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We’re Lovin’ It: DaiLo Serves up Big Mac Bao

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DaiLo transforms Toronto dining with Chef Nick Liu’s New Asian Cuisine and a chic design by Ian Rydberg.

Toronto hasn’t seen anything quite like DaiLo before: an unexpectedly refined dining space serving New Asian Cuisine, or what the owners bill as “#sickasianfood.” At the front are tufted teal banquettes partitioned off by elegant filigree screens; across is a delicate, hand-painted mural channelling French Orientalism circa 1750. The space is a departure for Ian Rydberg, founder and principal designer at Solid Design & Build Inc., whose previous restaurant projects – like the scruffy-hip La Carnita next door and Valdez – tended toward the industrial (with street art accents). The dining room’s visual focus is a huge skylight anchoring the main bar, which was once an enclosed courtyard: in the early evening, diffuse sunlight bathes the green marble bar below in a soft glow, while at night, it’s illuminated by a bright red cage made to resemble a Chinese lantern (one of many eye-catching lighting designs by local firm Milke Bau).

DaiLo Restaurant Toronto

Chef Nick Liu (also known as @Ninjachefnick) brings a promiscuous, high-low sensibility – and some serious culinary swagger – to his menu, which draws on his family’s Chinese cooking (mainly cuisine from the Hakka region), his classical French training at Canadian and international restaurants, and his signature flair for using local and sustainable ingredients. Take the Big Mac Bao ($5), a two-bite steamed bun that tastes uncannily like its fast-food namesake (but took countless rounds of tweaking to get right). Even better is his Sweet and Sour Pork Hock ($13), a recipe cribbed from his grandmother but elevated with a palate-cleansing jellyfish slaw, and his Whole Fried Giggi Trout ($30).

Upstairs is a cocktail and snack bar called LoPan, with neon signs, a live-edge mahogany bar and bartender Shane Mulvany’s inventive and Asian-inspired craft cocktails, like the Tom Yum Booze ($15). As night descends and noise levels rise, it feels like some kind of out-of-time Kowloon speakeasy hidden away above the refined dining room below. dailoto.com

503 College St  647 341 8882

Dinner at Dailo: Tue-Sun 5:30-11; Snacks & Dim Sum at Lopan: Tue-Sun 5:30-2

Featured in 2014 in Review: Toronto’s Best New Restaurants.

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In the pleasing hamlet of Cataract, the Liberty Inn reimagines a 19th-century landmark as a rejuvenating getaway

There are some hotels that make me say, “This feels like a space I could live in,” and The Liberty Inn is one of those places. Each of its five suites has more of the tenor of a country cottage than a hotel room. Thoughtfully furnished living and dining areas invite lingering, smart kitchenettes welcome whipping up a meal and bespoke bathrooms beguile. The fridge is stocked with homemade strawberry jam, ready-to-bake croissants and oat and dairy milk. There’s a woodland spa and a garden, both within a pastoral setting, replete with birdsong, just steps from the Forks of the Credit Provincial Park. Though this boutique hotel is just a 60-minute drive from Toronto, it feels like a world away.

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