Alexis B.

It was just after passing the gates to the site of the Festiblues site that I met Alexis with his partner Charlotte. Alexis was in command of the BBQ and the couple was waiting for the first spectators of the evening.

Alexis, who will probably have to keep grooming his characteristic mustache for quite some time as it may very well become a trademark, is a master butcher. With Charlotte and some associates he, opened Ça va barder, a gourmet butcher shop, on Fleury Street West this spring. The investment and the necessary steps for starting it left him "absolutely terrified" before the doors opened. But now, after only a few months in business, the shop already employs sixteen people.

Alexis lived in Outremont until the age of 14. Like many people I met to date, he then moved around through several neighborhoods in Montreal. However, he did not know Ahuntsic until recently. It’s while seeking the ideal location for Ça va barder that he discovered the neighborhood. In a few days, he and Charlotte will also become residents.

Alexis worked his way around in the restaurant trade. He worked both in the kitchen and as a waiter. He also studied and practiced the art of sommelier. However, he soon realized that he preferred knowing about wine to the actual sommelier profession, which did not make him as happy as he had imagined at first. It is therefore with the belief that one should go to work whistling that he decided to start his own business.

He is also a musician in his spare time. He mainly plays percussion, which led him to spend two years in Africa. He told me that he knew many African musicians in Montreal.

Standing between the BBQ and the butcher’s shop truck, he told me with assertiveness that one should not eat more than one pound of meat per week, but also that it must be choice meat. Considering meat cutting as a craft and having been trained by master butchers, this man knows what he is talking about!

I saw him again the following week. I went to get my bike that had been repaired in a neighboring shop. As I was just a few steps away, I dropped in his store to say hello. He greeted me warmly and proudly gave me a tour of the premises. We went down to the basement where he showed me the smokehouse, the fridge with meat parts labeled from their farm of origin, and another one where store-made sausages were maturing.

He speaks of his products with such warmth and conviction that I would not be surprised to see him on TV regularly if one day he is given the opportunity to do so. When I mentioned that to him, he told me that, as a matter of facts, he would be seen shortly in Maria Orsini’s show on Radio-Canada.

Something tells me he will keep on whistling for a long time!

Alexis on the site of Festiblues 2015

Patricia G.

When I arrived to the Tolhurst Park Picnic Wednesday, I saw a sympathetic group of people sitting together behind a table filled with Mexican dishes. I was quickly informed that all were either family of Patricia or friends coming to give her a hand for the evening. Like her, they were mostly from the city of Mexico or otherwise of the region of Aguascalientes.

Patricia is a baker.

It is as a member of the new SDC Quartier FLO (as in Fleury West) that Patricia can offer her products to Wednesday picnickers. Patricia arrived in Montreal with her husband and children nine years ago. After working briefly as assistant educator in a day care, she and her husband opened a bakery and pastry shop (Boulangerie-Pâtisserie mexicaine Patricia) seven years ago just west of Tolhurst Park. The couple had operated the same kind of business in Mexico City.

Their counter at the Wednesday Picnic offers different dishes every week. You may find a full meal on the table. That day, there were tacos dorados and paella, plus pastries and watermelon cubes served spicy or not. The first time I visited their table; there was pollo con mole poblano (chicken in a typical cocoa sauce).

If the business was mostly known to some Mexicans in its early days, the customer base has grown and diversified over the years. The house specialty is the "pastel de tres leches" (three milks cake).

Today, Patricia and Luis believe they get by at least as well as in their good years in Mexico City. Despite preserving strong roots – as their "Viva Mexico" caps showed –,  they consider themselves permanently settled here. Their children have already started making their way. It must be said that at the speed at which this small neighborhood changes, they are already veterans! Indeed, the opening of their bakery preceded somewhat that of St-Urbain restaurant that turned heads to what is now known as FLO.

Patricia au Parc Tolhurst