GenerationW
Senior Member
IMO, not since the Main Event at Yonge and College closed down.Is there a good wing place in Toronto proper?
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IMO, not since the Main Event at Yonge and College closed down.Is there a good wing place in Toronto proper?
Has anyone been to the new Williams Landing in Liberty Village?
I saw that! I was in T. for 6 days last week with my car and drove by it.
I finally got to try Duff's wings on College - absolutely foul. Undercooked and horribly soggy. I did have a terrific plate of wings on this trip at Barker's in Hudson Wisconsin.
Is there a good wing place in Toronto proper?
Here's something I don't quite get about these two strips:
College west (little Italy)
Danforth (Greek town)
These two strips probably have the highest concentration of restaurants in Toronto, particularly the Danforth with literary has tons.
Maybe Yonge between Bloor and Queen comes next.
So my question is, how do they all manage to stay in business ? Here's why I ask, other strips directly downtown or say all the ones around Yonge and Eglinton, NYCC, ... (are smaller) but they have tons (relatively) of employment in area and a high concentration of condominiums.
Danforth has very little employment from what I can see - maybe a little in the way of 2nd / 3rd story offices (on top of the restaurants) and same with College.
Am I missing something ?
They don't stay in business. At least not most of them.
I'd say on those strips, at any given time, about 20% of the restaurants are less than one year old. There are always a few institutions that have been there forever (The Standard Club, Astoria etc....), but the rest of the strip is always mostly places 2-3 years old.
They don't stay in business. At least not most of them.
I'd say on those strips, at any given time, about 20% of the restaurants are less than one year old. There are always a few institutions that have been there forever (The Standard Club, Astoria etc....), but the rest of the strip is always mostly places 2-3 years old.
I'm not sure that's true of the Danforth, at least the Broadview-Pape stretch. It's mostly the same old, same old. There hasn't generally been a lot of turnover. If anything, more turnover would have been nice, because it's hardly the most interesting/dynamic restaurant scene. That's why the recent raft of new places is a pleasant change.
I'm not sure that's true of the Danforth, at least the Broadview-Pape stretch. It's mostly the same old, same old. There hasn't generally been a lot of turnover. If anything, more turnover would have been nice, because it's hardly the most interesting/dynamic restaurant scene. That's why the recent raft of new places is a pleasant change.
I'm not an expert on restaurant economics, but I think I can guess what is going on.
Danforth (and Little Italy) are very well known for their concentration of restaurants. They are destinations for people who like to go to walk around, enjoy the atmosphere, see what's available and then decide where to eat. A lot of people travel a much greater distance than they normally would to eat in these areas because there are so many choices. This makes these areas a safer place to open a new restaurant. You have a lot more hungry people walking past Pape and Danforth than Pape and O'Connor. So more restaurants open and it becomes a bigger destination drawing in even more people.
As for the lunch crowd, the marginal cost of being open for lunch is probably pretty low. If you regularly have a large dinner crowd, you'll probably have staff in your kitchen around noon anyways to do prep work, take deliveries, do inventory etc. It probably doesn't affect profits to have two servers getting minimum wage on the off chance you can sell a few lunches.
Gotcha, so basically lunch isn't as important really as they can drive enough revenue during the dinner service and the cost of being open around lunch isn't that high anyway.
I know for some places it's clearly the opposite i.e. in the financial district.