RATING: Good
ADDRESS: 238 Augusta
PHONE: 416-364-6183
DINNER FOR TWO: $40*
HOURS: Mon-Sat noon-7pm; Sun 2-7pm
WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE: No
RESERVATIONS: No
When Elsie Shrigley and Donald Watson founded the UK Vegan Society
in 1944, they were trying to distance themselves from vegetarianism's
inclusion of dairy and other animal by-products. They would be shocked
out of their sarongs to encounter the arrogance that greets customers
at some of Toronto's vegan restaurants: juice-tenders taking a siesta
rather than serving juice, vegetables steamed clean of nutrients
because kitchen staff aren't trained to cook and faux foods presented
in quotation marks for their similarity to duck, feta or bacon. As
cartoon cat Ray Smuckles said, “If the majority of your menu is in
quotations, you're running a metaphor, not a restaurant.”
Joseph Tam and his 12-seat DIY restaurant Hibiscus humbly take
the piss out of granola snootiness. There's not a trace of vegan urban
fervour as Tam explains his menu. It's a dairy-, egg- and wheat-free
selection of chilled salads, plus, inexplicably, sweet and savoury
crepes. That's it. With no evidence of any other employees, he prepares
our food, serves us and operates the cash.
His little shop is adorable, too. Instead of hollow Maoist
placards or dishes named after soul-shifting trips to India, we're
welcomed by stained-wood shelves lined with herbal teas, oils and
beans. A little table for two with high-backed stools rests in the
front window, and benches are scattered with the day's papers. Its neat
tastefulness and slight elevation give the space the feel of a cozy
one-bedroom condo raised just slightly above the din of Kensington's
bohemian rabble (like the kid across the street in the pin-studded
denim vest who is far too enthused by his acquisition of a dime-store
squeeze box).
Tam extracts maximum wow effect out of a half dozen cold
salads, bursting with vibrant oranges and greens, fanned out in a
rustic wooden bowl ($7). Sprouting out of this bouquet is a toasted
rice cake smeared with spicy sun-dried tomato pesto. The simplicity of
the palette-like presentation is boosted by Tam's utter humility as he
escorts dishes and clears tables.
Fierce nuttiness inhabits a fluffy quinoa tabbouleh covered in
dried cranberries and sunflower seeds. Raw shreds of beet crunch as a
slaw dressed in a whiff of toasted sesame oil and lemon. Little
soy-marinated cubes of tofu sit next to balsamic-tossed green beans.
It all slides down with a mellow mango-banana smoothie ($3.50)
and a wheat-free, organic root beer ($2.62) smacking heavily of
vanilla.
The gluten-free crepe ($5.50), produced with buckwheat flour,
is closer to a crisp dosa (a south Indian crepe made from a rice/lentil
batter). As a cheese-eater (literal cheese-eating, not Boston slang for
informing, dime-dropping, etc.), I find it soothing to round out the
earthy bowl of vegetables and grains with a crepe stuffed with creamy
goat cheese, mushrooms and mango chutney.
Little chocolate-raspberry cakelettes ($1.25) are affably
under-sweetened. But calling them cupcakes is like calling Brandon
Routh Superman. Maybe Bizarro cupcakes. Face it: cupcakes have frosting
and frosting is why we eat cupcakes. Comparing dairy- and wheat-free
confections with their real counterparts is just unfair. A frozen
sphere of whipped soy ($2.95) is well-balanced with ginger and masala
and has a curiously crumbly texture. It would be superb if not labelled
ice cream.
Dropping into this serene oasis at lunch, a smile is served by
a fellow diner, the sort traded at a spa when two parties are waiting
for a massage. With no music, the only sounds are Tam's paring knife on
some mushrooms against a tiny cutting board and another patron's
fluttering of laptop keys. If you're bemoaning the lack of healthy
lunch choices at work, get the intern to hop on his bike and snatch you
some takeout from Hibiscus.
Everything at Hibiscus is, to borrow a term abused by this
city's culinary lexicon, fresh, because this dude does it, to borrow
another overused term, right.
Considering Toronto menus and chef egos, Tam is to be commended
for the narrowness of his scope, and the precision and charm with which
he achieves it.
*Price includes three courses, drinks, taxes and tip.