Listed in Restaurants
![entice culinary lounge]()
Entice is a culinary lounge on West Queen West with grand ambitions. It's a restaurant with a supper club kind of vibe that aims to be an immersive experience where sights, sounds and tastes are all accentuated.
It is indeed a visually enticing restaurant. The swank dining room looks like big money and key features include a bar top made of TV screens, textured walls and even touchless (sensor-enabled) powder rooms.
![entice toronto]()
To drink there are ten classic cocktails plus three "molecular drinks" which change seasonally.
![entice restaurant toronto]()
They're pricey; the Cucumber Granita is $18, but the combo of vodka with cucumber juice and black pepper syrup is delightfully spun into a frozen slushie state with liquid nitrogen (just note you might miss this dash of theatre unless you're sitting at the bar).
![Entice Toronto]()
The "global" approach to the menu from chef Ryan Wilson-Lall (former chef de cuisine at
Frank) employs a liberal dose of molecular gastronomy. We're off to a good start with the surprise amuse bouche; a bubble of coconut water with raspberries that burst in my mouth.
![Entice Toronto]()
Then there's the mushroom moccachino ($10), a soup that bills itself as a wild mushroom espresso broth with shaved chocolate and a sweetened froth. It's brewed in a hot infusion siphon which is a cool hack for making a perfectly clear consume, but the combination of flavours is...perplexing.
![Entice Toronto]()
The carbonara raviolo ($16) is redeeming, the house-made pasta forms a pocket around a roasted garlic mascarpone and egg yolk and it's a delight to cut into. It's smothered in pecorino and served with crispy basil, bacon and cremini mushrooms to be reconstructed on the fork as one eats.
![Entice Toronto]()
Next up is The Tour ($13) a trio of dips served on a crowded platter of roasted vegetables with bread. It's described on the menu as "moussaka, warm serrano bechamel, roasted garlic and parsley..." only said "moussaka" is more accurately a starchy eggplant-flavoured bechamel sauce.
It's devoid of the expected rich tomatoey lamb and it's almost indistinguishable flavour-wise from the accompanying "serrano bechamel".
I don't find either bechamel dips very appealing; they kind of jiggle in a congealed state and go almost untouched as we eat around them. I stick to the roasted garlic dip plated in the centre, it's actually quite good, kind of like an ultra-silky hummus. The accompanying roasted vegetables are welcome, although the whole dish is heavy and starchy.
![Entice Toronto]()
As it's set down on the table the Spicy Ahi Tuna ($25) is described as a "hot mess on a plate" and I can't help but agree. I doubt there's even four ounces of fish on this plate; more prominent are the haphazard mounds of mango, daikon, cucumber and green papaya slaw. Calling this one an entree seems like a stretch.
![Entice Toronto]()
The sour cherry duck breast ($28) makes a good first impression but on closer inspection the skin is browned but not rendered. What would usually be the best part is almost inedible (save for a few slices on the ends). The dish includes compressed pears, carrot puree, tangy cherry sauce which amounts to sweet on sweet on sweet and it's missing salt and acid.
![Entice Toronto]()
The striploin ($29) fares better and features a nicely seared steak boasting a rosy centre. It's plated alongside a chiffonade of aggressively seasoned collard greens, purple patatas bravas and meaty asado mushrooms.
![Entice Toronto]()
When it comes to dessert, there's a tres leche waffles ($11) featuring a stack of waffles with macerated cherries and tres leche poured table side.
![2entice culinary lounge]()
It ultimately tastes okay but for some reason arrives under a cloche which leads me to expect a puff of smoke or steam to be released when it's lifted but...there's nothing. It's just another example of style before substance - a common theme throughout this evening.
Photos by Jesse Milns