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Toronto Life - The Wire

The comprehensive index of every blog post, magazine story and restaurant review that appears on Torontolife.com

All stories relating to Chinatown

The Informer

Battleground Toronto

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Michael Ignatieff visits Trinity-Spadina to fight the NDP for second place

Michael Ignatieff is mobbed by the press in Toronto’s Chinatown (Image: John Michael McGrath)

Liberal leader and PM aspirant Michael Ignatieff visited downtown Toronto on the first Monday of the election campaign yesterday, doing an oh-so-brief walkabout with Christine Innes, the Liberal candidate running against incumbent Olivia Chow. Walking, by our calculation, a grand total of 150 metres in his 30-minute photo op, Ignatieff was in Trinity-Spadina to fly the Liberal flag in the one of the two 416 seats the party doesn’t already own (the other, Toronto-Danforth, is taken by Chow’s husband, Jack Layton). This led the NDP to complain that despite Ignatieff’s rhetoric of running against the Conservatives, Liberals were starting off their campaign running in NDP-held ridings—ones that, even if the Liberals win, won’t change the balance of power in Parliament.

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The Goods

Business of Fashion

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Louis Vuitton and Burberry sue Canadian counterfeiters for fakes

The handbag equivalent of a James Frey novel, $45 (Image: Aidan)

Take a stroll down Spadina Avenue, peeking into Chinatown’s many nondescript knock-off handbag emporiums. But don’t look too closely, because luxury brands Louis Vuitton and Burberry are starting to fight back, and they’ve targeted Vancouver-based producers and distributors Singga Enterprises, Carnation Fashion Company and Toronto-based Altec Productions (likely names that no one has heard of until today).

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The Hype

Creative Types

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Awesome Foundation’s first grant winner, Stephanie Avery, to play connect the dots with Toronto

A gravy boat around City Hall

Who’s the awesomest of them all? According to the Toronto branch of the Awesome Foundation, it’s Stephanie Avery, who was named the recipient of its first grant last night. A self-described “totally rad” artist, Avery was awarded $1,000 for her Connect the T-Dots pitch, a project that aims to turn aerial satellite views of Toronto into a giant connect-the-dots number puzzle.

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The Dish

From the Print Edition

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Toronto’s five best cafés

The city’s top spots for lingering over a latte and laptop

1. Rooster coffee house
This out-of-the-way spot overlooking Riverdale Park achieves café perfection. The room radiates homey elegance with a massive tree-trunk table (ideal for Scrabble tourneys) and comfy leather chairs. The baristas are full of scruffy charisma, chatting up customers as they pull espressos smooth enough to compete with the best in town (we’re talking to you, Sam James). 479 Broadview Ave. (at Riverdale Ave.), 416-995-1530.

2. Balzac’s café
This restored 1890s warehouse—a Distillery District icon for the past nine years—looks like it was airlifted in from the set of Amélie. While there’s usually a lineup downstairs, the open second-floor loft has a clandestine atmosphere, making you feel as though you’re squirrelled away in an Old World garret, suffering for your art. Balzac’s custom-roasted beans make distinctive, nutty-sweet coffee. 55 Mill St. (at Parliament St.), Bldg. 60, 416-207-1709; 43 Hanna Ave. (at Liberty St.), 416-534-7372.

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The Informer

March of Crimes

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Convicted shoplifter banned from Chinatown and Kensington Market

The Lucky Moose in Chinatown (Image: Colin Rose)

Helping yourself to a five-finger discount has never been so sticky: Anthony Bennett, a 52-year-old with a history of repeated shoplifting, has been banned from both Toronto’s Chinatown and Kensington Market neighbourhoods. Again (he was already observing a temporary ban). You may remember Bennett as both the perpetrator and victim in a high-profile citizen’s arrest case from 2009: Bennett stole some plants from the Lucky Moose grocery store, only to be later chased down by the shop’s owner, David Chen, tied up and thrown in the back of a van, vigilante style. (Chen was acquitted of assault and forcible confinement charges last October.)

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The Goods

From the Print Edition

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The List: 10 things Janet Carding, the new ROM director, can’t live without

Ten things Janet Carding, the globe-trotting new head of the Royal Ontario Museum, can’t live without

Water
My family has always had a strong relationship with water. I just moved here from Australia, and one of the things I miss most about Sydney is being close to the ocean. Soon after arriving in Toronto, I took the ferry to the Island. I just wanted to be out on the water—I didn’t even get off the boat.

Going to the theatre
I’m a diehard theatre-goer. Back in Sydney, I had season’s tickets to the two major theatre companies, and I’m getting to know the companies here. I’ve been to the Shaw Festival a couple of times and really enjoyed their production of The Doctor’s Dilemma. And I’ve just booked tickets for the Robert Lepage play, The Anderson Project, which I’m excited about.

My English breakfast
Being from Northern England, I love strong black tea. I was thrilled to find my favourite,  Yorkshire Tea, here at Pusateri’s. I also love Marmite. I spread it on toast in the morning with butter.

My knife set
My kitchen supplies are somewhere at sea in a giant storage container, so I had to get a new knife, which I love. It’s made by Global, a Japanese company. I found it at Tap Phong in Chinatown. I’m a vegetarian, and good chopping knives are important for stir-fries, which I make often.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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Fight or Flight? Jan Wong meets two black Torontonians with different solutions to troubles in their communities

New books by two black Torontonians propose radically different solutions to troubles in their communities

(Image: Taylor Callery)

It’s a gorgeous summer day in 2003. Imagine you’re 21 and with your extended family and a few friends at a backyard barbecue in Rexdale. Suddenly you hear shots being fired. Your neighbourhood is locked down, everyone is sent inside, and an emergency task force surrounds your home. Guys in flak jackets barge in and make your entire family—including your sister, who was mid-shower, your mom and your four-year-old nephew—walk out of the house with their hands in the air. They fling you and a friend against a neighbour’s door and demand to know what gang you belong to. The whole neighbourhood watches as you’re escorted to the police cruiser. You’re in handcuffs and feel mortified.

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The Hype

To-Do List

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The Weekender: Equus, Voice-Box, Robyn and more on our to-do list

Editor’s note: Robyn’s concert has been cancelled due to an illness.

1. BRUCE MAU: 25 YEARS OF BIG THINKING (FREE!)
An international design star, Toronto’s Bruce Mau has a roster of clients that looks like a who’s who of pop culture; he’s worked with Frank Gehry, MTV, MoMA and Coca-Cola. The Design Exchange’s Mau retrospective, which closes this weekend, looks at his corporate work, architecture and books. To Nov. 14. Design Exchange, 234 Bay St., 416-363-6121, dx.org.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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Get off the Road: Toronto street festivals take the whole city hostage. Jan Wong says that it’s time we learn to say no

Illustration of Toronto road closures due to festivals

(Image: Jack Dylan)

One of Toronto’s biggest, most aggravating problems is traffic. In a recent poll about the upcoming mayoral election, Torontonians ranked congestion as one of their most significant concerns, above even the economy. Gridlock costs Toronto untold millions in lost productivity. Then there’s everyone’s wasted time, not to mention missed flights and appointments, and overall frustration. “Our roads and transit systems are strained,” says Julia Deans, CEO of the Toronto City Summit Alliance, who believes efficient roads are critical to our competitiveness and quality of life.

This summer, if getting from one part of the city to another seemed particularly hellish, that’s because it was. The 2010 municipal capital budget is 50 per cent larger than last year. In addition, road repairs ramped up as the city eagerly spent federal infrastructure stimulus funds that will expire at the end of March.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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All Mixed Up: Toronto is the mixed-marriage capital of Canada

How our city is proof that if a post-racial society is possible, it will begin in the bedroom

(Image: Asaf Hanuka)

This fall, my husband and I will mark the 34th anniversary of our Chinese-Jewish marriage. Back in 1976, some folks (OK, my parents) fretted it would never last. “Think of the kids! Neither side will accept them,” my mother warned. It took 14 years—and the birth of our first child—before she quit running in hysterics from her house whenever my husband dropped by. (I’m not kidding.)

Yet in 2010, not only am I still married, with two fairly acceptable sons, I find myself living in the mixed-marriage capital of Canada. Toronto famously blazed the way for same-sex marriage. Today, it turns out to be a Petri dish for innovative people combos. According to the latest Statistics Canada data, nearly twice as many Toronto couples are in mixed marriages, legal and common law, as the rest of Canadians, 7.1 per cent versus 3.9 per cent. That number covers all existing unions, including dusty old ones like mine.

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The Informer

The Feds

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Toronto MP Joe Volpe proposes new rights for shopkeepers, including bondage

Regular Joe: Volpe stands up for the little guy (Image: ycanada_news)

One of the larger controversies in Chinatown and Kensington Market over the past year has been the case of David Chen, who is being charged with forcible confinement after he and his staff tied up a shoplifter while they waited for police to arrive. The law allows a person to use some force if someone is committing a crime on his or her property, but the problem for Chen is that the shoplifter had left the store and then returned. Not to worry, though, because someone in Ottawa is listening—Liberal MP Joe Volpe is coming to help.

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The Dish

From the Print Edition

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The Rebirth of Booze

At the hottest restaurants, cocktails are as sophisticated as the food. Bartenders are playing with liquid nitrogen, concocting infusions, and changing the way we drink. It’s the most exciting gastronomic development in years

Smoke and firewater: Barchef, on Queen West, serves a $45 haute manhattan, a mix of whisky, vanilla cognac and bitters that arrives in a bell jar filled with hickory smoke (Image: Finn O'Hara)

There are only two kinds of cocktails—those that are dead and those that are alive—and the only way to tell them apart is to taste them. A dead drink is at best two-dimensional, merely a mixture of liquids; a living cocktail is full of motion as its flavours unfold on the palate. It’s like the difference between a paint-by-numbers canvas and a true work of art. And in this city, the dead outnumber the living by about a thousand to one.

But not for long, thanks to a handful of determined pioneers. Frankie Solarik at Barchef, Moses McIntee at Ame, Jen Agg at the Black Hoof and Bill Sweete at Sidecar make up the new avant-garde, along with Christine Sismondo, the author of the influential book Mondo Cocktail, who is opening her own place on College Street in July, wryly called the Toronto Temperance Society. Each one has a different view of what constitutes a great cocktail, but they all share a single belief: it’s high time the age of the crantini was over.

The most extreme place to observe this revolution is Barchef, the dimly lit temple of mixology on Queen West where Frankie Solarik is the celebrant. Tall, slim and bearded, wearing a black porkpie hat, he works behind a bar crowded with more than 30 spiced infusions and subtle elixirs in various flasks and jars. I’ve never seen such a set-up—like an alchemist’s laboratory, complete with the molecular foams, flavoured airs and gelatinous transubstantiations that are Solarik’s specialty. His masterpiece is a smoked vanilla manhattan, a $45 cocktail set in a bell jar filled with hickory smoke until it smells like a campfire and tastes like heaven.

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The Dish

Weekly Lunch Pick

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Where to eat lunch this week: Anh Dao

The bún at Pho Hung may have a great reputation, but this version of the one-bowl wonder is better and cheaper at just $6

(Photos by Renée Suen)

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The Dish

Restauran-TO

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New Yorkers told to visit Toronto and eat at CN Tower

cntower

The peak of Toronto dining? (Photo by Oliver Mallich)

As if our superior Chinatown weren’t enough of a draw, New Yorkers in search of a reason to visit Toronto may find inspiration in this odd list compiled by the travel site eTurbo News.

Some of the city’s best restaurants fail to make the cut, though some obvious culinary draws—like Wine Bar and the CN Tower’s touristy 360 Restaurantare given a thumbs up. But how about fleeing the deli-filled streets of NYC for, wait for it, a deli? Apparently Caplansky’s is worth the journey (the writer even fantasizes about having the “cute, charming (a little pudgy), intelligent” owner Zane Caplansky as a son-in-law). Theatre district joints Dhaba and Focus Group are also top picks.

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The Dish

Rumours & Rumblings

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Wall Street Journal declares Toronto’s Chinese food better than New York’s

Chinatown: the land of better buns (Photo by John Vetterli)

Chinatown: the land of better buns (Photo by John Vetterli)

New Yorkers are never happy when someone suggests that they’re not the best at something. Case in point: when David Sax asserted that the best Jewish delis are in L.A., not New York, flurries of incredulous aggregate posts popped up everywhere. The Gothamist, in a tongue-in-cheek headline, went so far as to suggest Sax had a death wish in speaking his mind. But it turns out that NYC may have—God forbid—an inferior Chinatown to Toronto.

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