7 Numbers
RATING: Good
ADDRESS: 516 Eglinton W.
PHONE: 416-322-5183
DINNER FOR TWO: $75*
HOURS: Tue-Sat 5-11pm, Sun 5-10pm, closed Mon
WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE: Yes
RESERVATIONS: Only for parties of six or more
Thanks to Christopher Columbus, that famous misnamer of people,
places and things, we're stuck with the term “pepper” to name a variety
of fruits from the capsicum annuum plant. A contorni of roast peppers
could be many things – it could be, for example, a tomatillo-ancho
custard piped into a hollow cherry pepper with a pickled banana pepper
tuile poking out the top. At 7 Numbers, a side of roasted peppers is
more like what you'd imagine: chunks of yellow bell pepper, sweetened
by its own caramelized sugar, dropped without ceremony in the centre of
a small white dish – like most of the food, plated with a family picnic
sensibility. There are no garnishes. Food goes from pan to plate to
tummy with no self-consciousness or irony.
And we have Rosa “Mama” Marinuzzi to thank for that. She'd been
rocking this style for 13 years, since 1988, at Gio's, where she drew a
loyal following before opening her own restaurant, 7 Numbers. Her small
familial empire now consists of two locations (one on the Danforth, the
other at its new 40-seat Forest Hill location furnished, as expected,
with random garage-sale finds) that she runs with her sons Vito and
Tony and cousin Massimo.
Though her English is just fine, Rosa greets customers and
accepts compliments with a vague collection of obsequious vocalizations
that don't appear to contain any real words or enunciation. She's a
postcard of a matriarchal restaurateur you might send home from Rome.
She just seems to want everyone to eat and be happy. Like her food,
she's too rough-edged for her intentions to be doubted.
Her buttery calamari fritti ($5) have all the suppleness of al
dente pasta and crispy, battered zucchini flowers ($6) have the baby
zucchini stubs attached. The fat deposit scatters when hit by the
acidity of lemony, marinated artichokes, snap peas and wedges of
fennel, lightly roasted with crunch intact ($6). Marinuzzi displays
rustic sincerity with simple pairings like prosciutto and figs ($6), or
buffalo mozzarella and tomatoes ($5). Large, charcoal-scented sardines
($5) come packed in a tart tomato salsa with spicy peppers tucked
beneath to complement the last bites of fish.
A pile of thick lasagna ($9.50), mascot of the 7 Numbers
aesthetic, is saturated in a concentrated veal laden ragu. Muddled and
informal, bearing no sign of ever having been cut at a right angle, the
dish is an unpretentious joy to eat.
With no chance to rest, more plates of tomato-drenched proteins
rush to the table. Veal shank osso buco ($10) is so thoroughly braised
the meat and fat vacate the bone and swim in the shallow pool of chunky
tomato sauce that puts the homemade Calabrese buns to good use, as does
a tomato sauce surrounding a flaky fillet of rainbow trout ($12). Soon
we're drowning in sauce as still more tomato immerses a fat
cross-section of roasted eggplant ($8) filled with parmesan. Bordering
on becoming a stew, the eggplant, sweet with balsamic vinegar and gooey
with cheese, has little time to decompose as it disappears under the
thrashing of several forks.
Other than a few forgettable desserts (schlepped in from a
nearby bakery) and an ubiquitous tomato sauce, the menu never
overextends itself. It's as free of flowery adjectives as the food is
free of garnish and fuss. The prices reflect this, too – no item more
than $12. The gruff charm of Marinuzzi and her sons is present in the
undiluted simplicity of every dish. 7 Numbers is a terrifically casual
destination where that finicky group from the office can share off each
other's plates without embarrassment. It's right in that “meaty part of
the curve” that George Costanza described, “not showing off, not
falling behind.” The restaurant is snob-proof.
* PRICE INCLUDES APPETIZERS, ENTREES, DESSERT AND WINE AND TAXES AND TIP