Happy & Olive
Open a restaurant in a time when about the worst thing you can do is open a restaurant? Check. When so many restaurants are closing for lunch and reducing their hours, why not offer morning coffee, a lunch menu, dinner service and a weekend brunch? Check, check and check. Happy and Olive is a bright spot, the kind of place to sit down for coffee with a friend, then come back for a date-night dinner. But, really, this is a rebel story — because restaurant veterans Frank and Andrea Olson, and Ann and Dave Jackson’s vision is to go against all the negative trends we’re seeing in the restaurant business.
Brunch is stellar, and the lunch and dinner menus offer a tour of the world, from a latke menu to Pepper Crusted Black Cod to Moroccan Lamb Rack Chops served with a feta, ricotta and carrot tart.
We know the Olsons from the Red Ox Inn and Canteen, and the Jacksons owned the Wired Cup coffee shop in Strathearn. They’ve taken the best of both the cafe and the casual- fine-dining worlds, and transformed it into a community hub. Not bad for a place that isn’t even a year old, yet. — Steven Sandor
Happy & Olive
Crestwood | 9640 142 St NW, Edmonton | 825.401.4958 | happyandolive.ca
Ralphs Fried Chicken
Nitpickers will point out that Ralphs Fried Chicken once existed as part of a convenience store in Strathearn, and that it isn’t technically “new,” because it had a cult following for years. But, when the LRT — and redevelopment — led to the end of the strip mall that bodega called home, many fans feared it would be the end of Ralphs. Then, in 2023, it reopened — not as something to be sold alongside cigarettes, gum and chocolate bars, but in its own dedicated space. That’s why, for us, it qualifies as new (and, heck, Edify sets the rules, anyway).
But be warned: Ralphs’ fans have multiplied — expect lineups for the famous fried chicken and wedges. If you’re hoping for a salad, try the grocery store next door, because this spot is dedicated to chicken and potatoes. Once a cult classic on the south side, Ralphs is now a full-on rock star in the north. — Steven Sandor