Toronto: Restaurants, Stores, Trips [recommendations]

Toronto Beaches Boardwalk WordPress.

For five years now, I’ve spent 3 to 4 months of my year in Toronto (late winter / spring, mostly), and I just returned from another 3-month stay. Now Alex – a German friend of mine – and her partner are in town, and she’s asked me for recommendations: food, activities, stores, trips etc..

I’m not a very activity-minded person and spend most of my Toronto time in libraries, bookstores and cafés. I’m sure there’s lots of cool stuff that I’ve missed or dismissed. For what it’s worth: Here are my recommendations.

Restaurants:

There are also many, many cheap restaurants in Greektown / The Danforth.

In 2012, I made another list of Toronto restaurant recommendations HERE.

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Breakfast and Cafés:

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Snacks and Fast Food:

  • I like Tim Hortons donuts and danishes: their Maple Dip donut, their Canadian Maple dount, the Sour-Cream Glazed donut and the Maple Pecan danish are all pretty good. At Second Cup, I often get a Strawberry Lemonade Fruit Chiller.
  • Mondays to Fridays, between ca. 5.30 pm and 6.30 pm, you can get two boxes of (good) sushi for about 7 dollars at Sushi on the Run at College Park / Yonge and College.
  • Vietnamese Banh Mi sandwiches are pretty good. You can get them in Chinatown.
  • There’s a bunch of good Portugese bakeries at Bloor and Ossington, a bunch of good (if fatty / unhealthy) Chinese bakeries in Chinatown and a famous and well-beloved (expensive!) chocolate maker, SOMA, at the Distillery District. […don’t go to the Distillery District as a sight-seeing trip, though: It’s just a couple of cobblestone streets that will not surprise / amaze a girl from rural Germany].

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Toronto Tango Palace Coffee Company, Leslieville WordPress

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General stuff:

  • Get a Metropass to use Toronto’s subway, streetcars and busses. A day pass costs $ 10. A weekly pass around 40. A single, one-way trip less than $ 3.
  • Groceries – especially cheese and dairy products – are pretty expensive. But eating out is relatively cheap: For $ 15 to $ 25, you will get a good meal. Most days, I spend about $ 25 (EUR 18) on dinner, coffee and snacks.
  • Reddit has lots of recommendations, a big and helpful Toronto community and will often let you know about smaller / weirder local quirks and events.

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Going out / activities:

  • I enjoy watching karaoke at the Gladstone Hotel on Friday nights, starting at about 11 pm. The Drake Hotel is good for food and martini – and has some fun events once in a while, too.
  • If you want to get drunk, I’d recommend bars like The Communist’s Daughter on Ossington or gay pubs like O’Grady’s and Churchmouse and Firkin at Church and Wellesley.
  • Every Wednesday night, the AGO – Art Gallery of Ontario is free to the public. I like them a lot. There’s also the ROM Museum… but overall, they favor nature over culture, and I’m not very interested in animals and natural history.  :-/
  • Theatre is pretty expensive. Still: Get a free NOW magazine or look at the events listings of The Grid to find shows, performances, gallery events etc..
  • Concerts, on the other hand, are surprisingly cheap. I use last.fm to find out when bands I like come to Toronto, and I often see smaller, more inimate sets of less-known songwriters at the Drake Hotel Underground stage.
  • There’s a (free) drag show at Woody’s nearly every night, starting at about 10. There’s also Crews and Tangos, a younger, alternative place that reminded me of lots of horrible, sweaty parties in university. Alex? You will like this a lot. Check out the listings at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, too.
  • There are lots of small galleries on Queen Street West, west of Bathurst. Spend a morning / day strolling around there. I like hipster shops / art spaces like Magic Pony, too.
  • Kensington Market is charming and hippie-ish, and lots of friends I took there enjoyed the place much more than me. Same goes for the boutiques and jewellery stores on Queen Street West. One German friend loved the greenhouses at Allan Gardens – they are free and a fun way to spend half an hour.
  • I love going to the Islands: Take a cheap ferry (to Ward’s Island or Centre Island) and walk all the way to Hanlan’s Point. Highly, highly recommended!
  • Smaller and less spectacular than the Islands… so it’s better to do this earlier: Leslieville [my favorite part of the city] and The Beaches. Have a 2 hour walk in the neighborhood, from Queen and Broadview to the Beaches Boardwalk and the water treatment plant where… Miss Parker, Jarod and Sidney live.
  • Don’t get tickets for the CN tower. It’s nearly $ 30, and not worth it. A day trip to Niagara Falls was pretty depressing / disappointing, too, and I would not go there again. [That being said… if you DO go, read this wonderful, depressing book by Stewart O’Nan, about depressed people at depressing Niagara Falls!]

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Toronto Recommendations 2013 WordPress.

Books and Media:

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manapul flash.

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related links:

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