Address: 17 Yorkville Street
Phone: 416 921 1471
Dinner for two: $90 hours: Mon-Fri 11:30am-3pm, 5:30-11pm; Sat 5:30-11pm.
Wheelchair accessible: Yes.
Reservations: Recommended.
Toronto has its share of revered restaurateurs, and Franco Agostino
is certainly among them. With the pedigree of popular restaurants like
Il Posto and Banfi under his Versace kidskin belt, Agostino has
garnered a certain amount of respect from feeding Toronto's monied maws
over the years.
His latest venture, Imperia, shows off a rejuvenated Agostino
who seems to have shifted gears from upscale Italian to down-home
trattoria. He sold Il Posto because he was concerned with rising rents
in the Yorkville area - ironically, Imperia is still in Yorkville,
albeit buried between a parking lot and a slew of hair salons. But food
of this calibre, and at these prices, means Imperia will not fly under
the radar for long.
Hailing from the West Coast is chef Christopher Palik, who
spent five years in Vancouver and one, most recently, in France before
working at Langdon Hall in Cambridge and The Strand and Empire here in
Toronto and then hooking up with Agostino. Palik shows his mettle early
in the meal, from house-made, warm-from-the-oven breads to hand-rolled
pastas.
Take his seemingly straightforward veal and spinach ravioli
($15, half order $8). Orgasmic doesn't quite do it proper justice,
bathed as it is in a sinful yet exquisitely simple sage butter. A
pappardelle with lamb shank ($16) is miraculously flavourful despite
its apparent lack of sauce; a similar problem shows up in an otherwise
fantastic fettuccine alla Bolognese ($16) and ditto the potato ravioli
with braised rabbit ($16). Despite the unsaucy trend, the only real
miss in the bunch was a texturally challenged grilled calamari ($13)
oddly stuffed with sodden breadcrumbs, garlic, sundried tomatoes and
olive paste. Not exactly fit for a king.
But you'd happily pay a king's ransom for a sample of the
monkfish osso bucco ($23). It's impressive enough that the thick slab
is properly moist, but what makes it truly inspired is the accompanying
braised veal. Chef even goes to the trouble of making his own pork
sausage ($18), fragrant with fennel seed and partnered with a medley of
wild mushrooms. Yet another kitchen coup. A tasty-but-tough hunk of
veal liver ($18), sided with pancetta and apples, gets a passing grade.
And what trat would be complete without pizza? The Saporito
($16) - a razor-thin pie topped with the pork sausage, thinly sliced
potato and a judicious smattering of gorgonzola - is delicious.
If something needs to be rethought it's the desserts (all
$10), though they still merit some praise. A hazelnut brown-butter cake
has an oddly mushy texture, yet its slightly undercooked honey-poached
pears and chocolate-fig sauce work well. A vanilla panna cotta
alongside cider-poached apples boasts a seldom-seen luxuriant
creaminess. But a ricotta cheesecake, albeit smooth, is trounced by a
lovely-to-look-at but oddly medicinal tasting lurid-green mint cream.
Wheat-grass juice anyone?
Imperia does most things right, including staffing. A
tirelessly helpful server goes out of his way to guide and counsel
throughout the meal - which made any minor mishaps distant memories. In
his words: "I'm not just a vending machine to take orders." From his
mouth to servers' ears everywhere.