Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 25, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
winnipegfreepress. com
THIS CITY
. OUR WEEKLY LOOK AT THE PULSE OF THE CITY
.
A8 SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
WAZNY & WELCH
ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO TWEET
@ MAWWELCH tweeted:
Fair. We can't ignore the deftness with which a rookie
mayor handled it, tho. Mustn't let it turn sour like
Harper's apology.
@ WAZOOWAZNY tweeted:
I guess I can't get too excited about acknowledgment
of an issue we all know exists. I'll hold my applause
until the action phase.
@ WAZOOWAZNY tweeted:
I hope you're right.
@ WAZOOWAZNY tweeted:
My worry: The issue is now a part
of the fleeting 24- hour news cycle;
finding traction every so often
before the wheel spins again
@ MAWWELCH tweeted:
Reacting quickly. Speaking with real
emotion and setting the tone. Not
to mention the ability to get all those
folks together.
@ MAWWELCH tweeted:
Disagree. This, plus the last six
months ( Rinelle Harper, Robert-
Falcon, Lorrie Steeves, the Kelvin
teacher), represent a shift.
@ MAWWELCH tweeted:
What shall we talk about? The Saudi king's death? Racism?
Interest rates? Hillary Clinton? Winnipeg's first
homicide of 2015?
@ WAZOOWAZNY tweeted:
Bowman's press conference
regarding the Maclean's article:
reactionary photo op or was there
something of real value there?
@ MAWWELCH tweeted:
Real value. The speed and grace with which
his office confronted the issue was a potent
symbol.
@ WAZOOWAZNY tweeted :
T I'm not sure I understand what you mean. ALIA Syrie is the ebullient owner of the Tallest Poppy,
a new/ old eatery that opened in the hip, West Broadway/
Sherbrook Street area in October.
Five years ago, when the Tallest Poppy was located on
Main Street, Syrie and a few of her friends took time off to
drive to Burning Man, an annual festival staged in Nevada's
Black Rock Desert. At some point during the trip, Syrie
heard a " thump- thump- thump" coming from the rear of
the vehicle. Sure enough, when everybody exited the van to
investigate, they discovered one of the tires was flat.
Syrie called for a tow truck. The person at the other end of
the line said it would be a four- hour wait.
" So there we were, standing on the side of the road wondering
what to do next," Syrie said, pouring a visitor a cup
of coffee. " That's when one of the people I was with turned
to me and said, ' Uh, Talia, didn't you used to do this sort of
thing for a living?' "
. . .
Before Syrie opened the original Tallest Poppy; before she
spent a year running the Come ' N Eat restaurant at Neechi
Commons; before she and her current business partner,
Steve Ackerman, resurrected the Poppy at 103 Sherbrook St.,
and before she successfully changed a tire on a van somewhere
between Winnipeg and Reno - Syrie was a heavyduty
diesel mechanic.
" I used to work on big refrigeration trailers, the type they
use to haul food around in," she said. " I took an aptitude test
in high school, and it came back saying I had a high mechanical
acumen, apparently."
In 2000, the born- and- bred Winnipegger took a two- month
respite from repairing rigs to plant trees in British Columbia.
At the tail end of an evening Syrie describes as " a
debaucherous night of poor choices," she stepped on a broken
beer bottle while dancing barefoot around the campfire.
Thirteen stitches and significant nerve damage later, Syrie's
tree- planting days were done.
" Except I was really enjoying myself and didn't want
to come back ( to Winnipeg) yet," she said. " So I endeared
myself to the camp's kitchen staff, and they put me to work
cooking for 150 hungry tree- planters."
Syrie, then 23, eventually returned to her mechanic's job
only to discover brake jobs and oil changes weren't her cup
of tea any longer. What she enjoyed most about her B. C. experience,
she found, was having to think on her feet. Too bad
if the kitchen was out of a particular foodstuff or ingredient;
there wasn't a grocery store within hundreds of kilometres
of camp, so resorting to plans B, C and D was commonplace.
" Compared to that, my job suddenly seemed kind of monotonous,"
she said. " So that's when I went into catering."
Syrie, who lists celebrity chef Nigella Lawson and her
Baba Bernice as her culinary heroes, was still catering in
2007 when space became available in the Red Rock Lodge
( formerly the New Occidental Hotel). Syrie had been shopping
around for a permanent kitchen for a while. Because of
its proximity to her home in the North End, the retooled inn
seemed like an ideal fit. There was one condition, however:
The lodge's proprietor was OK with a catering biz, but he
wanted a restaurant component included in the mix, as well.
" I was like, ' Sure, I'll open a restaurant,' " Syrie said,
putting air quotes around the word " restaurant" with her
fingers. " As if anybody was going to show up; We had maybe
three tables at first - it was a complete joke."
Here's the thing, though: If Syrie had opened on Corydon
Avenue or Osborne Street, it wouldn't have been frontpage
fodder. But establish yourself in an area commonly
perceived as the wrong side of the tracks, and don't be too
surprised when every newshound in town comes sniffing
around.
" The media was really good to us, and we were busy right
from the get- go, so much so that it was a few years before we
could get back to catering," Syrie said, admitting four- and
five- star reviews didn't hurt, either.
" It used to blow my mind when people would tell us they'd
driven 45 minutes for breakfast or lunch," she said. " Seriously,
it was flattering to me that anybody came at all."
Syrie called it a day on Main Street in 2013. Not long after
her contract with Neechi Commons ran out last summer, she
and a pal were walking their dogs along Sherbrook Street.
On their way past the Sherbrook Inn, Syrie's chum turned to
her and said, " Talia, this place would be the perfect spot for
you," pointing to what used to be a Chinese food joint on the
hotel's ground level.
Although it is triple the size of the old digs, the second
Tallest Poppy retains much of its predecessor's quirky
charm. OK, maybe the entire staff, Syrie's brother included,
doesn't show up for work in matching, pink dresses anymore.
And maybe the bookshelves aren't lined with cheeky board
games such as Chutzpah.
But the mismatched tables and chairs? The clever flower
arrangements? The intriguing works of art? They're all still
part of the package.
As for the fare, diners can expect the same upscale
comfort food - selections such as chicken- fried steak, bison
meat loaf and Belgian waffles - that landed Syrie a Season
1 guest spot on You Gotta Eat Here! . The program's parent
station, Food Network Canada, recently cited the Tallest
Poppy as one of this nation's 12 " must- try brunch spots."
. . .
One thing Syrie misses about the Main Street location is
the intimacy she shared with her clientele there.
" We used to do these family- style brunches on Sundays and
at the end, when people were getting ready to leave, we'd line
up and have this big group hug," Syrie said with a chuckle.
A couple of weeks ago, a regular from the old days who
now lives in Toronto popped in for supper.
" I think ( it was) more because it was a link to the past than
because we were ever that close or anything, but I instantly
ran up to him and gave him this big, huge hug. His poor wife
had this WTF look on her face. He kind of hugged me back,
but not really.
" Clearly I was more excited to see him than he was to see
me," Syrie said.
david. sanderson@ freepress. mb. ca
By David Sanderson
' It used to blow
my mind
when people
would tell us
they'd driven
45 minutes
for breakfast
or lunch'
Flower
POWER
Tallest Poppy
blooming after
transplant
to new area
Photos by Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP
LEFT: A sign that was
formerly on the outside
of the Tallest Poppy's
Main Street location now
hangs inside its new
location; owner Talia
Syrie presides over a full
house at lunch hour; the
exterior of the eatery's
new location at the
Sherbrook Inn; flowers
adorn every table.
SEIZING
THE MOMENT
MAYOR WAS RIGHT TO IMMEDIATELY
ADDRESS MACLEAN'S ARTICLE
;