Essential Calgary Magazine Essential Calgary 2017 | Page 47

Some of the city’s top chefs use international training and influences to create globally-inspired, locally-loved dishes DINE AROUND THE WORLD PHOTOGRAPHS: (OPPOSITE PAGE) BY JASON DZIVER (THIS PAGE) BY MIKE HEYWOOD, COURTESY TRAVEL ALBERTA by julie van rosendaal No matter where you go, what you eat while you’re there contributes to a sense of place. Cities, countries, and regions are largely defined by what grows there, and menus reflect climate, terroir, history, and international influences. Naturally, restaurants often reflect their own regional cuisine, but are just as often inspired by faraway places. In Calgary, some of the best eateries apply global flavours and techniques to local ingredients, creating opportunities to expand your culinary horizons right here. At the historic Simmons Building in Calgary’s East Village, visitors can experience Argentinianstyle Alberta longhorn beef, charred over the Argentinian wood-fired parrilla grill at the heart of Charbar’s kitchen. Before they opened, chef Jessica Pelland spent a month cooking in Argentina, primarily with chef Fernando Trocca of Sucre restaurant, in order to learn first-hand their unique style of cooking over open flames. Charbar’s menu, inspired by the SpanishItalian influences of Argentinian cuisine, treats vegetables and meat with equal creativity and respect; almost half the menu, and most of the small sharing plates, are vegetarian. on bread: Aviv’s foray into the kitchen began with mastering the art of the loaf, and he has since traveled the world, learning how to perfect his sourdough alongside such master bakers as Chad Robertson of Tartine Bakery in San Francisco and Jean-Luc Poujauran at Boulangerie Poujauran in Paris. Beyond crusty loaves and perfect pastries, their casual eat-in or takeout menu has a heavy Mediterranean flavour, with bold dishes like shakshuka, an Israeli tomato-based stew in which eggs are poached, handmade pitas and labneh, and burekas — flaky pastry triangles stuffed with aged cheddar, feta cheese, eggs, and harissa. On the other side of the wall in the same Simmons Building, Sidewalk Citizen offers long-simmered stews inspired by the tiny tin-roofed kerosene kitchens common in the streets of Tel Aviv, the home city of owners Aviv Fried and Michal Lavi. Back in Israel, giant pots of stew would bubble on outdoor stoves all night long, to be served up with thick slabs of bread the next day. Their business was built Across the river, Chef Neil McCue brought dishes from his childhood in Yorkshire to Whitehall in the historic de Waal block, which was built in 1910. After his grandma inspired him to get into the kitchen, McCue wound up cooking in restaurant kitchens across the UK and Canada, including Catch when it opened in downtown Calgary in 2001, Langdon Hall in Cambridge, Ontario, and Curlew in East Sussex, (Left to right) Aviv Fried; Sourdough bread and Mediterranean food at Sidewalk Citizen Bakery. THE ESSENTIAL CALGARY 2016/17  47