Fonthill is a village of fewer than twenty thousand, a Niagara town with more orchards than dining destinations. Root & Bone reads as the exception. Behind a Pelham Street storefront, Chef Raymond Taylor cooks a four-course dinner at a level the address doesn't advertise — a wagyu short rib Wellington wrapped in mushroom duxelles and set against truffle whipped potatoes, a dry-aged Ontario striploin, dishes that turn with the growing season. He opened the restaurant in 2018 and built it around a short card rather than a long one: prix fixe Friday and Saturday, à la carte Wednesday and Thursday, dark the other three nights.
The card rewards a table that orders across it. Classic beef tartare comes with a vodka-cured quail egg, caper emulsion and pommes gaufrettes; seared diver scallops arrive over a sweet-pea purée with Meyer lemon gremolata; char-grilled quail is plated with a sour-cherry reduction, wild mushrooms and a pistachio crumble. Among the mains, the striploin comes with spring morels, smoked bone marrow and a sunchoke purée, charred octopus is set against a chorizo emulsion and tomato jam, Ontario pickerel against a saffron beurre blanc brightened with yuzu, and Ontario lamb loin under a rosemary and stone-mustard crust with black garlic jus. The vegetable courses get the same care as the proteins — crispy butternut squash with miso brown-butter aioli and candied walnuts, a spring risotto of English peas, ramps and asparagus tips finished with aged pecorino. Dessert runs from a burnt Basque cheesecake to a warm carrot cake plated with pear ice-wine gelato and a Grand Marnier crème brûlée.
Menu Tags
What to order
Tiers reflect how diners actually talk about each dish — Diamond is the rarest. Tap a dish to cast your vote.
The current menu has enough first-course, main and dessert range to make the four-course format feel curated rather than narrow.
02
Chef-Led Fonthill Identity
Chef Raymond Taylor's ownership and culinary leadership give the restaurant a named point of view, not just a polished dining-room shell.
03
Private and Patio Paths
Epicure Cellar, patio seating and the main dining room give guests different ways to use the restaurant for dates, groups and celebrations.
Restaurantica Analysis
How the score breaks down
9.9
Uniqueness
9.5/10
Bang For Buck
8/10
Food Quality
10/10
Local Reputation
9.5/10
Popularity Factor
8.5/10
The Playbook
How to eat at Root & Bone
1
Tartare Before the Main Course
Use Classic Beef Tartare as the first-course signal when the diners want Root & Bone at its most precise: quail egg, caper emulsion and pommes gaufrettes keep the dish rich, salty and crisp without overwhelming the later courses.
2
Wellington as the Anchor
Build the prix fixe around Wagyu Short Rib Wellington when the meal needs a centrepiece. Truffle whipped potatoes, mushroom duxelles and red wine jus make it the most luxurious main without drifting away from the restaurant's farm-to-table lane.
3
Striploin for the Steak Table
Choose Dry-Aged Organic Ontario Striploin when one guest wants a clear steak order but the group still wants Root & Bone detail: sunchoke, spring morels, smoked bone marrow, chorizo crumble and caramelized soya jus carry the plate.
4
Midweek A La Carte, Weekend Prix Fixe
Use Wednesday or Thursday for a more flexible a la carte read on dishes like Ontario Pickerel and Spring Vegetable Risotto, then save Friday and Saturday for the four-course prix fixe when diners want the full dinner arc.
5
Epicure Cellar for Private Tables
Book Epicure Cellar when the group wants a more hosted version of the Root & Bone experience. Keep a signature dinner anchor such as Wagyu Short Rib Wellington in mind so the private-room plan still feels connected to the main restaurant.
Key Strengths
What this room does best
8.5
Tasting Menu Specialists
The four-course Friday and Saturday format is the cleanest way to experience Root & Bone. The card fits because the menu is structured around paced courses, premium mains and composed desserts rather than a broad casual list.
8.0
Locally Sourced & Sustainable
Ontario pickerel, lamb, organic striploin, farm herbs, spring vegetables and morels give the menu a strong regional backbone. The sourcing story is specific enough to shape what diners actually order.
8.0
Signature Chef Restaurants
Root & Bone has a named culinary point of view through Chef Raymond Taylor, and the menu reads like a chef-led dining room: precise starters, composed sauces and a clear seasonal arc across the meal.
7.5
Date Night Magnet
Root & Bone works for date night because the dinner pacing, polished farm-house feel, tartare, scallops and Wellington give two diners easy shared decisions without making the evening feel formal.
7.5
Special Occasion
A prix fixe dinner, steak and Wellington options, seafood starters, composed desserts and private-dining access make Root & Bone a natural celebration pick without needing a hotel or resort setting.
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