Best New Restaurants in Toronto 2014

Best New Restaurants in Toronto 2014

These are the spots that encapsulate Toronto dining at its current peak, and ones I happily recommend to a friend or visitor.

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
The Chase

Chef Michael Steh has revived surf and turf in a big way with his expertly prepped platters of fresh seafood and prime cuts. The glitzy room on Temperance Street serves up expense account dining at its finest.
10 Temperance St., 647-348-7000

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Bar Isabel

At his College Street tapas bar, Grant van Gameren creates magical things with bone marrow, whole octopus and, his specialty, gloriously fatty cured meats. Fair warning: the room fills up early and the din reaches headbanger levels.
797 College St., 416-532-2222

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
THR & Co.

Cory Vitiello’s second restaurant is a bigger, better Harbord Room—a farm-to-table gastropub with a globe-trotting menu of fancy pizzas, he-man cuts of beef and harissa-kissed crudo.
97 Harbord St., 647-748-7199

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Drake One Fifty

Here’s where to go after a performance at the Four Seasons for a glass of wine and a crash course in contemporary Canadian art. Chef Ted Corrado grills status steaks and a mean burger smothered in thick-cut bacon and sharp cheddar.
150 York St., 416-363-6150

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Electric Mud BBQ

It’s worth suffering the wait, the picnic tables and tinnitus for the saucy ribs and cheddar-thickened grits with gulf shrimp at Colin Tooke and Ian McGrenaghan’s Parkdale party house. If you’d rather not, they now do takeout.
5 Brock Ave., 416-516-8286

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Geraldine

Peter Ramsay, formerly sous-chef at Cowbell, now serves a Prohibition-era menu of oysters, game and mushrooms on toast. But the real draw is the ridiculously complicated drinks made by bartenders with period-appropriate handlebar moustaches.
1564 Queen St. W., 647-352-8827

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Big Crow

Anthony Rose’s canvas-topped spot, hidden behind his Dupont diner Rose and Sons, is like a cottage country cookout with better food: gargantuan racks of smoked baby back ribs, perfectly grilled lobsters and potent ­Purple Jesus cocktails by the pitcher.
176 Dupont St., 647-748-3287

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Rhum Corner

Jen Agg’s laid-back new Haitian spot has a mind-boggling variety of rums and a chef, Jesse Grasso, who cooks the tastiest rice and beans this side of Port-au-Prince. The standout is a humble condiment that accompanies every entrée: an addictive, fiery coleslaw called pikliz.
926 Dundas St. W., 647-346-9356

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Woods

Bruce Woods did the brazenly untrendy thing of opening an à la carte restaurant in a year of shared plates and tasting menus. And it worked. His cooking is as skillful as ever, especially his signature plate of hand-cranked spaghetti served with a giant pecorino-stuffed meatball.
45 Colborne St., 416-214-9918

(Image: Dave Gillespie)
Agave Y Aguacate

Francisco Alejandri worked at Chiado and Scaramouche before striking out on his own with a Mexican restaurant where there’s not a taco in sight. Instead, he’s cooking modern dishes like a fat, blistered poblano stuffed with avocado, pineapple and citrusy cape gooseberries.
35 Baldwin St., 647-748-6448