Calgary Herald

SERVING UP INVENTIVE DISHES WITH CANADIAN FLAIR

- ELIZABETH CHORNEY-BOOTH Elizabeth Chorney-booth can be reached at elizabooth@gmail.com. Follow her on Instagram at @elizabooth or sign up for her newsletter at hungrycalg­ary.substack.com.

Circumstan­ces keep bringing Laetitia Chrapchyns­ki back to the kitchen at Donna Mac. After graduating from SAIT’S culinary program and paying her dues in a few restaurant­s around the city, the immensely talented chef was tapped for a gig at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C. in early 2020. Like everything else, that adventure was rerouted by COVID and Chrapchyns­ki found herself grounded at home in Calgary, with her more expansive dreams temporaril­y put on hold.

Chrapchyns­ki had a great profession­al relationsh­ip with Donna Mac co-owner Jeff Jamieson (who is also a partner at Proof cocktail bar and Vine Arts Wine and Spirits) and he offered her the head chef position at Donna Mac while she waited for pandemic restrictio­ns to blow over. While there, Chrapchyns­ki (or “Chef LT” as the Donna Mac crew affectiona­tely call her) gave the restaurant a much-needed burst of energy, creating some of the city’s most coveted pandemic-era take-home fare and comfort food.

By the fall of 2021, the Canadian Embassy came calling again and Chrapchyns­ki was whisked away to create Canadian-centric meals for important dignitarie­s meeting with the ambassador. She spent almost two years developing dishes that told stories of Canadian ingredient­s and traditions before setting her sights on a restaurant gig in Toronto. But circumstan­ces once again intervened and, after a bad cycling accident, she found herself back home in Calgary, close to her family and medical team. Jamieson once again offered her a job, this time as a culinary director, overseeing both Donna Mac and Proof.

During her time at the embassy, Chrapchyns­ki honed a lot of skills as well as her approach to thinking about our national cuisine, resulting in an exciting new menu at Donna Mac that restores the restaurant’s identity as a neighbourh­ood joint that happens to serve inventive food with a distinctiv­ely Canadiana flair. The signature Sylvan Star Gouda perogies ($19) and buttermilk fried chicken sandwich ($18) — both holdovers from Chrapchyns­ki’s first stint at the restaurant — are still on the menu, although the former is now an appetizer item and the latter is only available at lunch. New dishes include a pemmican-inspired, Saskatoon berry-laden beef tartare with oyster mushrooms ($22), an updated and delightful­ly bright tuna crudo ($18), agnolotti filled with Nostrala cheese and kabocha squash ($33) and pickle-brined brick chicken served with potato cake ($45). Ingredient­s are the star of the show here and Chrapchyns­ki likes playing with things like candy cap mushrooms, which appear in an ice cream that tastes more like maple syrup than fungi.

“Donna Mac has always been a bit of a chef-driven restaurant,” Chrapchyns­ki says. “Our new menu is a fusion of my upbringing and Ukrainian and French heritage, with some Vietnamese notes, some of the ingredient­s I learned how to use at the embassy, and the idea that Canada has an eclectic and evolving cuisine.”

Donna Mac is located at 1002 9th St. S.W. The restaurant is open daily for lunch, dinner, and weekend brunch. The restaurant can be reached at 403-719-3622 or through donnamacyy­c.ca.

Donna Mac is also one of the more than 85 restaurant­s participat­ing in this year’s YYC

Food and Drink Experience (also known as YYC EXP), which has expanded into a 17-day event for 2024, running from March 15 to 31. As in previous years, the festival has two components: a small selection of special events held at higher-end restaurant­s as well as a range of prix fixe menus available daily.

This year, there are three categories of prix fixe menus: threecours­e brunches and lunches (priced at $25 or $35), threecours­e dinners ($35 or $45) and multi-course gourmet tasting menus ($65 and $75). Participat­ing restaurant­s will offer one or more of these options, giving customers a good taste of what each restaurant is all about. The slate of restaurant­s includes old favourites like Charcut, Pigeonhole, and River Café as well as newer restaurant­s like Primary Colours, Business and Pleasure, and Bar Chouette. Some of the more interestin­g choices include a 30-minute “light-speed” omakase lunch at Nupo, a breakfast tasting at OEB, and an Indian feast at Calcutta Cricket Club. All of the menus are posted online. Restaurant­s tend to book fast, so make those reservatio­ns well in advance.

This year’s signature culinary events include collaborat­ive dinners at River Café, Francine’s, Model Milk, and The Wilde on 27, along with wine and spirits dinners, a one-night-only residency from chef David Leeder at Teatro, cocktail master classes at Fineprint and more. Many of these will sell out (or already have), so snag tickets where you can.

For tickets and more informatio­n, visit yycexp.com.

Finally, congratula­tions go out to The Wilde on 27 at the Dorian Hotel, which was just awarded the prestigiou­s Distinguis­hed Restaurant­s of North America (DIRŌNA) Achievemen­t of Distinctio­n. The Wilde is only the second restaurant in Calgary to receive this designatio­n — the other is Teatro. The Wilde’s kitchen is led by chef Joshua Dyer, who had become known for his opulent and inventive fine dining dishes.

 ?? ?? Culinary director Laetitia Chrapchyns­ki is back leading the team at Donna Mac after a stint at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
Culinary director Laetitia Chrapchyns­ki is back leading the team at Donna Mac after a stint at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
 ?? JIM WELLS ?? Donna Mac’s menu is an eclectic blend of Ukrainian, French, Vietnamese and Canadian cuisines.
JIM WELLS Donna Mac’s menu is an eclectic blend of Ukrainian, French, Vietnamese and Canadian cuisines.
 ?? ??
 ?? JIM WELLS ?? Agnolotti are filled with kabocha squash and Nostrala cheese.
JIM WELLS Agnolotti are filled with kabocha squash and Nostrala cheese.
 ?? JIM WELLS ?? Donna Mac is a “chef-driven restaurant,” says Chrapchyns­ki.
JIM WELLS Donna Mac is a “chef-driven restaurant,” says Chrapchyns­ki.
 ?? JIM WELLS ?? A light Tuna Crudo is one of the new dishes on the menu.
JIM WELLS A light Tuna Crudo is one of the new dishes on the menu.
 ?? JIM WELLS ?? Hearty brick chicken is brined in pickle juice.
JIM WELLS Hearty brick chicken is brined in pickle juice.

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