Biz Battle: The scoop on the area’s longtime ice cream rivals

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Our local cold war

The Village Chill and Dutch Dreams are two of the oldest and most popular destinations for ice cream in the Forest Hill area. To satisfy our sweet tooth, the Town Crier set out to discover what sets these destinations apart from the competition.

Opened in 1985 by Theodoor Aben, Dutch Dreams has been a neighbourhood fixture at Bathurst Street and St. Clair Avenue West with its bounty of sweet treats and eclectic décor, which has even been the setting of a Spice Girls video.

Second generation owners Theo and Dina Aben (who met at the shop when Dina came in as a customer) now run the business, which boasts between 32 and 50 kinds of kosher ice cream. There is also red velvet cheesecake and a variety of homemade desserts.

Chatting in the back seating area inside the shop, Theo Aben recalls how his grandmother used to serve him ice cream in the same fashion.

“Our ice cream is all served with whip cream and fresh fruit, which is a Dutch signature in Holland,” says enthusiastically, with a smile. “My Dutch pancakes are extremely popular: people drive from all over to have them, and it’s my grandmother’s recipe.”

Having been part of the business since he was 12, Aben says he’s been able to serve three or four generations of customers.

Many couples, whose first date was at Dutch Dreams, have also taken engagement photos at the shop. He’s also witnessed several proposals.

Much like fashion, ice cream is trendy, with flavours frequently going in and out of style, Aben contends.

“Pina Colada was one of our best sellers and then, about 10 years ago, I don’t know what happened, but we couldn’t give it away to anybody — like, nobody wanted it,” he says, his eyes widening. “And then, all of a sudden, there was this surge of Pina Colada lovers that just showed up, like three years ago, and now I’m going through it like crazy.”

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Although The Village Chill has been part of the neighbourhood since 1988, manager John Kin’s parents have been running the Lonsdale Road and Spadina Road shop for the last year.

The family business is home to 25 flavours of ice cream, although the shop also stocks extra varieties, such as lime sorbet and bubble gum for those customers seeking the “less popular” dessert flavours.

While ice cream is a big draw for customers, Kin notes many people also come in for the fat-free, low-calorie frozen yogurt.

“You can choose any two flavours, then we blend real fruit, Oreos, Smarties — even coffee,” he says from behind the counter, stating that being friendly is also key to their success. “If people request it, we also do multiple flavours for the ice cream.

“A kid once asked for five flavours in a small, and we said, ‘Sure thing.’”

The ice cream parlour also features ice cream cakes, and sells Dippin’ Dots: small ice cream balls flash frozen with liquid nitrogen in flavours such as banana split, cookie dough and cotton candy.

Working alongside his brother James, Kin says having customers remember their names is a frequent highlight of the job, but he also recalls receiving a letter in the mail after a customer came in without any cash.

“We actually had somebody send us a cheque from the United States because they didn’t have any money,” he says, noting the shop doesn’t accept debit or credit cards. “It’s an amazing place; people are really nice.

“We just really like the neighbourhood.”

Dutch Dreams The Village Chill
Established: 1985 1988
Nearest intersection: Bathurst Street and St. Clair Avenue W. Lonsdale Road and Spadina Road
Kinds of ice cream: 32 to 50 kosher
flavours
25 to 28
Owner’s favourite ice cream Moose Droppings Bordeaux Cherry
Most popular flavour: French Vanilla Chocolate but Moose Droppings is a close second
The scoop: In true Dutch tradition, ice cream is served with fresh fruit and whipping cream. They make their own desserts including the waffle cones and Dutch pancakes made from a secret family formula. Also sell tubs of ice cream. Also serve smoothies, shakes, fat free low calorie probiotic frozen yogourt and Dippin’ Dots, an ice cream snack of little balls that have been flash frozen with liquid nitrogen.
Open year round? Yes, but with shorter hours in the winter No, open from April until it gets cold, usually around November


This article was originally published in the September 2013 edition of the Forest Hill Town Crier.

Ice Cream Battle

Local Designer: Live Beautiful

DESIGN DUO: Live Beautiful’s Laura Hart, left, and Alison Nasmith show off pieces from their Rough and Tumble collection at Aime, a Yorkville boutique carrying their line.

DESIGN DUO: Live Beautiful’s Laura Hart, left, and Alison Nasmith show off pieces from their Rough and Tumble collection at Aime, a Yorkville boutique carrying their line.

While taking a jewellery-making course, Laura Hart and Alison Nasmith ignored their instructor’s design advice, which proved to be a key step in starting their own business.

The wide band ring — made much bigger than their teacher saw fit — wound up being the first piece they sold upon launching their jewellery line Live Beautiful online nearly two years ago.

“Someone from Australia bought it and it was really exciting,” Hart says.

“It was amazing because at that point we had this little Etsy shop and maybe our friends and family would buy things but it was like somebody bought it from Australia!” Nasmith adds. “It was cool and she got it and she loved it and to make something for someone and to know that we’re a part of their life in that little way is great.”

In contrast to poorly made, cheap and mass-produced items, the pair hope to challenge the marketplace by creating unique, handcrafted and sustainable jewellery using recycled materials, found objects and vintage pieces.

“We try to find ethical stones and small suppliers so we’re trying to put a positive product out into the world that still looks great,” Nasmith says. “We offer jewellery with a conscience so a big part of our brand is making everything by hand.”

In April Live Beautiful’s most recent collection, Rough and Tumble, debuted at three stores in Ontario including Aime boutique on Davenport Road, where they held a launch celebration in early May.

This month will also mark the release of the company’s bridal creations, which along with their other pieces are created in their Annex office near Bloor and Bathurst streets, featuring statement pieces that incorporate embroidery, beads and vintage lace.

“It’s very special to be part of somebody’s day and to create something old,” Nasmith says, adding a lot of their bridal work is custom made and she also designed her own wedding ring. “I love using pieces from people’s collection like working with their grandmother’s broach and turning that into a bib necklace. It’s personal and beautiful.”

Prior to this endeavour, Hart and Nasmith became fast friends while attending university in Kingston, where they fittingly worked together in a jewellery store and would constantly critique newly arriving stock.

Several years later they decided to take a jewellery-making course to spend more time together and to do something creative.

WHAT'S THE STORY? Laura Hart and Alison Nasmith create jewellery with a conscience made with materials sourced from small suppliers. Many of the pieces have a back story like the Herkimer diamonds, which are from an Amish farm in upstate New York.

WHAT’S THE STORY? Laura Hart and Alison Nasmith create jewellery with a conscience made with materials sourced from small suppliers. Many of the pieces have a back story like the Herkimer diamonds, which are from an Amish farm in upstate New York.

“We just kind of realized that we had a talent for it, as we were making stuff in the class, we were like this is something that feels right, it feels natural,” Hart says. “It was coming from us organically, like we weren’t really trying to do things but they were just coming out really cool.”

With varying skills and aesthetics, the pair say they bring different things to the table and complement each other well.

“I have maybe like 700 ideas and maybe three of them are good,” Nasmith says. “I just try a bunch of different things and lots of our designs are kind of accidents. I’m trying to do something else and then I’m like I don’t like it like that but maybe if I do this instead and there’s things I’ll do half way and Laura will come and tell me how she sees it.”

While their personal favourites of the current collection include the large Roxy studs and the bullet shaped Presley earrings, a popular draw are several pieces made with Herkimer diamonds they carried over from a previous line.

“A big thing we do is work with people on Etsy, we just feel like it’s a great community and they’re all small businesses all run by individuals and we want to support that,” Hart says. “The Herkimers are great on many different levels. They are beautiful pieces, people really respond to them aesthetically but they have such a great story.”

With a background in academics, Nasmith devotes a lot of time to researching where the materials come from, the story behind it and making sure everything is conflict free to see if the items suit their brand.

While investigating a batch of Herkimer diamonds, she learned they were from an Amish farm in upstate New York.

“The story just totally captured my heart,” Nasmith says. “They kind of come naturally through soil and they’re quite tough and the farm has horses that plow the fields and the stones were bothering their hooves so they let one miner very infrequently come to the farm and clear them out so its easier plowing and that’s where we get the stones. We paired them with 100 percent recycled metals from a supplier where our purchase goes towards animal welfare organizations. It looks great and it feels great, it’s like a lovely ethical piece and it really embodies what we’re trying to do with the line.”

As the business venture continues to grow, Hart and Nasmith hope the values of the brand will resonate with customers who also like the designs aesthetically.

“A big part of what we’re trying to do is create something that has a story,” Hart says. “It’s creating something that is different and hopefully they’ll want to invest in something they can keep forever and pass on to future generations. That would be the greatest thing if we could create something that people wanted to keep forever.”

Local Designer: Niki & Lola

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Angie Tingas and Michael Proteau’s children inspired their jewellery line — both literally and figuratively.

Named after their daughters Sophia Niki and Alexia Lola, the idea for Niki & Lola came about because they brought the girls to life.

“When I had them I thought, if I can make those, let me see if I can make other things too,” Tingas says. “I went to school for fashion but fashion management and people used to say, ‘Do you design?’ and I would say, ‘Oh no, I’m not artistic.’ So they actually inspired a want to try and do more.”

While Tingas conceptualizes the jewellery designs, Proteau develops the ideas and executes them into finished products made from raw metal and sterling silver.

“My highlight is when Mike actually interprets what I draw and makes something really, really beautiful,” Tingas says, adding they had a third daughter while they launched the line earlier this year. “I’m more like I want this out of the pieces and somehow he figures out how to make my ideas happen. Sometimes you don’t think your ideas will translate and they do.”

Early Nomad, their first collection of one-of-a-kind and handmade earrings, necklaces, rings and bracelets is available online at nikiandlola.com and designed and crafted in their home studio near Danforth and Jones avenues.

The Agny Spear

My personal fave: The Agny Spear

“There are a few people who get super excited about everything we do and they’ve been to every launch or media event and it just lifts your spirits and makes you feel like you’re going somewhere,” says Proteau.

Although Tingas had already started creating jewellery before they joined force, once she decided she wanted to go away from beads and into metal jewellery, collaborating was a natural progression since Proteau already had experience cutting, shaving and polishing metal.

“My background hobby wise has been in automobiles, cars, motorcycles so a lot of metal work was involved there,” he says. “As well I have some other hobbies that include electronics and that’s where the soldering came in.”

Inspired by simple geometry and a theme of early humanity, pieces like the shield ring symbolize protection while the astra bracelet, which has Swarovski crystals placed at random around the bangle, symbolizes the night
sky.

“I think it also speak to us, like we’re so different but somehow it meshed like our aesthetics,” Tingas says. “We get our inspirations off of each other like I’m more pretty and Mike’s a little more motorcycle-edgy
and somehow we try and blend those two.”

“It kind of goes with our name too,” adds Proteau. “Our two daughters, the one is like soft and sensitive and the other one’s like rough and tumble.”

The team behind Niki & Lola
The team behind Niki & Lola. Top image, the stylish and surprisingly light weight Polygonia Bangle.

Local Designer: Damn Heels

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Hailey Coleman was backpacking across England, Spain, France and Italy when she had enough of her damn heels.

“I hobbled home barefoot after a night out in heels and I was like, ‘Why do women always sacrifice comfort for style?’ ” Coleman says from her home near Eglinton Avenue and Laird Drive.

Her sore feet inspired her to launch Damn Heels, which started off as a line of foldable ballerina slippers and evolved into a stylish line of everyday flats.

“The design inspiration for every shoe comes from high heels so you get the streamline sexiness of a stiletto with the comfort of a flat,” she says. “The flats are not only for women to take their heels off after they had
enough of their heels, they’re also just for women who want to still look and feel great even while wearing flats.”

Although Damn Heels are available online at www.damnheels.com and select retail locations including Blo and Alma Natural Spa on Yonge Street and Gussied Up on Bathurst Street, throughout October Coleman hit the streets of Toronto to offer her shoes from the trunk of a Smart Fortwo Coupe.
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While one dollar from every pair of flats sold during the pop-up sale were donated to Rethink Breast Cancer, Damn Heels has donated over 1,600 shoes to other causes including Nellie’s and Dress For Success.

“These are organization that help disadvantaged women with clothing and giving them the skills to put together a resume or help them through interviews and they help girls out during prom season by outfitting girls for
prom,” she says. “So those really mean a lot to me to be a part of because they help women look and feel fabulous, which is exactly in line with our mission.”

Coleman, who is also putting together a jeans company, finds it fulfilling to watch women slip into her shoes and see a smile spread across their faces, she says.

Her shoes come in matching clutches, which can also be unfolded into tote bags.

“I really just want women to feel fabulous,” she says. “At the end of the day that’s what it’s all about. I define it as looking great, feeling great and being comfortable.”

Local designer: Cheryl Gushue/Cascata Blu


Swimwear designer Cheryl Gushue still has Barbies in her loft. It’s not that she’s an avid collector or simply likes to play with dolls. Rather, the figurines serve as a reminder of her start in the fashion industry, sporting the first intricate swimsuits she constructed when she was a mere 10 years old.

“I still have them,” she says from her Leslieville home. “I guess I knew that was sort of my calling. I kind of live for the beach and my place is like a beach house.”

Although she’s been designing custom swimsuits for the past eight years and has been featured on **Fashion Television,** Gushue and her business partner Joan Kelley launched Cascata Blu, a resort-wear line of
swimsuits, cover-ups and body jewellery, at a fashion show on Sept. 8.

“I want to be able to cover as many body types as I possibly can and I just want women to look their best,” says Gushue, who studied fashion design at Seneca College and has also made a name for herself in the beauty
industry as a makeup artist. “I will always make something that I want to wear and something that’s comfortable. My fabrics are super soft, have lots of ties and are very adjustable.”

With a goal of hitting international distribution at beach boutique hotels and cruise ships, Cascata Blu, which is Italian for blue waterfall, is currently available online at cascatablu.com and at Kamalame Cay Boutique
Hotel on Andros Island in the Bahamas.

“Fashion design and fashion has always been an interest to me, that was always my first love,” she says. “It’s one of those lifelong dreams that I managed to do as a living and as a career.”

ON THE RUNWAY: A shot from the official launch of Cascata Blu’s 2013 resort wear collection at The Spoke Club on Sept. 8, for more images click here.

Radar: Young Empires

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Shortly after forming in 2009, the band Young Empires got flown down to Bogota, Colombia to take part in a music festival featuring well-known acts like Green Day and Jamiroquai.

“It was something special just to see the culture down there and kind of get treated like Kings of Leon for a weekend,” bassist Jake Palahnuk says from a Laundromat in Parkdale. “It was pretty neat, having your own bodyguard, five-star hotel rooms each. We were just a young band with a couple of demos up online so it was pretty cool.”

Although the band — which also includes vocalist and keyboardist Matthew Vlahovich, guitarist Robert Aaron Ellingson and drummer Taylor Hill — resides in Toronto’s west end, Palahnuk got his start in music in
Hamilton, where he played his debut show as part of a rock cover band at a grade 7 talent show. He took up percussion first but changed when the band he wanted to join was searching for a bassist. After trading his Nintendo 64 for a Squier bass and teaching himself to play, he honed his skills in the Toronto-based group Turn off the Stars for seven years.

“I had met Matt, our lead singer, actually at my last band’s last show,” he says, adding Vlahovich had a solo project then called Golden Girls. “At the time I had been playing with my guitar player Aaron in another project just kind of jamming, playing for fun and I reached out to Matt to see if he wanted to join and the three of us just kind of hit it off right away and started making songs.”

Within a few weeks of joining forces, Vlahovich was invited to play a solo gig, which they decided to play as a band instead and immediately had to come up with a band name for promo posters.

“We just wanted to choose something young, something fresh, that had potential to be something really big and Young Empires came out of that,” he says.

The group’s debut EP, Wake All My Youth, was released in January 2012 and landed them live appearances on MTV, George Stroumbolopoulos Tonight and 102.1 The Edge. Their single “White Doves,” featuring an interactive Facebook music video, also receives quality airtime across the country.

Young-Empires

“We describe our sound as world beat haute rock,” Palahnuk says. “The world beat kind of refers to the tribal and the Latin American percussion that we use in our music and the haute rock refers to like the philosophy of music, which is to make you feel good and to make you feel like the sidewalk is your personal runway.”

In June the band took the stage at the Horseshoe Tavern for a North By Northeast Festival showcase featuring Yukon Blonde and The Lumineers, which was broadcast live on CBC Radio 3.

“That was a pretty incredible show,” he says. “It was really great. I think there were more people outside trying to get in than there were inside. It was so hot in there, just disgustingly hot. The hottest show I’ve been to, it was like a sauna pretty much on stage.”

On Aug. 30 the band will perform along with Lights at the “Ultimate End of Summer” party at Sunnyside Pavilion, before embarking on Canadian tour dates with electro-pop group Dragonette.

“Every tour we all end up getting in fights by the end of it but that’s expected when you spend 24 hours a day with four people — it’s like being married,” he says. “We’ve become best friends through the course of this
band. I think you kind of have to be if you’re going to make it.”