Quick Bites: Slow Jams, Emmer, Mascot Brewery

Fried chicken sandwich from Slow Jams
Fried chicken sandwich from Slow Jams

Slow Jams is a pop-up that specializes in Filipino BBQ and fried chicken; I tried their fried chicken sandwich (“coconut & lemongrass brine, spicy banana ketchup & soy pickled cucumbers”) at last year’s Taste of Little Italy street festival, and it was quite tasty.  The bright red sauce its slathered in kinda tastes like the stuff you’ll find on sweet and sour chicken balls; it’s a bit overly sweet, but the pickles do a pretty good job of balancing things out.  Otherwise, it’s nice and crunchy, and the dark meat within is pleasantly juicy.  It didn’t rock my world, but it’s a solid fried chicken sandwich.

Pistachio Croissant from Emmer
Pistachio Croissant from Emmer

The pistachio croissant is probably the thing that Emmer is the most well known for, but every time I’ve gone, it’s been sold out.  They had just put out a fresh tray of them on my most recent visit, and yeah, of course I got one.  It’s good!  And it certainly looks impressive, with the generous layer of crushed pistachios on top.  The croissant was maybe a bit overbaked (it was slightly dry) and I think inherently, a pistachio croissant will never be as good as an almond croissant.  But I still quite enjoyed this; it’s got a nice pistachio flavour, a good balance between the croissant and the filling, and its sweetness was very well balanced.

Buffalo Wings from Mascot Brewery
Buffalo Wings from Mascot Brewery

Mascot Brewery, nestled away in an industrial area of Etobicoke, is a definite hidden gem.  They’ve got a nice patio, a decent selection of sharable snacks and sandwiches, and  — as you’d expect from a brewpub — a bunch of interesting beer on tap.  I had the Buffalo wings (“Honey Buffalo Sauce, Buttermilk Ranch”), and they were quite tasty.  I didn’t particularly notice any sweetness (they tasted like pretty standard Buffalo wings to me), but these were otherwise quite tasty, and the buttermilk ranch was a definite upgrade over the standard jarred stuff.

Another Delicious Doughnut at Dipped Donuts

Dipped Donuts
Location
: 161 Baldwin Street, Toronto
Website: https://www.dippeddonuts.ca/

It’s been a few years since I’ve been to Dipped Donuts, and I figured another visit was probably in order.  Every other doughnut I’ve had from this place has been great, and hey, guess what?  It’s still great.

Dipped Donuts

I’m a big fan of the flavours here, which manage to be unique without ever coming off as gimicky.  Whoever’s coming up with the doughnuts clearly knows what they’re doing.

On this visit I got the saffron pistachio: “filled with pistachio pastry cream and topped with rich saffron glaze, pistachios and rose petals.”

Dipped Donuts

It’s so good; the pistachio filling is creamy and packed with pistachio flavour (and it tastes like real pistachio, not pistachio extract), and the glaze gives it a really nice floral hum that complements the nuttiness perfectly.  It’s sweet, but doesn’t punch you in the face like so many doughnuts do.  It’s great.

And of course, the doughnut itself is as tasty as ever.  Is Dipped Donuts the best doughnut shop in the city?  It might be.

Tasty Cookies at Felix & Norton

Felix & Norton
Location
: 8601 Warden Avenue, Unionville
Website: https://www.fncookies.com/

I should note that I cannot possibly be objective about Felix & Norton.  My high school was right across the street from this cookie shop.  I was a fat kid.  Cookies were a very, very regular occurrence.

So I don’t know if these cookies are actually delicious or if it’s just the nostalgia talking, but either way I like them a whole lot.

Felix & Norton

On this visit, I had two of my favourites from back in the day, Menage a Trois (which features white, milk, and dark chocolate) and Caramelt (milk chocolate and caramel).

They have that slightly cakey texture you get from cookies that are designed to be perpetually chewy; I’m normally not crazy about that, but it works here.  Again, it might be the nostalgia.

Felix & Norton

The quality of the chocolate is pretty decent, and the cookies themselves are sweet, but not overly so.  They’re quite good.  They also have a flavour I can’t quite put my finger on, other than to say that it is unmistakably Felix & Norton.  That flavour is thoroughly ingrained in my brain, and has remained unchanged over the years.  I don’t know what it is, but it makes these cookies taste noticeably different from anything else I’ve had in the GTA.

Quick Bites: Crumbl, Tom’s Dairy Freeze, Lola’s

Chocolate chip cookie from Crumbl
Chocolate chip cookie from Crumbl

Crumbl is an American cookie chain that opened in Mississauga earlier last year with a ton of hype.  I actually tried to go around when they opened, and the line was so intense that I wound up skipping it altogether.  Things have calmed down quite a bit (the place was empty on my recent visit), so I was finally able to try the chocolate chip cookie (they have a rotating menu of six cookies, but the chocolate chip is what made them famous).  The cookie seemed like it should have been pretty decent; it’s not too sweet, and it’s clearly made with good quality chocolate.  But the cookie was way, way underbaked, with a pronounced raw flour flavour and a middle that was more gummy than chewy.  I’m assuming this was partially on purpose, to create a softer cookie, but they clearly went a bit too far (it probably doesn’t help that the cookie is enormous, which makes it harder to underbake without having a fully raw middle).

I should note that I originally wrote this a few months ago (I have a bit of a backlog).  I recently tried Crumbl’s second location in Mississauga, around Dixie and Dundas, hoping that the first cookie was just a mistake — surely it’s not supposed to be that underbaked?  I had the exact same experience.  I also overheard a family in line raving about how much they love the cookies here, so clearly this place has its fans.  I am not one of them.

Strawberry sundae from Tom's Dairy Freeze
Strawberry sundae from Tom’s Dairy Freeze

I just checked — this will be my seventh time featuring Tom’s Dairy Freeze on this blog, and you know what?  I regret nothing.  The place continues to serve the city’s best soft serve, so why shouldn’t I write about it on a semi-regular basis?  It’s my duty.  I got the strawberry sundae on this particular visit, and it was, of course, delicious.  I find the sauces here tend not to be nearly as good as the ice cream itself, but this one was great — in particular, the huge chunks of strawberry complemented the creamy ice cream perfectly.

Chocolate gelato from Lola's
Chocolate gelato from Lola’s Gelato

Speaking of amazing ice cream, every time I check out Lola’s, I’m like “is this the best gelato in the city??”  Certainly, they’re neck-and-neck with Mizzica (Nani’s used to be a contender, but my last few visits have been surprisingly poor).  I got plain old chocolate on this particular visit, and while it was maybe a touch too sweet, it had a great chocolate flavour and the texture was perfect: super rich and creamy, and served at the right temperature (e.g. not as hard as a brick).

Tasty Pastries at Ba Noi

Ba Noi
Location
: 806 Bloor Street West, Toronto
Website: https://ba-noi.myshopify.com/

Ba Noi is a delightful bakery on Bloor that specializes in sourdough, along with a handful of tasty treats.

Ba Noi

They’re also very, very popular.  When I showed up on a Saturday afternoon, they were sold out of everything outside of chocolate chip cookies and butter tarts.  That was unfortunate, but certainly, there are worse things to be forced to order at a bakery.  I tried both, and they were each extremely tasty.  I’ll definitely have to come back to try the sourdough.

Ba Noi

The cookie was the highlight.  It helped that it was extremely fresh (arguably too fresh, but who can say no to a warm, gooey chocolate chip cookie?), but this was a superlative cookie, with great quality chocolate and a nice depth of flavour.  I find a lot of chocolate chip cookies can be one-note sweet, but that definitely wasn’t the case here.

Ba Noi

The butter tart was interesting; it was kind of like a hybrid between a standard butter tart and a Portuguese custard tart, with a flaky crust and a filling that was less sweet and more custardy than the norm.  It was absolutely delicious, though the crust was a bit soggy despite it still being warm from the oven when it was served to me (the woman behind the counter advised that it might be too fresh to sample immediately; I waited about an hour to eat it.  It’s possible it steamed in the bag?).