When I first moved to Montreal, I fell in love with three things:
1) the blueberry jam at Première Moisson,
2) The Chocolat Chaud a l'ancien (also Première Moisson)
3) Jean-Talon Market.
In Toronto I went every Saturday to the St. Lawrence Market, the home of an enormous collection of butcher stalls, fishmongers, cheesemongers, a farmer's market, and specialty shops like Kozlik's Mustards (24 samples to try), Moustachios (sellers of the biggest veal parmiggiana sandwiches in the city) and St-Urbain Bagels. Moving to Montreal I figured Jean-Talon would be about the same. I also figured I could wander up St-Urbain and find the best bagels in the city.
I was a little wrong on both counts (let's leave the bagels out of this for now).
Yes, they're both huge and have some of the freshest meat, produce, and cheese in the city, but where I loved St. Lawrence Market for the samples of fresh pasta, my first cabbage roll, the slightly creepy old man who taught me to shuck an oyster, and the nice Japanese young man who gave me one for free while I waited for sushi, I love Jean-Talon for the fact that the gourmet sea overflows into streets surrounding the market itself, so shops like the Marché des Saveurs du Quebec and the Fromagerie Hamel can actually be called part of the market. St. Lawrence is overwhelming, but Jean-Talon is...well, beautiful chaos.
I needed chilis. I've been here a year and a half and by now I believe that any culinary problem can be solved by Jean-Talon. For example, I want to make a Spicy Sweet Potato Soup. I needed 2 dried New Mexico Chili Peppers. I knew I could wander up St-Laurent and find an Epicerie specializing in Latin American products that may or may have exactly what I'm looking for, or I could stumble upon a wall of dried chilis at Jean-Talon's Olives et Épices. $4 later I had a small bag of dried New Mexico chilis.
Olives et Épices is actually two stores in one. It's a collaboration between Épices de Cru and Olive et Olives. Épices de Cru, run by Philippe et Ethné De Vienne, specializes in importing "location specific" spices, a label that classifies spices by the area and conditions in which they're grown, like AOC refers to French wine classifications and DOC to Italian, and only wines of a certain quality can qualify. You can expect to pay a little more, but you pay for quality.
One of the best things about Olives et Épices is that, like the name implies, most of the spices are brought to Canada whole, so freshness is preserved. This way the walls and walls of ground spice mixes are much fresher than what you can find at grocery stores. You can choose from Mediterranean lamb rubs, tandoori blends, fish masala, and pre-assembled bouquet garni for whatever's getting roasted. Plus full shelves of salts and herbes de provence.
Did I mention the make-your-own vanilla vodka (or rum...or extract)? A wall of vanilla sticks in small bottles invites you to choose between specialty sticks like Madagascar or Tahiti. Take a bottle home and fill it with vodka or rum. Three months later you have either the most aromatic vanilla extract for the next time you make panna cotta...
...or a cocktail party. Your choice...
...and that's just half the store.
Olive et Olives also deals directly with producers and growing cooperatives, and imports only high quality (AOC) cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oils. The standards are all controled by the International Olive Council. Seriously, that's a real council. All they do is think about olives and olive products. I suppose they're less alcoholic than the AOC wine people, but personally, I want to start a Vanilla council.
At Jean-Talon you can sample a lot of the oils for sale. Certain oils are recommended for salads, some for grilling meat or fish, some for vegetables, and some as a finishing oil for soup or a cooked dish. This shop is the best opportunity to taste the difference, especially since a good bottle (and they're all good bottles) will cost you anywhere from $12 for Andalusian Boromeo to $56 for Nectar, so will hopefully last you long after you forget which kinds you sampled the first time, and therefore need to go back and try them again.
For the convenience of being able to find that one bizarre ingredient when you really want it, this is a wonderful and unique company. It's a little expensive, but you support good producers and high quality products.
Expect to Pay: $13-$25 for olive oil, $8 for a container of spices, $3-$8 for chili peppers
Hours: Mon, Tues, Wed, Sat: 7am-6pm, Thurs-Fri: 7am-8pm, Sun: 7am-5pm
Olive et Épices
7075 Casgrain Avenue
514-271-0001
http://www.oliveolives.com/en/
http://www.epicesdecru.com/en/company.php
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