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Gta

Asian fusion dining ruled the aughts. But at this tiny 色色啦 bistro, the food isn鈥檛 trendy 鈥 it鈥檚 personal

This Etobicoke spot has been doing lemongrass pork tacos and lychee martinis well for 13 years.

Updated
4 min read
Food Spread

Tres leches cake, left, Vietnamese grilled pork tacos, ceviche and Argentine steak frites.


As I sipped a lychee martini and ordered a shrimp and avocado ceviche garnished with a shiso leaf, I couldn’t help but wonder: was this restaurant transporting me back to the early 2000s? The menu called appetizers 鈥渟mall tapas鈥 and mains 鈥渓arge tapas.鈥 And just like that, the Asian fusion I once had a soft spot for nearly two decades ago, still lives on.

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Manh Nguyen, chef & owner of Mai Bistro holding Vietnamese grilled pork tacos.

But not the watered-down kind of fusion we鈥檝e grown used to 鈥 teriyaki glazes and Sriracha mayo passed off as innovation, yuzu added to iced drinks and beers on cue every summer, matcha and ube desserts now as common as chocolate chip. I’m thinking the Y2K-era of Asian cooking, where chefs incorporated predominantly East and Southeast Asian flavours into sharable plates in a chic restaurant in a glamorous city. Think Susur Lee’s Singapore Slaw, or ordering pad Thai at the long-closed Bamboo Club.

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