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Does anyone know what happened to Le Trou Normand on Yorkville Ave.? Walked past it yesterday and saw that the gate was chained and the posted menus still promoted Winterlicious and most sheets were curled up from the sun. It used to be a "place" to go in the 70s and 80s. I recall a splurge birthday dinner there (while still on student income) when the restaurant was full of the Toronto horse breeding set getting ready to head to the Royal Winter Fair. I had rabbit cooked with prunes.
 
^ It's been closed for awhile now. The owner used to eat out on the patio in the summer with his dog sitting beside him on a chair. They were there for about 40 years and I always find it sad that these long time establishments close without a murmur. Kind of like Theatre Books closing last week, also after about 40 years.
 
^ It's been closed for awhile now. The owner used to eat out on the patio in the summer with his dog sitting beside him on a chair. They were there for about 40 years and I always find it sad that these long time establishments close without a murmur. Kind of like Theatre Books closing last week, also after about 40 years.

Don't know, but the place has been gone for a few months - since April or May, at least.
 
Tim Hortons on Jarvis, just south of the Esplanade, looks like it's just about ready to open. The design of the space is quite nice for a Tims.

I noticed the Tim's was open today, not sure exactly when it opened. I'm more of an indie coffee guy but I went in and grabbed a coffee and a donut to check the space out. It does seem nicer than normal, some exposed brick and nice chairs, and the signs say "Tim Horton's Coffee House" though I'm not sure if that's a new thing for all stores or if this one is "special". I think it will do very well in the neighbourhood and will be a good gathering spot on a corner that's been dead space for too long.
 
Fisherman's Wharf from 69 Richmond St. W. is either moving or opening a second location at Church and Richmond in the old Florentine Court location.

I wonder if the food will be as impressive as the paint job.

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A new coffee shop is going in the space on the north-east corner of King Edward Hotel:

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Does anyone know what happened to Le Trou Normand on Yorkville Ave.? Walked past it yesterday and saw that the gate was chained and the posted menus still promoted Winterlicious and most sheets were curled up from the sun. It used to be a "place" to go in the 70s and 80s. I recall a splurge birthday dinner there (while still on student income) when the restaurant was full of the Toronto horse breeding set getting ready to head to the Royal Winter Fair. I had rabbit cooked with prunes.

Worst food ev-er. Atrocious.
And the middle aged woman in the dowdy clothes who used to dance beside the empty Champaign bottle to entice patrons was downright embarrassing.
The only question was who had worse food - Remy's or Le Trou Normand. Probably Le Trou since they had pretentions. I'm STILL chewing that Duck Muscovy...
 
RIP The Coffee Mill ... apparently another victim of Yorkville rents.

The owner was also 'quite' old...


Yorkville Coffee Mill marks 50 years: Knelman

Yorkville’s past history remains stubbornly and miraculously alive at European-style outdoor café

Martha von Heczey is owner of The Coffee Mill, a fixture in Yorkville since the early 1960s. She is pictured beside the same the UNICEF fountain that has also been a Yorkville fixture for decades.

By: Martin Knelman Entertainment, Published on Tue May 14 2013


The rising folk music stars moved on decades ago, the Toronto International Film Festival has migrated south, the high-end shops and condo developers have swooped in.

The Village of Yorkville has undergone many drastic changes over five decades. But some things never change. On a beautiful summer afternoon you can still relax on the sublimely secluded patio of the Coffee Mill, enjoying goulash soup, open-face sandwiches and a café latte.

As for Yorkville’s legacy as a 1960s hippie playground and capital of folk music — well fond memories of those days will be recalled and celebrated this year at Luminato. On June 17 — the day before the first of the festival’s two Joni Mitchell tribute concerts at Massey Hall — three veterans of the era when Joni and many other future stars drew crowds to cramped coffee houses will beguile a lunchtime crowd at the Luminato hub in David Pecaut Square with yarns from the 1960s and 1970s.

Sharing their memories will be two famous performers, Murray McLauchlan and Sylvia Tyson, and an offstage witness named Nicholas Jennings, who worked behind the counter at the Riverboat, and later wrote a book about it.

Alas, the Riverboat — the most famous of the folk-music coffee houses that lined the street — is long gone, and so are many others. Proprietor Bernie Fiedler was forced to close the Riverboat in 1978 after 14 years. Not even the Victorian building whose basement it once occupied has survived, but today you can read about it on a Heritage Toronto plaque that was installed on the sidewalk in front of the Hazelton Hotel, on the north side of Yorkville Avenue, just east of Avenue Road.

Happily, one touch of Yorkville history remains stubbornly and miraculously alive. On Thursday, May 16 the Coffee Mill celebrates its 50th anniversary. Martha von Heczey, a Hungarian immigrant who had landed in Toronto and was working as a sportswear buyer for the upscale retail store Creeds, had an idea. On a whim, and with a small bank loan, von Heczey founded the city’s first European-style outdoor café.

On May 16, 1963, the Coffee Mill opened in a courtyard called Lothian Mews, tucked behind the north side of Bloor Street West. Its success came as a surprise, because few believed that proper, middle-class Torontonians would sit outside and relax like Europeans.

In 1967, after divorcing her first husband, the café proprietor met and married Laci von Heczey, a former champion wrestler from Hungary, who walked into the café one summer day. He had a cheetah on a leash, which was part of a nightclub act he had devised.

During the hippie era, she imposed ground rules, including mandatory footwear.

After 10 years, she moved two blocks north to a small mall with Yorkville Avenue on one side, Cumberland Street on the other, and a delightful secluded patio between. In 1984, she even managed to reclaim the UNICEF fountain — the centrepiece at Lothian Mews, which had been placed in storage. Designed by Jack Harman as a promotion for the Canada Save the Children Fund, it depicts a girl carrying a baby on her back and a boy standing beside them. And today it remains the focal piece of the Coffee Mill’s patio.

Martha, as she is known to regulars, has been running the place non-stop for five decades, with the help of loyal customers who have been returning for years, like members of an extended family.

Among those whose photos you can spot on the walls: Al Waxman, Barbara Amiel, Gordon Pinsent, Tom Kneebone, Edward Greenspan, Anne Mirvish, Dusty Cohl, Pierre Berton and Anna Porter.

In my family, it has been the ideal place to celebrate birthdays, weddings and book launches, like a club without the membership fee. To me, it is also very conducive to catching up on media and showbiz gossip, conducting interviews, and running into old friends. There are hardly ever any surprises on the menu. What keeps us coming back may be that it feels less like going out to a restaurant than eating at home.

The May 16 anniversary festivities include an open house from 11 a.m. on and a ceremony at 3 p.m. featuring Hungary’s ambassador to Canada, Laszlo Pordany. I wouldn’t dream of missing it.
 
This is sad re Coffee Mill. My husband and I had our first date there nine years ago.
 

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