Selection of beer taps, branded with The Social: Bar + Table

Eclecticism Is on the Menu at Port Hope’s The Social Bar and Table

When I arrive at Port Hope’s The Social Bar and Table, head chef Eric Dreher is halfway through preparing the dishes for their spring menu. Each new item is being prepped for photographing for use on their website, which gives me a chance to see several of the Social’s offerings lined up along the bar. They look so good it’s hard to take my eyes off them as I sit down.

“Everybody gets to demonstrate their creativity, everybody gets to have a say in things,” Eric tells me, when I ask him how the staff settled on the new dishes. “We’ll all kind of work together, we’ll try and come up with the best menu items that we can that would suit this environment and the theme that we go with here.”

A big part of that theme is eclecticism: past menus have drawn influence from French, Indian, Mexican, Japanese, and North African cuisine. The unifying element is a cozy, casually chic ambiance and a commitment to local food sourcing wherever possible. The Social is Feast On-certified, which guarantees a high proportion of Ontario products on the menu and on tap. Hence the spring menu update, and Eric tells me they switch out dishes based on availability three to four times a year. Nearby Burnham Family Farm Market provides much of the produce, with proteins like fish and beef coming from slightly further afield, including farms in Wellington County and Kingston.

Discover Port Hope

The beer list is as local and varied as the menu. “We don’t have any Molson or Labbatt’s, we don’t do any big names. For Port Hope I believe that we are known as the Ontario craft beer bar,” manager Jason Fuller chimes in. “we’ll get a case or two from different breweries and as it runs out we jump to another brewery. It’s a constant flow.” Prominent among the taps during my visit is the Social’s house lager, brewed under the auspices of Muskoka Brewery.

Adding to the appeal is the Social’s location right beside the Ganaraska River in downtown Port Hope. When the patio is open, it more than doubles the size of the restaurant. Situated in a handsome heritage building, the restaurant manages to stand out in a city with no shortage of impressive historic architecture.

While Jason and I chat, Eric prepares a tandoori chicken salad with avocados, green grapes, arugula, toasted almond slivers, cilantro and lime. The recipe is based on one Eric’s mother’s signature dishes, and its taste is both fresh and filling. It promises to be a hit, especially in warmer weather.

I try the red curry cod and am impressed to find such a nuanced flavour outside of a dedicated Thai restaurant. On next visit I may sample one of the more traditional Ontario favourites like the prime rib beef burger, buttermilk fried chicken sandwich, or braised brisket. Or if the season’s changed, I may just see what the crew at the Social have come up with since. Eric tells me that would definitely be in the spirit of the place: “It’s a lot of hard work but it pays off because you get to be creative and it keeps your mind active. You never stop learning and there’s always room to grow and move forward.”

Share this post

Read More

Kate Boothman performs onstage at the Ganaraska Hotel
Meet the Musicians

Meet the Musicians—Kate Boothman

Talking about music is like dancing about architecture, so the saying goes. It can be hard for a musician to describe what they do, which is why Kate Boothman invented a new genre to describe her latest album, My Next Mistake. “It’s a really relaxing record about sex, drugs, and rock n’ roll, so we called it massage rock,” she says, laughing. “It’s versatile—it can be played acoustic, it can be played loud electric, but I’m a singer-songwriter, essentially.”

Read More »
Beau Dixon performs on a grand piano, and is partly reflected in the glossy raised lid
Meet the Musicians

Meet the Musicians—Beau Dixon

At the start of 2020, Beau Dixon wasn’t sure where his career was headed. Even as a multidisciplinary artist with credits in music, theatre, and television, the closure of so many performance venues was nerve-wracking. “The first few months were very scary—how’s this going to work, what am I going to do, should I go back to school, you know, take up plumbing,” he recalls. In one of the pandemic’s many unpredictable twists, he found himself working on two prestige TV productions instead. “Weirdly enough, this has been the most successful two years of my life, my career, primarily because I landed a TV series called Station Eleven. I had a substantial role in that and another series, a sci-fi series called The Expanse. So that helped during my rainy days.”

Read More »
A man in an orange hoodie looks at a bearded man playing guitar
Arts and Culture

Meet the Musicians—Close Kicks feat. Louwop

We’re used to seeing far-off places in our media. New York lofts, tropical beaches, Icelandic vistas—all perks of living in the Internet age. But it can make it all too easy to forget about the scenery and stories in our own backyard. Darryl James’ Close Kicks project is unabashedly local, and there’s a thrill of recognition in his music videos to seeing our landscapes and streets not as stand-ins for another place or era, but as themselves. Speaking to James and his collaborator Luis Segura, aka Louwop, at Lindsay’s Academy Theatre, it’s clear their commitment to nurturing the local scene runs deep.

Read More »