Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
Michelin-recognised Armenian on Yonge. Book it.

Taline is Toronto's only Armenian restaurant with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024–2025), and at the $$ price tier it delivers serious culinary credibility without the commitment of a $$$$ tasting menu. A 4.6 Google rating across 458 reviews confirms the consistency. Book it when you want a focused, considered meal that covers ground most Toronto dining itineraries miss entirely.
Taline is one of the very few places in Toronto where you can eat Armenian food at a level that has earned back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025). At a $$ price point, it sits in a different conversation from the city's $$$$ tasting-menu circuit, and that makes it genuinely useful: this is where you go when you want cooking with real culinary credibility without committing to a $300-per-head evening. Book it for a weeknight dinner when you want something considered rather than casual, or as a strong opening argument for why Toronto's mid-price dining tier punches well above its weight.
Picture Yonge Street on a Tuesday evening: the stretch between St. Clair and Summerhill is quieter than the downtown core, the kind of neighbourhood where a restaurant has to earn its regulars rather than rely on foot traffic. Taline sits at 1276 Yonge St in that pocket, and the spatial logic of the room matters here. Armenian restaurant design rarely trends toward the theatrical; this is a room built for the table and the food, not for Instagram positioning or statement lighting. The intimacy of the space is a feature, not a limitation. If you are coming with a group expecting a sprawling, high-energy dining room, recalibrate. If you are coming for a focused meal where the cooking holds the attention, you are in the right place.
Armenian cuisine is under-represented in serious dining globally. In Toronto, it is almost invisible at the level Taline operates. The cuisine draws on influences that span the South Caucasus and the eastern Mediterranean: grains, legumes, slow-cooked meats, herb-forward preparations, and a use of dried fruits and spices that reads as sophisticated to anyone paying attention. This is not novelty cuisine; it has centuries of culinary logic behind it. Taline translates that logic into a restaurant context in a city where diners are more likely to know Kaiseki or contemporary Italian than anything from Yerevan. For a food-focused traveller or a Toronto resident who genuinely wants to eat across the full range of what the city offers, that gap is exactly why this reservation is worth making. For a comparable lens on Armenian cooking in a different city, Mini Kabob in Los Angeles and Zhengyalov Hatz in Los Angeles are useful reference points, though neither operates in Taline's Michelin-recognised register.
The service question at Taline is where the value calculus gets interesting. Michelin Plate recognition signals that inspectors found the cooking technically sound and the overall experience coherent enough to flag. At the $$ tier, service polish is not always a given; many restaurants at this price point trade warmth for efficiency or efficiency for warmth. The 4.6 Google rating across 458 reviews suggests the experience is consistently landing well with diners, which is a meaningful data point at this volume. The service style at a room like this tends to be knowledgeable and direct rather than orchestrated, which suits the cuisine and the neighbourhood. It earns the price point without overclaiming it.
If you are exploring Toronto's broader dining scene, the comparison context matters. Alo, Sushi Masaki Saito, Aburi Hana, and Don Alfonso 1890 all operate at the $$$$ tier and demand significantly more financial and logistical commitment. Taline gives you Michelin-level credibility at roughly half the cost, which is a strong argument for including it in a Toronto dining itinerary rather than treating it as an alternative to those rooms. Pair it with a $$$$ meal elsewhere in the same trip and you have covered the range. For broader planning across the city, see our full Toronto restaurants guide, as well as guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in Toronto.
For the travelling food enthusiast who moves between cities looking for depth, Taline sits in a comparable position to AnnaLena in Vancouver or Tanière³ in Quebec City: credentialled, cuisine-specific, and worth planning around rather than stumbling into. If your trip takes you further afield, Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal, Narval in Rimouski, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln, and The Pine in Creemore are all worth considering alongside it in a wider Canadian dining shortlist.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Given the Michelin recognition and the 4.6 rating, this is a pleasant surprise. You do not need to set a calendar alarm or refresh a booking page at midnight. A few days to a week of lead time should be sufficient for most dates, though weekends in peak periods may warrant a little more notice. There is no obvious booking window pressure that should stop you from planning this as a spontaneous addition to a Toronto trip rather than the anchor reservation you build a schedule around.
| Detail | Taline | Alo | DaNico |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | $$ | $$$$ | $$$ |
| Cuisine | Armenian | Contemporary | Italian |
| Awards | Michelin Plate ×2 | Michelin Star | Michelin Plate |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Hard | Moderate |
| Leading for | Cuisine discovery, weeknight | Special occasion splurge | Mid-range Italian |
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taline | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | $$ | — |
| Alo | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Aburi Hana | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Edulis | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Taline and alternatives.
Taline sits at the $$ price point, which signals a relaxed but put-together crowd rather than a formal dining room. Clean, casual-to-neat clothing is appropriate. There is no evidence of a dress code, so leave the tie at home, but you would be underdressed in gym wear given the Michelin Plate recognition.
Yes, with the right expectations. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) give Taline genuine credential for a birthday or anniversary dinner, and the $$ pricing means you get a recognised-quality meal without a three-figure-per-head bill. It works best for couples or small groups who want something meaningful without the formality of Alo or Don Alfonso 1890.
Specific dietary accommodation details are not listed in the available venue data. Your safest move is to check the venue's official channels before booking, especially given Armenian cuisine's reliance on wheat-based dishes and meat. Flagging restrictions at the time of reservation is standard practice for Michelin-recognised kitchens.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is a genuine advantage for a Michelin Plate venue. A week's notice is typically sufficient, though weekends around special dates can fill faster. You do not need to set a reminder weeks in advance the way you would for Alo or Sushi Masaki Saito.
For Michelin-level Armenian specifically, Toronto has no direct like-for-like alternative, which is part of Taline's case. If the draw is quality cooking at a comparable price tier, Edulis (Spanish-influenced, also Michelin-recognised) is a strong comparison. For a step up in formality and spend, Alo is the obvious escalation.
Tasting menu availability and pricing are not confirmed in the current venue data, so committing to a verdict on format would be speculation. What is confirmed: the $$ price range and back-to-back Michelin Plates suggest strong value relative to the recognition level. Check the current menu directly before booking to confirm what formats are on offer.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.