Happy Hour
Sunday to Thursday from 5pm to 6pm, RASA offers happy-hour pricing on selected red, white, rose, orange, and sparkling wines by the glass or bottle.
Selected wines listed at happy-hour 5oz and bottle pricing.At RASA, a brisket burger arrives under gochujang mayo and kimchi, and a few plates over, sea bream comes dressed in yuzu and Thai basil. Neither feels like a stunt, because the kitchen has decided in advance that it answers to no single tradition. The name nods to tabula rasa, and the menu takes the blank slate literally — globally inspired sharing plates, built for a table rather than a plate-per-person march, in a Harbord Village storefront run by The Food Dudes. The Toronto group made its name in catering before it built dining rooms, and that habit of feeding a crowd still shapes how the food lands.
The order that defines the kitchen runs through a handful of plates. Truffle Gnudi is the pasta anchor, wild mushroom and walnut pesto under a parmesan crisp, compact but complete. The RASA Burger is the comfort move that refuses to be ordinary: brisket beneath provolone, gochujang mayo, pickles, and kimchi, sharp enough to sit beside the seafood without apologizing for being a burger. Spicy Ceviche carries the brightest snap on the menu, sea bream with peanut, sesame snaps, yuzu, and Thai basil. From there the spread widens — Short Rib with rendang and tom yum caramel, Country Style Pork over dashi grits, Grilled Octopus with sunflower romesco and pomelo, a Chickpea Fritter with fennel mostarda and wasabi. Vegetable plates hold their own in the same idiom — Asparagus with tahini and taggiasca olives, a Chopped Salad of quinoa, jalapeño feta, and harissa chickpeas — so a vegetarian-leaning table still orders with the kitchen rather than around it. Dessert keeps the same nerve, a Sticky Bun finished with candied bacon and a Chocolate Tart with whiskey ice cream.
What holds it together is restraint, not novelty. A blank-slate menu can read as a grab bag, and this one does not, because each plate commits to one clear idea instead of stacking influences to prove a point. The brisket burger is a burger first and a fusion exercise second. The ceviche is built to reset the palate before the richer plates land. An open chef counter and a back dining area keep the cooking in view, and the plates come paced for sharing rather than staged as a tasting menu. Order well and the meal builds its own arc — something bright, then something rich, with a shared anchor in the middle — without anyone needing to plan it. The result is a confident neighbourhood kitchen that happens to cook from everywhere.
RASA opened in 2014, taking over a corner that had been Momo before it, and it has held its ground in one of the city's most crowded dining pockets since. The kitchen now runs under executive chef Lia Silva and head chef Callum Smith, with The Food Dudes still the identity behind RASA. That lineage shows on the plate: the polish of a group that has opened several restaurants, and the looseness of one that still wants dinner to feel social rather than ceremonial. A Bib Gourmand nod from the Michelin Guide sits alongside that history as outside confirmation, not as the point.
The wine happy hour, Sunday through Thursday from five to six, is the detail that tells you how to use the place — come early, build the first round around a glass and the ceviche, then let the table fill in. A wraparound patio opens for the warm months, and RASA caps its own reservations at six during patio season, routing larger parties down a sister-restaurant path; it is a small sign of a kitchen that would rather get a table right than chase volume. The clearest case for the place is the simplest one: it is where a group that cannot agree on a cuisine can still order every plate well.
Sunday to Thursday from 5pm to 6pm, RASA offers happy-hour pricing on selected red, white, rose, orange, and sparkling wines by the glass or bottle.
Selected wines listed at happy-hour 5oz and bottle pricing.RASA's menu is not trying to represent one tradition. The strongest plates work because the kitchen uses global references in specific, dish-level ways: yuzu and Thai basil on sea bream, walnut pesto on gnudi, gochujang mayo and kimchi on a brisket burger.
RASA opened in 2014 and has stayed relevant in one of Toronto's most competitive dining pockets. The room, patio, Food Dudes identity, and Bib Gourmand recognition give it the shape of an established local dinner choice, not just a new-opening curiosity.
The Sunday-to-Thursday Wine Happy Hour gives RASA a practical repeat-visit hook. It turns the restaurant into a sharper early-dinner option, especially for diners who want polished plates and wine without stretching the night into a formal occasion.
Share the nuances of your visit to RASA in Toronto — the standout dishes, the room, the service.
Write a review