Start with a truffle salad ($12), a meal in itself, with roasted hazelnuts giving it a toasty finish. Erdinger Weissbeer ($7.25/500mL), a light, refreshing wheat beer, goes well with the greens.
The pub also makes one of the best crostini plates ($12) in the city. What’s key is the roasted tomato, which is cooked until it’s super-sweet. If it wasn’t mixed with mozzarella and fresh basil, it would be a dessert. To complement the sweetness, go with the Floris Ninkeberry ($7.25) from the pub’s extensive beer list. It’s a light Belgian wheat beer (just 3.5-per-cent alcohol) that’s heavily infused with essences of mango, passion fruit, apricot and peach. It smells and feels like Champagne on the tongue.
For the main, try the mini-burgers (three for $13). The bacon and apple relish is what elevates these sliders above the rest – if you like pineapple on burgers, the apple is a step in that direction. Try it with an Erdinger Dunkel ($7.25/500mL), a German dark beer that’s not overly heavy, but has the deep malt flavour that goes well with meat. (10534 Jasper Ave., 780-428-0825) –Steven Sandor
Bistro Meets Bar
The Pourhouse Bier Bistro carries 60-plus brews, including hard-to-find ginger beer, and the food, a twist on pub grub and continental fare, is surprisingly handsome.
The servers know their beer and can articulate the flavours well, but pairing is where they fall short. However the chef’s daily specials are designed to accompany the weekly list of beverage specials, so the server was able to set up my entree, a shrimp and havarti stuffed chicken breast ($14.50), with a special and unusual Japanese Cabernet ale served in a cobalt blue bottle. The Minoh Ale ($10) is heavy with grapes complementing the dish’s sweet kernels of corn and beans.
When it comes to the menu’s staples, the albacore tuna dish ($18) finds its perfect partner in the Schneider-Weisse Hefe-Weizen ($8.75/500mL), a German wheat beer with an acidic, slightly spicy flavour and apple finish. Like the beer, the tuna – well-done on the edges and rare in the middle – has a sweet aftertaste, from the sesame seed crusting and ginger sauce drizzle. A hint of wasabi echoes the Schneider-Weisse’s spice.
The Pourhouse has several burgers, including a curious grilled chicken with Brie, cumin aioli and mango cubes ($14). It’s a heavy sandwich, so I recommend you cut through it with a very light and dry pilsner from Turkey called Efes Pilsen ($6.25). Efes has a bitter finish that tastes like it was made for the Brie. (10354 82 Ave., 780-757-7687, pourhouseonwhyte.com) –Omar Mouallem
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