Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Restaurant Takeover dishes out tough news

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LOIS ABRAHAM TORONTO — Restaurant­s teetering on the edge of bankruptcy need to get with the times, says a food industry expert who is passionate about helping failing eateries get their ledgers back in the black.

Chef Corbin Tomaszeski, who dines incognito as part of Restaurant Takeover, says he’s amazed that many restaurate­urs are not up-todate when it comes to social networking or don’t have Wi-Fi.

“If you look at the younger generation with their smartphone­s, you’ve got to get on board with that. People come in with their smartphone­s. What do they do?” he asked. “They take pictures, there’s Facebook, they’re tweeting, there’s Pinterest, Instagram, there’s all those things they do and that’s just with their cellphone,” he said.

“That’s a huge impact on your business and if you’re not set up for it, you’re screwed.”

Tomaszeski, who is executive chef at the Royal Ontario Museum and has 20 years experience in the food trade, is one of the experts who, along with designers, turn around failing eateries in the new show Restaurant Takeover. The fresh take on Restaurant Makeover premieres Aug. 30 on Food Network Canada.

“I like the spin on the new direction the show has taken,” with a greater focus on food and more tough love, Tomaszeski said.

What’s different is the addition of spycams, which provide undercover footage of what customers would see, “which makes it blatantly obvious why they’re having the problems they are,” he added.

“We’re actually looking at the restaurant while they’re in business, which is something that never happened before. (Before) we went when it was empty, there was never any public there. ... You now have that realness to the show.”

He said there’s more focus on resolving why the restaurant­s are having problems rather than just doing a quick fix and creating a few dishes.

“There’s a little more accountabi­lity on the restaurant’s side with the chef and the designer taking over the restaurant. And (it’s) really explaining to these restaurant owners that their business is in the pits and we need to do something about it.”

Besides Tomaszeski, other familiar faces include Massimo Capra, chef and co-owner of Toronto Italian restaurant­s Mistura and Sopra Upper Lounge, and designers Cherie Stinson and Cheryl Torrenueva. They’re being joined by some newbies: chefs Richard Andino, Derek Minkensky, Andrea Nicholson and Adam Hynam-Smith, as well as designers Montana Burnett, Paula Velez, Amanda Campbell and Alison Milne.

As in the show’s previous incarnatio­n, restaurant­s apply to participat­e and agree to shut down during the six-day makeover. And they must pony up $15,000, which the show matches.

There has been criticism levelled at Restaurant Makeover — called a curse by some — that establishm­ents have gone out of business after their remake. But Tomaszeski said it’s not the TV show that was to blame. Some of the restaurant­s were already too far gone.

“By the time we get in there and people think that $15,000 or $30,000 is going to save a dying restaurant I think they need a little dose of reality. Just because we put paint on the wall and new floors and new tables and chairs, that’s not always good enough. People need to throw away the bad habits,” he said.

The first season of Restaurant Takeover targets 13 eateries in Ontario and shooting is underway on the second season. In the premiere airing Thursday, Tomaszeski and designer Velez redo Village Pizza and Restaurant in Tottenham, Ont., northwest of Toronto. In the reveal, owner Bernice Augusto, whose decor was dated and cluttered, is at first not receptive to the new modern furniture and airier interior.

“You gotta be firm with these people because they don’t get it,” Tomaszeski said. “They’re so far into the depths of their business falling apart they’ve lost sight of why they’re there, they’ve lost sight of why they have these businesses. It’s really a shame because usually you see that hidden golden nugget of opportunit­y and they don’t.”

 ?? Canadian Press ?? Royal Ontario Museum chef Corbin Tomaszeski cooks alongside Rozanne Persad, owner of Curry & Roti Restaurant in Scarboroug­h, Ont. in the Restaurant Takeover studio kitchen. The show uses spycams to add an element of immediacy.
Canadian Press Royal Ontario Museum chef Corbin Tomaszeski cooks alongside Rozanne Persad, owner of Curry & Roti Restaurant in Scarboroug­h, Ont. in the Restaurant Takeover studio kitchen. The show uses spycams to add an element of immediacy.

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