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Where chef Devan Rajkumar eats Guyanese food in Scarborough

https://torontolife.com/food/r...food-in-scarborough/

 

 

Chef Devan Rajkumar loves Guyanese food. He’s a bit biased though—his parents immigrated to Toronto from Guyana back in the ’70s, and although he wasn’t born there, he visits frequently. He still has vivid childhood memories of cooking with his grandmother, stone-grinding coconut on her living room floor. It’s one of the TV personality’s earliest food-related memories.

When Rajkumar’s feeling nostalgic, he’ll head out to Scarborough, which he says is the Guyanese hub because the area around Sheppard and Morningside is home to more than half a dozen excellent Guyanese restaurants. “Guyanese food doesn’t get the spotlight it deserves,” says Rajkumar, who describes the nation as a culinary melting pot where Caribbean, East Indian and Chinese cooking traditions meet.

Charley’s Caribbean Cuisine

1158 Morningside Ave., 416-282-8608, charliescaribbeancuisine.com

Charley’s is an unfussy hot table tucked away in a two-storey strip mall. Rajkumar ignores the meat here, as he thinks the veggie dishes are the stars of the buffet. “I was raised Hindu and this reminds me of the religious food we’d eat,” he says. “They have bora and okra!” Rajkumar gets really excited about food.

Go-to item #1: Veggie platter with pumpkin, okra and bora
Tasting notes: While Rajkumar likes the sautéed okra and bora (a long bean), he’s bonkers about the pumpkin, which he always saves for last. The pumpkin purée is silky and spiced with onion, garlic and brown sugar.

 
Rajkumar’s favourite veggies at Charley’s.

Go-to item #2: Dhalpuri roti
Tasting notes: Rajkumar doesn’t use cutlery at Charley’s. Instead, he uses this split pea-stuffed flatbread to scoop up the plate’s saucier elements. Dhalpuri roti is often eaten in the Caribbean with a meat-based curry, but is excellent with a chutney, or even just butter.

 
Flaky dhalpuri roti (left) and a bowl of dhal.

Go-to item #3: Dhal
Tasting notes: This yellow pea stew has just a whiff of heat and plenty of garlic. Rajkumar uses it as a gravy to moisten some of the drier elements of the plate, like the steamed veggies below.

Go-to item #4: Provisions
Tasting notes: “Cassava, eddoes, plantains: these are all Amazon vegetables that labourers would fuel up on before engaging in back-breaking work,” says Rajkumar. The cassava has a buttery texture, while the slightly firmer eddoes have a nutty flavour. The steamed plantains aren’t Rajkumar’s favourite—he thinks they’re too dry and starchy. He prefers his plantain fried.

 
Rajkumar with his spread (provisions pictured on plate to the back right, as well as next to the pumpkin and greens).
 
Contemplating his order.

Scarborough event space has '100 per cent Guyanese Chinese style' menu

Twilight is in Scarborough's restaurant Top 10, chef says

WHATSON 06:00 AM BY MIKE ADLER   TORONTO.COM
 
Twilight

Chef Tommy So makes and sells the hot sauce at Twilight Family Restaurant and Bar. - Dan Pearce/Torstar

 
Twilight

Special Chicken and Fried Rice at Twilight Family Restaurant and Bar. - Dan Pearce/Torstar

 
Twilight Pepper Shrimp

Pepper Shrimp at Twilight Family Restaurant and Bar. - Dan Pearce/Torstar

 
Twilight Family Restaurant

Twilight Family Restaurant and Bar in North Scarborough. - Dan Pearce/Torstar

Twilight Family Restaurant and Bar is where Caribbean entertainment and a Caribbean Chinese cuisine come together in North Scarborough.

Twilight is where a woman named Mariam can, a few weeks from now, throw herself a 60th birthday party and dance with Poser (Sylvester Lockhart), a Calypso monarch from Trinidad and Tobago, on the bill.

It’s where local favourites like Connector (Joel Davis) perform, and Caribbean carnival bands launch costume lineups, in shows that typically start at 10 p.m.

 

On the walls of the 55 Nugget Ave. restaurant are mix CDs for dance hall, soca, Indian and, reggae — with names like, Chutney in de Park, and Rockin' Ya All Night 2 — and event posters from Royal Rum Shop on Oct. 5 to the Parang Parang Lime on Nov. 2.

wilight, which opened behind a plaza off McCowan Road in 2010, is a large banquet space (capacity 376), plus an even larger event centre, Krave, two units away.

A single kitchen supplies both with vast amounts of wings, fried rice, and chow mein from a menu, says chef Tommy So, that is “100 per cent Guyanese Chinese style.”

Like Twilight’s owners, So, who’s worked here five years, is from Guyana. He believes Twilight should be ranked as one of Scarborough’s Top 10 restaurants.

Many diners are regulars, people who know the menu and recognize the quality of the food, So said. “You can see the difference.”

https://www.toronto.com/whatso...-chinese-style-menu/

 

Sunil

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