Tasting Notes Toronto by Insider Wine cover art

Tasting Notes Toronto by Insider Wine

Tasting Notes Toronto by Insider Wine

By: Alex Abbott Boyd
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Hosted by Toronto-based sommelier Alex Abbott Boyd, Tasting Notes Toronto explores the people shaping the city’s food and wine culture—from Michelin-starred chefs and master sommeliers to restaurant operators and winemakers. Each episode goes behind the scenes of hospitality careers, restaurant culture, and the decisions that shape what we eat and drink in Toronto today.© Insider Wine Art Cooking Food & Wine
Episodes
  • Neo-Chinese Cooking at One of Canada’s Best New Restaurants — Eva Chin of Yan Dining Room
    Jun 23 2026

    What happens when a chef cooks her way back to a heritage she almost lost?

    Eva Chin is the chef behind Yan Dining Room — a 26-seat room built inside Hong Shing Restaurant, born out of a fire, where she cooks what she calls "neo-Chinese cuisine": traditions followed, rules broken.

    In this conversation we get into how growing up between the US and Hong Kong, training in kitchens around the world, and rebuilding her own identity through food all end up on the plate. We talk about how every dish becomes a vessel for memory and how a private dining room became an intimate storytelling stage. We get into the stereotypes that have boxed in Chinese food in North America since the railroads, her case for "anti-gatekeeping" cuisine, and why she believes food can heal intergenerational wounds that conversation can't.


    It's a conversation about identity, authorship, and what it means to cook a cuisine that's still being written.

    Chinese Food Isn't What You Think It Is — Eva Chin of Yan Dining Room

    00:00 – Yan Dining Room origins
    02:21 – Dining room as storytelling
    06:41 – Neo-Chinese cuisine & nostalgia
    10:36 – “Fusion is confusion”
    13:42 – Rewriting Chinese food stereotypes
    20:07 – Critics & early reception
    27:07 – Wine pairing Chinese food
    30:12 – Becoming a chef (no school)
    33:10 – Brae & Australia foraging
    34:50 – China train journey & Hong Kong wake-up
    38:53 – Food, family & healing
    41:06 – Moving to Toronto / Momofuku
    44:25 – Anti-gatekeeping Chinese food
    48:47 – Farmers, terroir & sustainability
    54:48 – Future of Yan

    🙌 Enjoyed the episode? Follow, rate, and review Tasting Notes Toronto on your favorite podcast platform — it really helps others discover the show. And don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode.

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    58 mins
  • Quitting Toronto to Build a Niagara Vineyard from Scratch — Corey Mio of Mio Vineyard
    Jun 2 2026

    What happens when you leave Toronto, buy a neglected 17-acre farm in Niagara wine country, and plant a vineyard — with no formal training in viticulture or winemaking?


    In this episode, I sit down with Corey Mio of Mio Vineyard and Sempre Mio Wines to talk about building a vineyard from scratch, learning to farm on the fly, and why he believes great wine starts long before the grapes reach the winery.


    We discuss the realities of growing grapes in one of the world's most challenging wine regions, Corey’s obsession with Chardonnay clones, why he identifies as a farmer first and winemaker second, and the realities of building a vineyard business in Ontario, including selling grapes to established wineries while gradually growing their own label, Sempre Mio Wines.


    We also dive into the future of Ontario wine, the pressures facing Niagara growers, the challenges of regulation and development, and why Corey believes supporting local wine requires more than just talking about it.


    Whether you're a wine lover, aspiring farmer, or someone dreaming about building a life around something meaningful, this conversation offers a fascinating look at what it takes to turn a vineyard dream into reality.

    Timestamps

    Quitting Toronto to Build a Niagara Vineyard from Scratch — Corey Mio of Mio Vineyard


    00:00 – He Bought a Vineyard With No Experience

    01:45 – Why Niagara Changed Everything

    03:56 – Finding the Farm and Building Mio Vineyard
    07:58 – Why Great Vineyards Take Decades
    10:06 – The Business of Farming, Selling Grapes & Sempre Mio
    12:19 – Farming Philosophy and Vine Longevity
    14:25 – The Chardonnay Obsession: Varieties, Clones & Quality
    20:07 – The Story Behind the Tantalus Mio Vineyard Chardonnay
    23:01 – The VQA Fight and Ontario Wine Regulations
    25:59 – Building Sempre Mio Wines
    28:29 – Niagara's Potential and Challenges
    31:09 – What's Holding Ontario Wine Back?
    37:19 – Niagara Recommendations & Where to Find Sempre Mio
    41:02 – Final Thoughts

    🙌 Enjoyed the episode? Follow, rate, and review Tasting Notes Toronto on your favorite podcast platform — it really helps others discover the show. And don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode.

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    41 mins
  • Matt Palynchuk — Raton Laveur, The Hardest Bar in Toronto to Find (and Get Into)
    May 19 2026

    What happens when a wine pop-up in a laneway quietly becomes one of Toronto's most talked-about (and hardest to find) wine experiences?


    In this episode, I sit down with Matt Palynchuk — Wine Director at Union Restaurant and longtime sommelier at Archive Wine Bar — to unpack the origin story and philosophy behind Raton Laveur, an 18-seat, event-driven wine space tucked behind a working cidery, with no reservations and no Google Maps presence.


    What started as a "maybe we can do something with this weird back space" quickly evolved into a packed, word-of-mouth wine bar built on constraint, curiosity, and an unapologetic rejection of convenience. We explore how the space came together, why discomfort can actually enhance hospitality, and what it means when a hidden bar becomes too discovered through social media.


    If you care about wine, hospitality, or how a packed room actually gets built without marketing — this one's a must-listen.


    Matt Palynchuk — Raton Laveur | The Hardest Bar in Toronto to Find (and Get Into)

    00:00 Opening a Wine Bar Behind a Cider Factory
    00:52 From Idea to Opening in Three Months
    01:47 How Word-of-Mouth Built a Packed Room
    02:41 Why Toronto Loves a Hidden Bar
    04:00 Designing a Space That Forces Connection
    04:57 Frank's in Dublin — The Dream Wine Bar
    06:24 Why Small Spaces Make Better Bars
    08:30 Curating a Culture vs. Forcing One
    11:20 What Raton Laveur Actually Is
    12:33 Weekly Themes: Baga, Tenerife, Aligote, the Giro
    14:48 Wine for Nerds and Newbies
    16:27 Always Ask for a Taste First
    17:59 Hospitality vs. Convenience
    18:40 The Night He Knew the Bar Was Working
    19:45 The Four-Top That Came for a Photo Shoot
    22:49 Private Instagram, No Google Maps
    25:01 The Easter Weekend Lineup Down the Alleyway
    27:49 Making Wine Accessible — Lessons from Archive
    31:51 Ontario Wine Deserves Respect
    37:06 Overrated / Underrated: Wine Regions
    38:16 Please Don't Come

    🙌 Enjoyed the episode? Follow, rate, and review Tasting Notes Toronto on your favorite podcast platform — it really helps others discover the show. And don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode.


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    39 mins
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