped open Biera inside Ritchie Market in 2017 and led the kitchen to much acclaim for seven years before leaving in 2023. Letourneau, who worked at Bar Clementine and Woodwork in the past, previously rented space at Biera for his condiment company, Lessig Ferments.

“We’re excited to be neighbours (with Biera), as well as with Darling (opened by another former Biera employee, Justin Jones),” Sandford said. “Way back when, Whyte Avenue was a hub, and I feel like it’s going back to that. I want to be part of it again.”

Vagabond will offer a happy hour with snacks from 3pm to 6pm, and a full menu with larger plates from 6pm to 11pm. Vagabond will have an outdoor charcoal grill and a wood-burning oven, in order to prepare hot items alongside smaller nibbles. Drinks will include curated wines, cocktails, and local beers. “We want people to come and try some dishes, and enjoy the summer while we have it,” Sandford said.

Vagabond

Roger Letourneau and Christine Sandford (supplied)

The menu as a whole takes some inspiration from their travels in Europe over the last year. “We lived on the border of France and Spain,” Sandford said. “Gilda, a Catalonian tapa (a snack or appetizer) we loved, typically has anchovy and pickled pepper. But we don’t want to do it with those ingredients. We want to mimic those flavours with ingredients from Alberta.”

The pair said they feel strongly about adapting ideas from abroad to the local context. “I really appreciate when people do a specific cuisine with local ingredients. You take those dishes and really think about it,” Sandford said.

“If you keep importing stuff, Canadian cuisine isn’t moving forward. We are not building our own identity,” Letourneau added.

Sandford teased that some items may remind diners of similar plates she served at Biera. “There are definitely some dishes I worked on that will make their way on the menu,” Sandford said. “Familiar with a new twist.”

The pair said they are excited to work with Alberta farmers, including Reclaim Organics, Prairie Gardens, Fifth Gen Gardens, and Vital Green Farm. The menu will be continuously revised to highlight the changing seasonal bounty, and vegetables will comprise at least half the menu.

“Rather than having an idea of dishes, we go to our local supplier and see what’s available,” Sandford said. “That’s how my brain works. If there’s a specific green tomato, how can I make a dish mostly out of green tomato and maybe two other ingredients? We like to use three to four ingredients.”

Sandford acknowledged that pushing local food can be challenging, especially at a time when food prices have increased significantly. “Sometimes it’s tough to provide a meal using local ingredients,” Sandford said. “You have to be careful as it can come across as pretentious or intimidating. But really, you’re just using carrots that came from the ground. Sometimes the way our society is set up is that it can cost more, where local food is more expensive than imports. It’s backward here. But it is starting to change.”

After the pop-up wraps, the pair said they plan to travel, this time within Canada. Sandford and Letourneau will return to Edmonton eventually, for family, business (Lessig Ferments will continue to be based out of Edmonton), and palpable customer loyalty.

“That is the one part of working in Edmonton that’s drawn us back,” Sandford said. “We have this great community and following here. It feels special to see some people who have come to our original pop-ups and to the restaurants where we’ve been cooking for 16 years. It feels pretty special to have people support you the whole time.”

Openings

  • Daniel Costa’s newest concept, Va, is now open in the Citizen on Jasper, 12024 Jasper Avenue. Va serves coffee, focaccia panini, and pizza.
  • Argos Bar Bistro is now open in St. Albert at 150 Bellerose Drive. It is the latest restaurant from the Sorrentino’s Group, offering “Northern Mediterranean cuisine”.
  • Obj3cts, one of the recipients of the Downtown Retail Attraction Program Grant, opened earlier in July at 10356 Jasper Avenue. The store is the brainchild of the folks behind Wild Rose Cakes. Obj3cts offers coffee, baked goods, and sandwiches.
  • JMT’s relocated storefront on Whyte Avenue (they moved from Downtown) opened earlier in July. Find JMT at 10463 82 Avenue.
  • Station Park hosted a soft opening during Art Walk this weekend, with their French, Mexican, and pizza concepts available to try (the Asian fusion concept was not yet ready). They will announce more general soft opening details soon.
  • Zillionaires Lounge, located at 6256 99 Street will be soft opening on July 18 for industry professionals.

Upcoming Events

  • I missed sharing this last week, but Sabor is hosting a Swine & Dine event, celebrating Alberta pork products, on July 16. Tickets are $75 per person and include appetizers and three courses.

Local News

What I Ate

No Food Notes next week as we are on vacation. Enjoy the warm weather!

  • Linda and I checked out new Alberta Avenue restaurant La Morenita. They offer all-day brunch, as well as a pastry case, in addition to a regular lunch and dinner menu. Of the items we tried, the chilaquiles were my favourite (I enjoyed both the red and green sauces).
  • La Morenita

Our spread from La Morenita

  • I met up with a friend for lunch on the glorious patio at Pal’s – I love how they’ve incorporated the mature trees and the great vantage for people watching. Their beef dip is my go-to, and the chips are crispy and addictive.
  • Pal’s

Beef dip from Pal’s

Food Notes for July 8, 2024

Openings

  • La Morenita is now open at 8501 118 Avenue. It’s great to have more independent eateries on Alberta Avenue!
  • Papa Giuseppe’s Kitchen, an Italian restaurant specializing in Pinsa Romana, opened last week, at 10583 115 Street.
  • The first Edmonton location of Japanese cheesecake chain Uncle Tetsu Canada is now open in West Edmonton Mall, across from the Indigo/Starbucks.
  • Montreal-based ice cream chain La Diperie has opened in St. Albert. It is located at 11 Bellerose Drive.

Closures

  • I was so sad to learn that El Fogon is closing. It’s my go-to for work lunches, and I will miss their excellent arepas. Their last day of operations is July 28.

Local News

What I Ate

  • On the same day I learned about El Fogon’s coming closure, my colleagues and I had already planned a picnic in the park with their arepas. It will also not be my last arepa from El Fogon.
  • El Fogon

Beef and gouda arepa from El Fogon

  • I met up with some friends at Bernadette’s for lunch. I had to order the BBQ brisket sandwich, which I so loved from their former Pei Pei Chei Ow menu, and enjoyed on the Bernadette’s dinner menu on my last visit. The portion was very generous; I enjoyed every last bite.
  • Bernadette’s

BBQ brisket sandwich

  • I was also able to get to Rosewood Foods before the end of YEG Burger Week to try their pho-inspired burger. I loved the flavours, and you can’t beat their house-made buns.
  • Rosewood Foods

Pho-inspired burger from Rosewood Foods

Food Notes for July 1, 2024

Openings

Local News

Beyond Edmonton

  • The next season of Top Chef will be filming in Canada! As much as I love seeing the Canadian version of the show in Top Chef Canada, the flagship series is just many notches above.

What I Ate

  • I missed including some bites from the Glass of the Sask media preview I attended last week. Epcor partners with 20 local restaurants to celebrates the high quality tap water we have in Edmonton. Emily and I enjoyed some delicious bites that night, including a light and refreshing salad from Mai Mai Vietnamese Street Kitchen.
  • Mai Mai Street Kitchen

Salad from Mai Mai Vietnamese Street Kitchen

  • After a fun afternoon at the carnival nearby, we dined at Pho Hoan Pasteur. The service and food were excellent.
  • Pho Hoan Pasteur

Pho from Pho Hoan Pasteur

Food Notes for June 24, 2024

Openings

  • PlayWright, a restaurant from MilkCrate’s Steve Brochu, is now open in the Citadel Theatre! I wrote about the story behind the restaurant back in March.
  • Chai Lounge is now open in the former Tres Carnales space at 10119 Rice Howard Way.
  • Culinary Unicorn is latest restaurant taking over a revolving door in the Matrix Hotel, at 10009 107 Street.

Upcoming Events

  • Meuwly’s is hosting a Summer Kitchen Party on June 27, in support of In the Weeds YEG. Tickets are $99 and include food stations and three drink tickets.
  • Save the date for YEG Burger Fest, involving over a dozen Downtown restaurants serving $10 burgers from July 2-7.
  • RGE RD and Duchess are partnering to offer an afternoon tea on July 7 at The Butchery. Tickets are $119.05 per person.

Local News

  • Edify checked out 104 Street newcomer Slap Shot.
  • Happy first birthday to White Rabbit Ice Cream’s brick and mortar storefront!
  • It was for naught (sob!) but many establishments, including Pals, RGE RD, and Nowhere Wine Bar, decided to close or close early today to allow staff to watch the final Oilers game of the season.
  • Callingwood establishment Muggnz Family Restaurant is celebrating 25 years of business in Edmonton.
  • Central Social Hall and The Cajun House were the top food and drink establishments in the St. Albert Gazette Readers’ Choice Awards.
  • Edmonton is a “hot spot” for farmers’ markets, with a dozen Alberta Approved markets in Edmonton, plus others without that label like the 124 Street Grand Market.

What I Ate

  • I had lunch for the first time at Gyu Kaku (It has taken me long enough, I know!). I will say, it might be better suited for a lingering dinner where time isn’t an issue – either that or I’m just not great at multi-tasking between conversation and not burning the thin cuts of meat. I will say the value was there – with three meat options, rice, miso, and salad for $19.95.
  • Gyu Kaku

Our two-person spread at Gyu Kaku

  • Our family enjoyed a great al fresco meal on the weekend, dining on a meal sourced from Fox Burger and Filistix food trucks as a part of District Cafe’s Summer Solstice event.
  • Fox Burger and Filistix

Outdoor dining is our jam

  • Mack and I were also able to get away to celebrate my birthday – part of our evening took us to Dolly’s for the first time. We loved their patio and cocktails.
  • Dolly’s

Dolly’s!

  • We ended the night at our favourite local, Tzin. Their superb food and service always brings us back.
  • Tzin

The Bacon from Tzin

  • And for a sweet treat, we indulged in Birdhouse Bakeshop brioche donuts, available on occasion through Good Goods.
  • Birdhouse Bakeshop

Brioche donuts from Birdhouse Bakeshop

Food Notes for June 10, 2024

Openings

  • Happy Beer Street distillery Shiddy’s has opened up an eatery called the Rumpus Room. They serve Flatboy Burgers (who relocated here from the Granite Curling Club). It is located at 9908 78 Avenue.
  • Slap Shot is now open at 10184 104 Street (replacing Northern Chicken).
  • Backstairs Burger is readying the launch of Backstairs Pizza at their Holland Plaza location (11998 109A Avenue).
  • La Morenita is a new Mexican restaurant to open later in June in Alberta Avenue, located at 8501 118 Avenue.

Local News

What I Ate

  • I finally had dinner at Bernadette’s last week and it did not disappoint! Our small group shared several of the dishes, and the Saskatoon berry brisket (a carry over from their Pei Pei Chei Ow menu) and the spam pops were the standouts. Service was great, and the space is lovely and intimate. It was a great way to spend an evening.
  • Bernadette’s

Spam pops from Bernadette’s

  • For my Dad’s birthday, he wanted to try LovePizza. So we ordered a round of different pies to share. I had forgotten how tasty the Ode to Ukraine is (like a perogy on a pizza).
  • LovePizza

Our spread from LovePizza

  • After checking out the dragon parade and the Van bLoc party in Chinatown on Saturday, the drizzly weather drove us inside to warm up over hot soup at Pho Tau Bay. Ellie loved the noodles!
  • Pho Tau Bay

Ellie at Pho Tau Bay

Food Notes for June 3, 2024

Openings

  • The Pampa space Downtown has been vacant for some years, so its nice to see some life back into it. Sang, is a new Korean restaurant from the owners of Dorinku/DOSC/Japonais, offering hanjeongsik for the first time in Edmonton, a “Korean-style full-course meal characterized by the colourful array of side dishes”.
  • Aloha Poke and Grill opened its second location in Garneau on June 1. Find it at 8716 109 Street.
  • Brew and Bloom will be opening their second location on the south side on June 7, at 1019 Parsons Road SW.
  • Machi Machi is the latest Taiwanese bubble tea chain to open in Edmonton, at 3713 Gateway Blvd.
  • Doughlicious Donuts is now open in West Edmonton Mall on level one, near the lake.

Closures

  • The Grizzlar, which closed their storefront some time ago, posted that it will not be returning: “Well, we thought we could bring it back, but we can’t. It wasn’t our choice and there are some issues which we are working through, but the end result is the same. The GRIZZLAR is done and is not coming back.”

Upcoming Events

  • Taco Week, which runs for 10 days from May 31-June 9, will donate $1 from each taco or margarita sold at participating restaurants to Edmonton’s Food Bank and the Leftovers Foundation. 16 restaurants, including Maria, Smokin’ Barrels Cocina Latina, and El Mero Mero, are participating.
  • The Van bLoc Party takes place June 8 and 9, with food, vendors, and entertainment in Chinatown. It should be fun!

Local News

What I Ate

  • It’s a treat when I get to choose the catering for work events – this week, it was Indigenous lunch boxes from Culina. The three sisters salad and house dressing was amazing.
  • Culina

Lentil fritters on three sisters salad from Culina

  • We brought dinner over to my parents’ house after they spent the day with Ellie. It was a chance to order their favourite from Co Do Hue. I do enjoy their vermicelli bowls!
  • Co Do Hue

Vermicelli and rice bowls from Co Do Hue

  • We also returned to The Art of Cake for a box of their scones to share with Mack’s Grandma for her birthday, who is a fan. Emily is also rapidly becoming a fan of the scones too, especially when dressed with strawberry jam.
  • Art of Cake

Scones from The Art of Cake

Sosyal Scoops treats

  • We also finally got our community garden plot in this weekend. Ellie is already a pro at watering, and Emily is looking forward to the tomatoes and strawberries. Here’s hoping for a good growing season!
  • Alex Decoteau Community Garden

At the Alex Decoteau Community Garden

Food Notes for May 27, 2024

Little Bon Bon set to sweeten Chinatown with deep family history

The creators of Yelo’d are opening an ice cream parlour and café called Little Bon Bon in the historic Hull Block, at 9660 106 Avenue NW, in June.

Co-owners Ailynn and Jason Wong hope Little Bon Bon will add to their family’s long history of Canadian hospitality, and bring positive energy to Chinatown.

Jason Wong said the aim is also to become a destination. “We want people to say, ‘After the soccer game, or after dinner, let’s go for ice cream at Little Bon Bon,'” he said.

Wong also said the opportunity to open a new Chinatown shop felt like fate, dovetailing with his connection to the neighbourhood and heritage.

“We spend a lot of time down here,” he said. “We’re here within a six-block radius every one or two weeks. Golden Bird was our first date spot in 1996, and we’ve been going there ever since.”

Chinatown is already a significant part of Yelo’d, too, as it provides many fresh ingredients. “Items that we use fresh as much as we can — things like jackfruit, coconut milk, red mungo bean — we can’t get them anywhere else in the quantities that we need,” Wong said.

Still, making the Chinatown shop happen took work. During a Chinatown street festival in 2023, the couple connected with a Chinatown Business Improvement Area representative who asked if they would consider opening in the neighbourhood. Although the couple had already pondered the possibility, the BIA was able to sweeten the idea with a grant of $40,000 to cover renovations.

That money was part of the $1 million Chinatown Recovery Fund issued by the City of Edmonton in 2022-2023, with four businesses each receiving a $40,000 incentive to open in Chinatown. The recipients were Pho Satay & Grill, Boa and Hare, One01 Bistro, and Little Bon Bon.

After the grant offer, the couple searched for spaces but couldn’t find a suitable option. Then a member of the Chinatown Transformation Collaborative told them about a unit available in Hull Block. “We saw it and the dream wheels really started to turn,” Wong said. “We got that feeling of what we could do.”

Little Bon Bon

Jason Wong at Little Bon Bon

For Wong, Little Bon Bon is a way to continue his family’s hospitality legacy in Canada — in a neighbourhood where many Chinese immigrants started their new life in Edmonton. Wong’s great-grandparents emigrated to Canada from China in the early 20th century. His great-grandfather escaped railway labour to work as a tea boy at the Fairmont Hotel in Victoria, before opening his own hotel in Stonewall, Manitoba. Wong’s grandfather owned Arthur Tavern in Thunder Bay, Ontario.

“There are hundreds of people who talk about the atmosphere and his food,” Jason said of his grandfather. “There’s an item he served in his restaurant that are called Bon Bons — deep-fried beef short ribs. They were popularized by him in his restaurant, and they’re part of Chinese Canadiana. Little Bon Bon is an homage to him.”

Most of the menu items for the new shop, such as a cookie-crumb-encrusted scoop of ice cream that’s a sweet version of a bon bon, will be exclusive to this location. Wong said Little Bon Bon will debut 12 new flavours, including a much-requested soy sauce ice cream with a caramel ribbon, and one inspired by his grandfather. “My Grandpa Wong would eat a ridiculous amount of chocolate. Grandma Wong would laugh because he would come home with so much fudge and brownies. So, we are making a Grandpa Wong Superfudge ice cream.”

Meanwhile, two limited-time feature flavours will draw inspiration from the neighbourhood: A Vietnamese coffee-flavoured ice cream, made using coffee concentrate from Van Loc, and Kalina’s Cotton Candy, named after the resident daughter of Chinatown, child of Kim Fat Market owner Phong Luu.

Wong also promises “extensive” coffee, with espresso-based drinks on the menu plus feature drinks. While the couple’s current plan is to open in the afternoon and into the evening, they are happy to shift based on feedback. “It’s whatever the community tells us they want coffee and ice cream,” said Wong. “If they want early coffee, they’ll get early coffee.”

There will be seating in the space, including a bench along the window. At present, there are no plans for a patio due to the narrow sidewalk and high volume of foot traffic outside.

Wong’s vision for Chinatown is one with more vibrant streets, something he was used to in Toronto’s Chinatown growing up. “[Edmonton’s] Chinatown is a unique place to have such a concentration of cultures in a 10-block radius,” said Wong. “There’s a lot of great things to experience, and we’d like to add to the incredible food and culture that is down here.”

Wong is also eager to challenge perceptions of value associated with food in Chinatown, especially when compared with mainstream or European counterparts. “People expect to pay 50% less for goods down here,” Wong said. “Those things bother us to no end. This is my other hope — for businesses not to undervalue the things they make and create for the community and the people who travel down here.”

Through the process of opening Little Bon Bon, Wong’s 14-year-old daughter has taken an interest to learn more about her family history. It’s a curiosity Wong wants to inspire in all visitors to the shop. “Our daughter is having conversations with her grandparents, searching for more stories and heritage,” Wong said. “We hope to spark a little bit of that with everyone through something as simple and fun as ice cream.”

Openings

Upcoming Events

  • The popular Twilight Picnic Experiences return to the University of Alberta Botanic Garden on June 7 and run until September 28. The $125/for two people includes admission, a picnic box to share, and live entertainment.

Local News

What I Ate

  • Emily and I volunteered at Cat Fest over the weekend! She had a great time. One of the perks was food from Takam Market in the same venue. I enjoyed their most popular pasta order, the chicken alfredo, and a delicious pineapple drink.
  • Takam Market

My order from Takam Market

  • Our family had our first picnic of the summer on Friday! It had been a while since we enjoyed Jack’s Burger Shack (Emily is a big fan of their milkshakes). It coincided with a fun video dance party at Alex Decoteau Park, part of the Downtown Spark activities that are on until June 2. In our experience, food seems to tastes better outside.
  • Jack’s Burger Shack

Hangover from Jack’s Burger

Food Notes for May 20, 2024

Openings

  • Scott Iserhoff and Svitlana Kravchuk’s new restaurant, Bernadette’s, is now open.
  • Canadian franchise Stacked Pancake has its first Edmonton location in Mill Woods (in the former Pizza Hut). It is located at 6504 28 Avenue.
  • US-based chain Firehouse Subs has opened in Edmonton at 16815 127 Street.
  • Daniel Costa has announced the name of the first of his three concepts at Citizen on Jasper, called VA!, to serve focaccia panini, pizza al taglio, and salads.
  • Thanks Su for the heads up that Labo Coffee will be moving into the space vacated by Sorellina Coffee in Old Strathcona at 10546 82 Avenue.
  • Brew and Bloom is close to opening their second location on the south side.
  • Little Bear Gelato is open in the Garneau neighbourhood until August in the Eleanor and Laurent space at 10926 88 Avenue.

Upcoming Events

  • UFest, Edmonton’s Ukrainian Festival, returns to Borden Park May 24-25.

Local News

  • The founders of LovePizza, Braede Harris and Gavin Fedorak, are “passing the LOVEPIZZA torch to new owners of the brand.” The restaurants will continue to run through its franchise owners. Braede and Gavin will continue to operate Fuge Sausage.
  • Disappointing but not surprising, Edmonton was again shut out of Canada’s 100 Best Restaurants list, while Calgary had four of its restaurants recognized. Apparently the number of judges “in each province and region is proportional to its population.” I’d love to see how many Calgary vs. Edmonton judges were on the panel. Three Edmonton establishments were recognized on the Best Bars list – Clementine, Bar Bricco, and Baijiu and Little Hong Kong.
  • Edify offers a list of where to get a broad range of coffee types in Edmonton, including traditional Arabic, Mexican, and Ethiopian-style coffees.
  • Calgary-based food writer Carmen Cheng highlighted some local businesses on Global Edmonton during Asian Heritage Month, including Caramunchies, Van Loc, and White Rabbit Ice Cream.
  • CBC highlighted some of the Edmonton Oilers-themed products currently available (and with their win tonight, will continue to be available into the next series), including from Doughnut Party, Annie Rue Ice Cream, and Sea Change Brewing Company.
  • Restaurants located Downtown and near the Expo Centre, including Fu’s Repair Shop, Continental Treat, and Coliseum Steak & Pizza, are benefiting from folks coming to Edmonton for big events.
  • City Council voted in favour of the Rice Howard Way entertainment district.
  • Grand Markets Edmonton has expanded its Thursday night market, and has added a new Saturday market on the south side in the Canadian Tire parking lot in South Edmonton Common.

What I Ate

  • As desk lunches go, a nooner pizza from Coliseum Steak & Pizza is pretty reliable – fast, tasty, and consistent.
  • Coliseum Steak

Pepperoni and mushroom pizza from Coliseum Steak

  • It’s been a while since I’ve hit up King Noodle House for their Bun Bo Hue, so it was time I changed that. It hit the spot, and Emily is (almost) just as big of a fan as we are.
  • King Noodle House

Bun Bo Hue from King Noodle House