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    Restaurant in Toronto, Canada

    Aloette

    360Pearl Points

    Patrick Kriss's bistro, without the Alo wait.

    Aloette, Restaurant in Toronto

    About Aloette

    Chef Patrick Kriss's approachable counterpart to Alo, Aloette delivers technically precise contemporary cooking at a $$$-tier price point with service polish that punches above its bracket. Michelin Plate–recognised (2024 and 2025) and ranked on OAD's Casual North America list three years running, it's the strongest argument for a Toronto special-occasion dinner that doesn't require a tasting-menu commitment.

    The Verdict

    Aloette earns its place on Spadina as one of Toronto's most consistent casual-fine dining rooms. Chef Patrick Kriss built his reputation at Alo, the tasting-menu institution a few blocks away, and Aloette is the more accessible expression of that same kitchen sensibility — $$$-priced, reservation-friendly, and designed for the kind of meal where you want serious cooking without the ceremony of a multi-course commitment. If you're deciding between the two, Aloette is the right call for a date night or celebratory dinner where flexibility matters; Alo is the call when you want the full, uninterrupted progression. Book Aloette when you want Patrick Kriss's standards at a price point that doesn't require a special budget conversation.

    The Space

    Aloette occupies the ground floor of a Spadina Avenue building in the Fashion District, and the room telegraphs its intent clearly: this is a bistro with fine-dining discipline, not the other way around. The layout is compact and deliberate — a bar anchoring one end, close-set tables filling the main floor, the kind of spatial arrangement that creates atmosphere through proximity rather than grand gestures. For a special occasion dinner, request a table rather than bar seating if you want a more settled, unhurried feel; the bar works well for solo diners or a couple who want to eat with a bit more energy around them. The scale is intimate without being precious, and that balance is central to what makes Aloette work as a celebration venue: it feels considered without being stiff.

    Why Aloette Works for Special Occasions

    The service philosophy here is where Aloette most clearly distinguishes itself from Toronto's broader casual-dining tier. At the $$$ price point, many rooms in this city trade on informality to justify the gap in polish , the logic being that a relaxed room earns goodwill for softer service. Aloette doesn't make that trade. The front-of-house carries the attentiveness you'd associate with a more expensive room without tipping into formality. That's a harder balance to strike than it sounds, and it's the reason Aloette performs well for business meals, anniversaries, and birthday dinners where the stakes are higher than a Tuesday night out.

    That service standard also justifies the price more than the food alone does. The cooking is technically accomplished , Kriss's training is evident in the precision of the menu , but at $$$ per head in Toronto in 2025, you're paying for the full experience: the room, the pacing, the attention. Aloette delivers on all three with enough consistency to make it a reliable recommendation rather than a high-variance gamble. Compared to Grey Gardens on the same general price tier, Aloette runs a tighter, more polished room; compared to Antler, it skews less concept-driven and more technique-forward.

    Awards and Recognition

    Aloette holds a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025) and has been ranked on the Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America list three years running , #91 in 2024, #123 in 2025, and Highly Recommended in 2023. The OAD ranking is a meaningful signal here: that list is crowd-sourced from frequent diners and food professionals, which means Aloette's position reflects repeat-visitor satisfaction rather than a single critic's visit. A Google rating of 4.5 across 1,827 reviews adds further weight. This is a room that performs consistently, not one that peaks on good nights. For context among Canadian contemporaries, venues like AnnaLena in Vancouver and Tanière³ in Quebec City operate in a similar register of serious-but-accessible fine dining, and Aloette belongs in that conversation.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Reservations at Aloette are moderately difficult to secure , not the weeks-in-advance sprint that Alo requires, but weekend tables at prime hours will go quickly. Book one to two weeks out for Friday or Saturday evening; weeknight availability is generally more forgiving. Reservations: Recommended; book online via the venue's reservation system. Dress: Smart casual is the practical standard , the room has enough formality that jeans-and-a-hoodie reads as underdressed, but there's no enforced dress code. Budget: $$$ per head, which in Toronto's current market means expect to spend in the moderate-to-upper range before wine. Location: 163 Spadina Ave, 1st Floor, Fashion District. Getting there: Spadina streetcar and Osgoode subway station are both within walking distance; street parking is available but limited on weekend evenings.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Aloette stacks up against Toronto's broader fine-dining tier.

    Pearl Picks , If You're Exploring Further

    If Aloette's contemporary bistro approach appeals, these are worth adding to your Toronto shortlist: FK, Restaurant 20 Victoria, and Grey Gardens. For the full Patrick Kriss experience, Alo is the next logical step. Outside Toronto, the same calibre of serious-but-welcoming contemporary cooking shows up at Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln. For those building a broader Canadian dining itinerary, our full Toronto restaurants guide covers the wider field, and our Toronto hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companions for planning the full trip. Internationally, César in New York City and Jungsik in Seoul operate in a comparable vein of technically grounded contemporary cooking worth benchmarking against.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Aloette?

    Bar seating at Aloette is available and a practical option if you're dining solo or as a pair without a reservation. It's one of the better ways to access the room on shorter notice, given that weekend prime-hour tables book up. The bistro format suits counter dining well, and the $$$ price point applies regardless of where you sit.

    What should I wear to Aloette?

    Aloette's bistro positioning on Spadina signals a relaxed but put-together crowd. Think neat casual — a clean shirt or blouse works; you don't need a jacket. It's more dressed-down than a tasting-menu room like Alo, but the Michelin Plate recognition and $$$ pricing mean you won't feel out of place making an effort.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Aloette?

    Aloette operates as a bistro rather than a tasting-menu room — that format lives upstairs at Alo. If you're after an à la carte contemporary dining experience at $$$ without the weeks-in-advance booking pressure that Alo demands, Aloette is the practical call. Three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining Casual North America list backs up the consistency.

    Can Aloette accommodate groups?

    Aloette can handle small groups, but it's a bistro-format room rather than a large event space, so parties of 6+ should contact them directly to confirm availability and configuration. For a special-occasion dinner for 2–4, it's a natural fit at the $$$ price point. Larger groups needing a private room would be better served looking elsewhere in Toronto.

    What are alternatives to Aloette in Toronto?

    For a step up in formality and a full tasting menu, Alo (also Patrick Kriss) is the obvious move — budget more time and booking lead. Grey Gardens and FK offer comparable contemporary bistro energy at a similar price tier. If you want to spend more for a marquee experience, Sushi Masaki Saito or Edulis both sit in Toronto's top tier for their respective formats.

    Location

    163 Spadina Ave. 1st Floor, Toronto, ON M5V 2A5, Canada

    Toronto, Canada

    Compare Aloette

    Booking Options Near Aloette
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    AloetteContemporary$$$Moderate
    AloContemporary$$$$Unknown
    Sushi Masaki SaitoSushi, Japanese$$$$Unknown
    Aburi HanaKaiseki, Japanese$$$$Unknown
    Don Alfonso 1890Contemporary Italian, Italian$$$$Unknown
    EdulisCanadian, Mediterranean Cuisine$$$$Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    Aloette sits at $$$ in a Toronto fine-dining tier that is otherwise dominated by $$$$ venues. That price gap matters: if you want Patrick Kriss's standards without committing to the full tasting-menu format at Alo, Aloette is the direct answer. Alo is the harder booking and the more complete progression, it belongs in the conversation with Toronto's top tables alongside Sushi Masaki Saito and Aburi Hana, both of which run $$$$ omakase formats that are exceptional but inflexible. If you want to eat well in Toronto without locking into a two-to-three-hour set progression, Aloette is the better fit than any of those three.

    Against Edulis and Don Alfonso 1890, both at $$$$, Aloette loses on raw ambition but wins on value and booking ease. Edulis is the stronger choice if seafood-forward Canadian-Mediterranean cooking is your target and you're willing to pay for it; Don Alfonso 1890 is the call for a formal Italian occasion with full-service depth. Neither is a direct substitute for Aloette's casual-fine balance.

    For a celebration dinner where price, service quality, and booking practicality all need to align, Aloette is the most dependable option in this peer group. It's not the most ambitious room in Toronto, but it's the one most likely to deliver a high-quality experience without requiring weeks of advance planning or a $$$$ spend. Book Aloette for flexibility; book Alo or Sushi Masaki Saito when the occasion calls for a more complete, immersive format.

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