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All stories relating to Keith Froggett

The Dish

Restauran-TO

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Zagat’s 2012 survey picks Toronto’s best restos and settles that pesky average tipping question

Scaramouche’s Keith Froggett (Image: Renée Suen)

Online restaurant review sites like Yelp and Urbanspoon may have cut into the crowd-sourced territory that Zagat once owned, but the yearly survey still has some clout—and the power to get diners in the door. The 2,266 food-loving Torontonians who voted in this year’s survey were crazy for Keith Froggett, giving fine dining restaurant Scaramouche top honours for food and also placing Scaramouche’s pasta bar in the top 10. But the winners weren’t all about linen tablecloths and tasting menus: The Burger’s Priest, with its epically greasy Vatican City burger, broke the top three for best food, while pan-Asian chain Spring Rolls was voted most popular restaurant (proving that democracy isn’t foolproof).

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The Dish

De-licious

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Alternalicious: a roundup of rebel prix fixes outside the jurisdiction of Winterlicious 2012

Every year, some restaurants decide to opt out of the prix fixe madness of Winterlicious and offer their own special menus and bargains outside the strictures of the official program. “We do it to give Winterlicious a bit of competition, to bring people in,” Elle M’a Dit’s Gregory Furstoss told The Dish. “But we don’t have to have the pressure of being under Winterlicious—we don’t have 200 people booked!” Meanwhile, Ross Bonfanti of midtown’s Il Sogno Ristorante launched his winter prix fixe back when it was tough to get into the official festival and now, several years later, feels no need to jump on board. “I have a good thing going,” he told us. After the jump, a roundup of winter prix fixe menus and deals.

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The Dish

Foodie Follies

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This year’s What’s on the Table fundraiser for The Stop features over 30 top chefs from Toronto and beyond

Eat well and feed the hungry along the way—that’s the concept behind the annual What’s on the Table benefit being held this year on November 2. Since 2005, the fundraiser has gathered $1.5 million for The Stop, the innovative community food centre whose goal is to increase everyone’s access to healthy food (check out our interview with chef Chris Brown from shortly after he joined The Stop). Dining stations open at 6:30 p.m., and patrons won’t be starved for choice; the event features offerings from over 30 chefs, including Lynn Crawford of Ruby Watcho, Anthony Walsh of Canoe and pâtissier Nadège Nourian (see below for the very impressive full list).

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The Dish

Locavoracious

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In a bid to stop the “mega-quarry,” Michael Stadtländer rallies (nearly) every chef we’ve ever heard of for Foodstock


Michael Stadtländer has rallied 100 of the best chefs from across Canada to participate in Foodstock, an epic, pay-what-you-can public food event on October 16 to raise money to fight the construction of a huge limestone quarry in the town of Honeywood, Ontario. The Highland Companies’ plan aims to span 2,316 acres of land and run 189 feet deep (deeper than Niagara Falls), and will have to pump 600 million litres of groundwater out of the pit each day (about the same amount used by 2.7 million Ontarians), all to extract crushed stone known as amabel dolostone.

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The Dish

From the Print Edition

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Greatest Hits: Chris Nuttall-Smith picks the 25 most delicious dishes of the last year

Enoteca Sociale’s octopus and fava beans

The 25 most delicious dishes tasted this year, ranging  from lowbrow comforts (potato puffballs) to high-minded masterpieces (tea-smoked duck)*

See the list »

*Availability of dishes varies according to season and changing menus

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The Dish

Aprons & Icons

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We ask the top chefs at Toronto Taste what’s in store at George, Splendido, Scaramouche and the rest of the city’s hot restaurants

This past Sunday marked the 20th anniversary of Toronto Taste, the annual event that unites Toronto’s food lovers and food makers for a day of innovative cooking, tasking and fundraising for Second Harvest. 60 of Toronto’s top chefs—including Jason Bangerter, Donna Dooher, Chris McDonald, Mark McEwan, Anthony Walsh and Anne Yarymowich—doled out top-notch cuisine to an estimated 1,600 guests at the ROM. We caught up with the chefs and asked them what’s in store for them and their restaurants this summer.

The Dish

Restauran-TO

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Despite everything, Scaramouche is staying where it is

After years of rumours that the 30-year-old restaurant would be moving, Scaramouche has let it be known that it’s staying put. After a long and contentious battle, restaurant owners and landlords agreed to extend the lease at 1 Benvenuto Place for six more years. “Friends and clients have been asking us where Scaramouche will move, so I’m pleased to finally report that we’re staying where we are,” says executive chef Keith Froggett.

• Scaramouche Staying Put Until At Least 2016 [TasteTO]

The Dish

Aprons & Icons

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Toronto Taste 2009: A $225 evening of chocolate pasta and Arctic char

This year’s Toronto Taste corralled 40 of the city’s chefs—including Mark McEwan, David Lee, Jamie Merieles, Marc Thuet, Keith Froggett and other big names—into a fenced-in space on Cumberland Avenue. The objective was to raise money for Second Harvest. We toured the food stations and met the chefs before the crowd arrived. This year’s Toronto Taste corralled 40 of the city’s chefs—including Mark McEwan, David Lee, Jamie Merieles, Marc Thuet, Keith Froggett and other big names—into a fenced-in space on Cumberland Avenue. The objective was to raise money for Second Harvest. We toured the food stations and met the chefs before the crowd arrived.

The Dish

Restauran-TO

2 Comments

Scaramouche stays put for another year

Room with a view: Scaramouche keeps its digs

Room with a view: Scaramouche keeps its digs

Scaramouche’s long-standing lease fiasco has finally been resolved—at least for now. Rumours of the restaurant’s relocation have been circulating for months, ever since its landlord, Malen Capital Corporation, announced plans to redevelop the space into luxury condominiums. With the restaurant’s lease ending in December 2009, the story went that the quarter-decade-old Forest Hill eatery was soon to be homeless, losing its signature ravine-framed view of downtown. Partner Carl Korte, however, put an end to all that, explaining that the proprietors have negotiated an extension to keep Scaramouche on site for an additional year—until December 31, 2010. “It’s interesting right now with so much change in our economic landscape. I think that, collectively, on both sides, everyone is glad to have a little time to breathe,” says Korte.

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The Dish

Aprons & Icons

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Christine Cushing wants to teach “lovable losers” how to cook

Christine Cushing

Fearless: Christine Cushing takes aim

Spirited TV chef Christine Cushing is on a mission to transform Toronto’s “hopeless lovable losers” into confident cooks on her new reality series, Fearless in the Kitchen. The show, which premieres this fall on the Viva Network, is one part Kitchen Nightmares and two parts Makeover Story. Episodes will feature true cooking amateurs—who will have been tested to prove that they can’t even fry an egg—being treated to lessons by Cushing (for whom “failure is not an option”). Fearless promises all the voyeuristic appeal we’ve come to expect from this sort of endeavour, complete with laughable neophytes, surprise challenges and, as Cushing puts it, a little bit of “oh crap, what’s gonna happen?”

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The Dish

Restauran-TO

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Scaramouche stimulates appetites with (yet another) recession-friendly prix fixe

These days, set menus seem to be about as common as pink slips, and Scaramouche is no exception. On Tuesday, the midtown mainstay introduced its Spring Stimulus Menu: a three-course dinner stacked with lavish selections for $58, on sale until April 30. It’s not the first budget-friendly table d’hôte for Scaramouche: earlier this year, Lobsterlicious was followed by the Crustacean Celebration. So no one can accuse the long-time favourite of being behind the times. Says chef Keith Froggett, “People think that it’s very expensive to eat at Scaramouche, but it isn’t.”

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The Dish

The Downturn

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Scaramouche forgoes Winterlicious for Lobsterlicious

scaramouche21

Scaramouche

In order to boost business in the typically slow post-Christmas months, Keith Froggett’s fine-dining powerhouse, Scaramouche, has started serving a three-course prix fixe menu called Lobsterlicious ’09. But don’t confuse it with Winterlicious, an event in which Scaramouche has never participated. We spoke with Carl Korte, a partner at the restaurant, to find out why.

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