"Founded
as a cooperative in 1918, the basement restaurant is a vestige of a
period in Canadian history when radical labor unions urged general
strikes as part of their campaign for economic and social revolution. It
is also a symbol of the several waves of immigrants from Finland who
flocked here to work in this paper-mill town, railway junction and port
on Lake Superior," says NYT writer Ian Austen.
"But
in some ways, it is food that has conquered all. Even in its heyday as a
political hotbed, the place was best known as a destination for a solid
meal. Today the Hoito is arguably Canada’s most famous pancake house,
particularly beloved for its formidable Finnish pancakes."
Many summers ago we bought great sausages at a deli in Thunder Bay and cooked them when we camped outside town. Still think about them, longingly. Maybe we ought to go back, says she at the beginning of a summer when we're likely to stay on the island of Montreal.
Getting a little tired of American ex-patriots telling Canadians how to think.
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