Red Rose Patisserie

Posted by Emily Thomas / Reviewed on April 5, 2009

4 Comments

Red Rose BakeryI asked my friend Sona to take us to her favourite Persian bakery in Toronto, so she meets us (picks us up... in a car!) at Finch station and drives us the short distance to Red Rose Patisserie. We arrive really hungry because one of us (who I'll call "Shortbread") gets lost on her way uptown and delays us.

Red Rose BakeryYonge and Finch is exemplary of a great city, a curious mix of Persian and Korean restaurants and business. Inside Red Rose, customers speak Farsi and snack on freshly baked Persian sweets or take away boxes of imported Iranian chocolates and crystallized sugar to dissolve in coffee and tea. There are also huge containers of nuts and dried fruit available in bulk, a nice extra that I sincerely wish was available in every bakery I visit.

Red Rose BakeryThe display case is full to the brim and consists of shirini tar, "moist sweets" with custard and cream, and shirini khoshk "dry sweets" that mostly resemble little cookies. Shortbread goes straight for the cream puff ($3.00), a fresh piece of pastry stuffed with pure whip cream. Alyssa chooses a Neapolitan ($3.50), layered flake pastry with custard, and Sona has her favourite, rollete, a pastry roll with cream and pistachio. (Pistachio abounds inside Red Rose.)

Red Rose BakeryRed Rose BakeryEverything arrives at our table nicely displayed and dusted with icing sugar. I finish off everyone else's dessert and sample the plate of shirini khoshk that Sona chose. My favourite is a soft, moist cookie wrapped around ground figs, very fresh and very sweet. Sona tells me to try a cookie with poppy seeds. "It's interesting," she says. It is very light and practically disintegrates in my mouth.

Red Rose BakeryThe most interesting dessert we try is the faloodeh ($3.99), thin starch noodles in rose water sorbet, definitely a new taste for me. (Red Rose also offers saffron ice cream. Given the chance, I would have chosen this instead.) It's really sweet and refreshing, and arrives at the table with bottles of cherry and lemon syrup to pour over top of it. I like the taste of the faloodeh plain, but it looks so nice with the cherry syrup that Alyssa dumps some on anyhow.

Red Rose Bakery

Red Rose Bakery

Red Rose Bakery

Red Rose Bakery

Photos by Alyssa Bistonath

Discussion

4 Comments

Tim / April 6, 2009 at 9:06 AM
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Looks great. Oh, and gotta love the nickname "shortbread".

Miri / April 19, 2009 at 2:26 PM
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Good Job,
This Bakery goes lengths to use originality , the cookies are to die for.............

moe In replying to a comment from Tim / November 14, 2009 at 12:27 AM
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Waste of a drive uptown. Service was awful. Coffee bad. Tea bad. U cannot eat the pastries your purchase in the store!!! U need to buy them separately. I was encouraged to go there after having a good experience @ the shehrzade on college, but the experience was awful, Oh, by the way we just had food @ zafarrun next door and their service was as bad - food arrived before cutlery! - and I am confident they do not have a chef, or a master cook. It is sort of quality kebab that u get from any other Persian joint. They said both places have the same management which would not surprise me. Don't go, and if did, recall that I told you so.

bob / December 30, 2009 at 11:21 AM
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Pars bakery at 6049 Yonge in the little Iranian plaza is the best Persian bakery in town.

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