Premium Sweets

Scrumptious, upscale Bangladeshi at mid-range prices

Bangladeshi restaurants are far outnumbered by North Indian restaurants in Toronto. The food they serve has distinct differences, like the use of mustard oil in lots of fish and rice dishes. The other standout are the sweets, called mishti (মিষ্টি) in Bengali. Bangladesh is part of the Bengal region and shares the same cuisine as West Bengal in India.

Premium Sweets is rare in its category: a mid-range Bangladeshi restaurant with upscale ambience. Other Bengali places in the city cater to the budget crowd. Don’t let its name fool you. Although its premium sweets are definitely a highlight, they are also a full-service restaurant. They started out in Mississauga and opened a second branch in Scarborough in 2017. It’s close to the Golden Mile, so it is a good spot to eat after outlet shopping.

Exterior of Premium Sweets
Premium Sweets
Premium Sweets interior
Interior of Premium Sweets. Second floor seating overlooks the ground level dining area.

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Gandhi Cuisine

This restaurant closed on 30 June 2020. Thanks for the memories!

Pioneers of East Indian roti and still the best

Gandhi is one of the first restaurants to serve East Indian roti in Toronto (and also the world). The East Indian roti might even have been invented here in the 1990s.

From India to the Caribbean to India to Toronto

A bit of terminology. East India refers to India, the country, as opposed to the West Indies in the Caribbean. Roti is a generic Indian term for bread but here it refers to the version in Trinidad, Guyana, and the windward islands. The life of a roti starts with a bread dough made up of maida (wheat flour). Then, ground dhal (split peas) are filled in the dough and the dough is rolled out to a thin disc. The result is a flatbread with a layer of dhal crumbs sandwiched in the middle. The semi-hard dhal doesn’t add much flavour but it provides textural contrast to the soft bread. This flatbread is known as dhalpuri roti and is a Trinidadian creation.

When people talk about West Indian roti, they usually mean a meal involving the flatbread and not the flatbread itself. Take a dhalpuri roti, put your choice of curry, meat, potatoes, and vegetables in the middle, and then fold it up into a rectangular parcel. Lightly toast it on a tawa (hotplate) and you get a West Indian roti. The fillings are usually Caribbean entrées like chicken curry and goat curry.

Gandhi takes the concept of a West Indian roti and uses traditional Indian fillings. The most popular filling here is butter chicken but you can also find other North Indian curries like jalfrezi, vindaloo, and korma. Another departure from the West Indian roti is that they use a chapati instead of a dhalpuri roti. It’s mostly the same thing except the chapati doesn’t have dhal and is much thinner.

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