Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
La Banane
310ptsMichelin-noted French bistro. Book weeks ahead.

About La Banane
La Banane is one of Toronto's most consistent French bistros, holding Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 alongside back-to-back Opinionated About Dining rankings in North America. Book 3–4 weeks ahead for weekends. At the $$$$ tier, the kitchen earns its price through technical precision and a coherent meal progression rather than spectacle.
Book Now — Tables at La Banane Move Fast
La Banane on Ossington fills up weeks ahead, particularly on weekends. If you're planning a visit for Friday or Saturday evening, expect to be looking at a 3-to-4-week booking window at minimum — and that's not seasonal advice, it's the baseline. The 60-seat dining room (approximate, based on floor footprint) doesn't have the capacity to absorb walk-in demand at this price point, and with a Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 alongside back-to-back Opinionated About Dining rankings in North America's casual category, word has gotten around. If your date is flexible, Wednesday or Thursday evenings are your leading window for a shorter lead time.
What La Banane Is
La Banane is a French bistro on Ossington Avenue in Toronto's west end, under the direction of chef Evan Davis. It sits at the $$$$ price tier, which in Toronto's current dining climate means you're spending meaningfully per head before wine , this is not a casual drop-in. The room leans into classic bistro visual cues: the kind of setting where the lighting is deliberate, the tables are close, and the energy is warm without being loud. For a first-timer, the immediate impression is that this is a room that takes itself seriously without announcing it.
The cuisine is French bistro with the precision you'd expect from a kitchen that's earned consistent critical attention. The OAD ranking has moved year over year (Recommended in 2023, #474 in North America for 2024, #583 in 2025), which tells you the competitive field around it has grown but the kitchen is holding its position. A Michelin Plate two years running confirms the cooking is technically competent , Michelin Plates are awarded to kitchens where the inspectors find good cooking, full stop, not just a credible concept.
The Experience as a First-Timer
If you're coming to La Banane for the first time, the format to understand is progression. French bistro cooking at this level isn't about a single dish , it's about a sequence of decisions: how the kitchen moves you through the meal, where the richness lands, how the lighter courses set up what follows. Chef Davis's kitchen builds a meal that earns its price point through coherence rather than spectacle. You won't find theatrical tableside presentations or multi-act tasting menu ceremony here. What you will find is a bistro that understands pacing.
For first-timers, the counter or bar seating (where available) is worth requesting if you want to watch the room work. The Ossington location puts La Banane in a neighbourhood that runs independently-minded: the street has enough density of good restaurants that it draws a crowd that knows what it's doing. Your fellow diners at La Banane are likely not tourists , this is a local reservation. That changes the energy of a room in ways that matter.
On the question of the tasting experience specifically: La Banane's approach within the French bistro format rewards attention to the menu's architecture. The move from lighter to richer courses, the integration of classic technique with current sourcing priorities, and the way the kitchen handles protein progression are the things worth tracking as you eat. This is not a venue where you should be looking at your phone. The meal is the point.
Ratings and Recognition
- Google: 4.6 / 5 (1,205 reviews) , a high rating at meaningful volume, suggesting consistency rather than a spike from a single moment of press attention
- Michelin Plate: 2024 and 2025 , two consecutive years of recognition from Michelin's Toronto inspectors
- Opinionated About Dining: Recommended (2023), #474 North America (2024), #583 North America (2025) , present in the OAD ranking across three consecutive years
Practical Details
Reservations: Book 3–4 weeks ahead for weekends; Wednesday and Thursday evenings book shorter. La Banane is closed Monday and Tuesday. Hours: Wednesday through Sunday from 5:30 pm; Friday and Saturday service runs to 11 pm, all other evenings to 10 pm. Budget: $$$$ , plan for a meaningful per-head spend before wine and service. Dress: No confirmed dress code in the database, but the price point and bistro setting suggest smart casual is appropriate; this is not a jeans-and-sneakers room, though it's not black-tie either. Address: 227 Ossington Ave, Toronto, ON M6J 2Z8. Booking: Booking difficulty is rated Hard , this is not a venue you can reliably walk into on a Friday night.
How It Compares
La Banane in the Broader Canadian Context
Toronto's $$$$ French dining sits in an interesting position nationally. If you're building a trip around serious French-influenced cooking in Canada, Tanière³ in Quebec City and Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal represent the Quebec approach to the same tradition. La Banane is doing something different: it's a bistro first, not a modernist tasting room, and that's a deliberate positioning. For wine-country French-influenced cooking at a different price point and pace, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln is worth knowing about for the same trip. Closer to Toronto, The Pine in Creemore offers a more rural, ingredient-led experience for contrast.
For a global frame: if you've eaten at Bouchon Bistro in Napa or bistro simba in Tokyo, La Banane is operating in the same register , serious French bistro craft in a city context, not a destination-country-house format. Within Toronto's own restaurant guide, see our full Toronto restaurants guide for how La Banane sits relative to the broader field. You may also find useful context in our Toronto hotels guide, Toronto bars guide, and Toronto experiences guide when planning around a dinner here.
Compare La Banane
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| La Banane | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #583 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #474 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Gourmet Casual Dining in North America Recommended (2023) | $$$$ | — |
| Alo | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Aburi Hana | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Edulis | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at La Banane?
Bar seating at La Banane is an option worth considering if your party is small and you're flexible on timing. It can be easier to secure than a full table, particularly on busy Friday and Saturday nights when the room books out weeks in advance. Confirm availability when you call or reserve, since bar capacity is limited.
How far ahead should I book La Banane?
Book 3 to 4 weeks out for Friday or Saturday. Wednesday and Thursday evenings are more forgiving, often bookable with a week or two of lead time. La Banane is closed Monday and Tuesday, so your window is Wednesday through Sunday, with weekends carrying the most competition for tables.
Is the tasting menu worth it at La Banane?
At the $$$$ price tier, La Banane sits in territory where the format matters as much as the food. The venue holds a Michelin Plate and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining recognition through 2023–2025, which signals consistent execution rather than a one-season flash. If you want to experience chef Evan Davis's cooking at full range, a progression-format meal is the right choice here rather than dropping in for a single course.
What should I wear to La Banane?
La Banane is a French bistro on Ossington Avenue in Toronto's west end, not a white-tablecloth formal room. The $$$$ price point and Michelin recognition mean the crowd leans polished, but this is not a jacket-required venue. Neat, considered dress fits the tone without overdoing it.
Is La Banane good for a special occasion?
Yes, with some caveats. The Michelin Plate rating, Opinionated About Dining rankings, and $$$$ pricing give it the credentials for a birthday or anniversary dinner. Book well in advance — 3 to 4 weeks for a weekend — and consider a weeknight if you want a quieter room. For sheer formality and occasion-dining scale, Alo is a step up, but La Banane delivers a more relaxed, neighbourhood-rooted version of the same calibre.
What are alternatives to La Banane in Toronto?
Alo is the obvious comparison if you want a more structured tasting-menu experience at a similar or higher price point and with more extensive award recognition. Edulis on Niagara Street offers a different European-influenced approach at a comparable level of seriousness. If your interest is specifically in French-leaning cooking at $$$$ in Toronto, those two are the clearest peers.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Banane?
La Banane only serves dinner, Wednesday through Sunday from 5:30 pm, so the question doesn't apply here. If you're planning a daytime meal, you'll need to look elsewhere and return for an evening reservation.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 5:30–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5:30–10 pm
- Friday
- 5:30–11 pm
- Saturday
- 5:30–11 pm
- Sunday
- 5:30–10 pm
Recognized By
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