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Vancouver Restaurant Takes Flight on Seedy Street

Vancouver Restaurant Takes Flight on Seedy Street
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When you taste the carrot cake puree, served alongside the tenderest of duck breasts, you realize that Makoto Ono isn't only a wonderfully talented chef, he's a fun-loving one, too.

Pidgin serves the sort of food that culinary travellers seek out around the world. It's brilliantly creative and unusual, even in a city where you have some of the finest Thai, Indian, Chinese, and Japanese cuisines within steps of each other.

Along with the carrot cake and duck breast, connoisseurs will be intrigued by the Lamb Belly and the Octopus, cooked sous-vide and served with a delicious Sweet Potato Puree.

"I'm trying to be creative. I have Japanese sensibilities and French cooking style. It's a blend of those," says Ono, a friendly guy with an easy smile who is keen to maximize his talents.

He worked in Hong Kong prior to relocating to Vancouver and launching Pidgin in February with owner Brandon Grossutti. Raised in Winnipeg, Ono helped his parents run a sushi restaurant called Edohein, one reason he appreciates the ingredients he can source on the west coast.

"The product in Vancouver is so good," Ono says. "You can't ask for anything more. My goal is to be true to the ingredients but also make food that is an expression of who I am as a chef as well."

Pidgin Speaks a Sweet Language in Gastown

Despite the quality of the food, the restaurant has had its challenges. It is on one of the most notorious streets in the drug-addled Gastown district. And while Ono and Grossutti have polished the interior to the point where you can easily forget the grungy atmosphere outside its doors, social critics have been vocal. Pidgin has been faulted for bringing a level of gentrification to the area that is out of step with the surroundings. To an outsider that attitude may seem strange, but there are many Vancouverites who possess a fierce sense of social justice and view any show of wealth as the beginning of the end of their low-income neighbourhoods.

Carrall Street is particularly unique. Across from Pidgin is a concrete square called Pigeon Park (the restaurant's name speaks more to the fusion of East and West than to the landmark) that's populated by drug users and the homeless. Pigeon Park is only three blocks south of the waters of Burrard Inlet and the touristy Water Street. But it is also only two blocks from the infamous corner of Main and Hastings, the epicentre of Vancouver's drug problems. A walk on Carrall Street will alarm visitors unprepared for the poverty, drugs, and stark squalor in what is an otherwise beautiful downtown core.

Where Does Pidgin Rank Among BC Restaurants? Click Here to See

Vancouverites have become acclimated to fine dining in Gastown, where chefs take advantage of low rents to create some of the most beautiful rooms in the city and offer excellent food at prices that would be multiples higher if served in tonier neighbourhoods like Coal Harbour, Yaletown, and Kitsilano.

Pidgin joins such great Gastown restaurants as L'Abattoir, Wildebeest, and Nicli Antica Pizzeria as dining options that should be on any foodie's list. It is the fine restaurant that is deepest into the drug culture, though, and visitors will need to be prepared for walking or driving into an atmosphere that can be uncomfortable, if not unnerving. One single female diner from Toronto told me she loved Ono's food but the neighbourhood was too disturbing for her.

I can see her point. Parts of Gastown take a strong stomach.

Read the rest of the article on Vacay.ca and find out what you should order when you visit Pidgin.

Read Adrian Brijbassi's picks for top restaurants in British Columbia.

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