Someone who favors style over substance. In the case of restaurants: the ones with obnoxious decorations, overly dark, dumb themes and lousy food. Lots of hole in the wall restaurants out there with mediocre (if non-existent style) with excellent food.What's a hipster?
Maybe I'm in the minority, but I go to a restaurant for good food, good portions, reasonable prices and a good time with friends. If any of these fail, it ruins the party.Someone who favors style over substance. In the case of restaurants: the ones with obnoxious decorations, overly dark, dumb themes and lousy food. Lots of hole in the wall restaurants out there with mediocre (if non-existent style) with excellent food.
High price does not = good food. After all these years I am all restauranted out. That does not mean that I will not enjoy a good Chinese meal at places where I know I can eat like a king for $20 a person.Nothing like a home cooked meal with family or friends.
Yup.Nothing like a home cooked meal with family or friends.
If your post is focused on my post, I did mention that for comparable foods, IMO home made is typically better. I'm not saying an avg mom at home can replicate complex cuisine.So.. No offence to many folks but some of you are chipping in and clearly have absolutely no idea what you're talking about but are piling on due to pet peeves or some other intention. Eating for enjoyment is a wonderful and varied experience. I eat cheap food (love good burgers, sandwiches and pho) and fine dining (steaks, sushi, classic French) and everything in between and have made it a point to go to all the good restaurants, hole-in-the-wall, local neighbourhood spots or Michelin Star joints, when I travel around the world.
So to correct some misconceptions:
1) Home cooking cannot replicate classic formal French dining nor the absolute best sushi or steak restaurants - it simply is impossible. It's sourcing the ingredients, the man hours of prep and attention to detail, etc. A classic French meal for $100-200 per person requires, including prep, probably 20+ man hours worth of labour (so much prep) and the commitment to spoil (read throwaway) nearly 50% of the ingredients they bring in through the door to only use the best. Not to mention many decades of training.
2) The very best independent restaurants have moments of fame and some thrive and some die - but the current emphasis is on food and not decor, and if you pick up the Joanne Kate's Top 100 restaurants in Toronto, many are definitely not empty. In fact for the best you'd be lucky to get reservations days or weeks in advance.
3) There is good food at numerous price points all through this city - but it also depends on a persons tastes. I eat everything - literally no limitations. I love game and venison. I love French, both bistro and brasserie-style. I love tacos, pho, Indian, Cambodian. Ethnic cuisine is usually cheapest. Best damn fried chicken sandwich is at Brock Sandwich.
Overall, I'm surprised, folks here are generally respectful and understanding of different "tastes" and the varied experiences we share with respect to the wonderful ladies associated with our hobbying.. Why so close minded about this?
Canoe and Scaramouche are hipster restaurants? guys like you will send our economy into the shitter.Are they all overpriced with absolutely terrible service? At least that's been my experience
The last place I went to was probably more expensive than Scaramouche / Canoe taking portion size into account..
Why would people still frequent those places? Don't they know any better? I'm just mad because their incompetence just wasted my evening.
I'm sorry if I didn't make it clear. But Canoe and Scaramouche aren't hipster.Canoe and Scaramouche are hipster restaurants? guys like you will send our economy into the shitter.
I laughed, thank you. Needed it!!You guys just ain't hip.
Fair enough.@Occasionally
Responding to the thread in general but also addressing your point as well. And I still disagree, even for your BBQ example, Electric Mud and Barque have fine BBQ. The labour of some of the work from BBQ experts in the Southern States is shocking. The Japanese take on charcoal grill skewers - kushiyaki - is obsessive and is available in both street side stands as well as fine dining-sequel hotel restaurant versions.
I love a home cooked meal myself but the amount of labour possible when it is converted into a commercial venture is shocking.
@JTKirk - I don't disagree but farm-to-table is quite sought after these days. Have you tried the more home style fare at Ruby WatchCo? (Lynn Crawford) or the fancy schmancy tasting menu at George?
Exactly.I'm sorry if I didn't make it clear. But Canoe and Scaramouche aren't hipster.
I keep thinking... My faith in humanity has been on a steep decline. Is this now a social norm to accept "different" restaurants even though they are much subpar than mainstream high end places? Do people actually feel they are obliged to go to such places otherwise they wouldn't be "accepting"? It makes no sense to me. Are they blind? That is the only explanation I have why hipster places are thriving.
I laughed, thank you. Needed it!!
I went to the Keg once and I didn't like the steak at all. They didn't even sear it properly. But I do have to say that the steaks at Jacobs were much much better than the Keg, don't like their sides though.Exactly.
The Keg is as mainstream you can get for a steak place. For $40 you get a steak, a side and some mushrooms. I've eaten at fancier steak places and don't see how any of them are really any better. Sure, the other places make a show of it and come out with a big platter and you pick which cut you want. So I guess that is where the extra $40 goes.
I'm not a good cook, so anyone can make a better steak than me. But your comment about making a good steak at home doesn't surprise me.I went to the Keg once and I didn't like the steak at all. They didn't even sear it properly. But I do have to say that the steaks at Jacobs were much much better than the Keg, don't like their sides though.
I can make a better steak than the one I had at the Keg
Tragic when people decide to supplement understanding with labels and ignorance, isn't it? lolCanoe and Scaramouche are hipster restaurants? guys like you will send our economy into the shitter.
A good butcher makes a massive difference.I'm not a good cook, so anyone can make a better steak than me. But your comment about making a good steak at home doesn't surprise me.
As I said above (replying to exnocomment), I'd say lots of things can be made better at home. And few people have pro training or commercial grade cooking equipment. The best steaks I had were buddies making on their backyard BBQ. I have no idea (nor really care) what marinade they use or what brand of BBQ machine they bought. All I know is the best grilled steaks I have had are made by buddies and none of them have one minute of professional culinary arts training. Half of them probably just bought a BBQ at Canadian Tire. And all of them just buy meat from the grocery store, Costco, although some of them go to dedicated butchers. But as a whole, it's not like their choice of meat should be any better than what a restaurant can source.
As for sides, that'a whole other debate. And again, I find most sides at any restaurant lousy.