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    Restaurant in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Canada

    Trius Winery & Restaurant

    360pts

    Strong wine list, Michelin-recognised kitchen.

    Trius Winery & Restaurant, Restaurant in Niagara-on-the-Lake

    About Trius Winery & Restaurant

    Trius Winery & Restaurant holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a 4,000-bottle wine list with sommelier service — making it one of Niagara-on-the-Lake's most credentialled dinner destinations. Food pricing sits at an accessible $$, but the wine list runs $$$. Book 2–3 weeks ahead for weekends; come for the cellar, stay for a long dinner.

    Verdict: A Michelin-recognised winery restaurant that earns a second visit — on the right terms

    If you came once for the wine and the vineyard setting, the question on a return visit is whether the kitchen can hold its own as the main event. At Trius Winery & Restaurant, the answer is a qualified yes. This is a Michelin Plate holder (2024 and 2025 consecutive), which places it in credentialled contemporary dining territory within Niagara-on-the-Lake. The cuisine runs toward seafood and steakhouse with a contemporary frame, the wine list carries 4,000 bottles with strong California and French representation, and the food pricing sits at $$ (a typical two-course meal of $40–$65) while the wine list climbs into $$$ territory with many $100+ bottles. For a second visit, the calculus is direct: come with a specific wine objective, let the sommelier (Liz Ferro) work, and treat the kitchen as a capable partner rather than the headline act.

    The Room on a Return Visit

    The ambient feel at Trius is winery-formal without being stuffy — the kind of dining room where the energy is controlled rather than lively, and where the noise level stays at conversation-friendly through most of the evening. This is a dinner-only operation set on the Niagara Stone Road wine route, and the atmosphere reflects that: unhurried, wine-centric, and oriented toward long meals rather than quick turns. If you visited in summer and found the room at full energy, a return in shoulder season will feel markedly quieter and more focused. For a couple or a small group planning an occasion dinner, that quieter register is the point. If you want a livelier room with more street-level energy, Niagara-on-the-Lake's dining scene offers alternatives, but Trius is specifically not trying to compete on buzz.

    The Wine Program Is the Reason to Come Back

    A 4,000-bottle inventory and 600 selections is a serious list by any measure in the Ontario wine corridor. The strengths are California and France , which, for a winery restaurant in Niagara, is a deliberate positioning choice: this is not a list designed purely to showcase local VQA production. That makes it more interesting as a standalone wine destination and means a second visit can take a very different direction than the first depending on what you ask for. Dustin Laufenberg (wine director) and Liz Ferro (sommelier) are named staff, which signals programme investment. Corkage is set at $50 , reasonable for a winery restaurant of this tier if you want to bring a bottle, but the list depth makes it hard to justify not ordering from the cellar. For serious wine drinkers, the return visit argument is simply: you haven't worked through the list yet.

    On the Food: Seafood and Steak, Done Competently

    Chef Yvon Goetz and Chef James Fritz run a kitchen that holds a Michelin Plate , a recognition for quality cooking that falls below starred status but above the noise. The cuisine is contemporary with seafood and steakhouse anchors, which suits a winery setting well: both formats pair cleanly with the kind of wines a $100+ list prioritises. The $$ food pricing is genuinely accessible relative to the wine ambition of the room, which means a well-managed dinner here won't feel as expensive as the $$$ wine pricing might suggest on paper. For returning guests, the sensible approach is to allocate more budget to the wine side and treat the food as a strong supporting programme.

    A Note on Delivery and Off-Premise

    Trius is a dinner-only restaurant in a winery on Niagara Stone Road. The format, the wine-dependent experience, and the kitchen's contemporary positioning do not translate to off-premise dining. There is no delivery consideration worth making here: the meal at Trius is specifically about sitting in that room with access to that wine list. If you are looking for Niagara-on-the-Lake dining that travels or that works for a casual off-site occasion, this is the wrong venue. Come in person or don't come at all , the off-premise version of this meal does not exist in any meaningful form.

    How Trius Fits in the Broader Canadian Contemporary Scene

    Trius holds its Michelin Plate within a Canadian contemporary dining scene that runs from Alo in Toronto at the starred end to estate-focused spots like Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln , a direct regional peer that leans harder into the winery-as-fine-dining concept. For guests building a Niagara wine country itinerary, Pearl Morissette and Trius cover different registers and both are worth the stop. Further afield in Ontario, Eigensinn Farm in Singhampton and The Pine in Creemore offer comparable destination-dining propositions with different culinary philosophies. For a longer Canadian wine and food route, Tanière³ in Quebec City and Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal represent the higher-end benchmark for what Michelin recognition looks like at starred level. Internationally, César in New York City and Jungsik in Seoul show where contemporary fine dining can go beyond Plate recognition. Trius is well-placed within its regional tier , it is not trying to compete with those rooms, and it does not need to.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Moderate booking difficulty , plan 2–3 weeks ahead for weekend dinners, less for mid-week. Budget: Food $$ ($40–$65 for two courses); wine list $$$ (many bottles over $100); corkage $50. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate given the price range and Michelin recognition , no formal dress code confirmed, but the room skews toward occasion-dressed guests. Meals: Dinner only. Address: 1249 Niagara Stone Rd, Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON. Google rating: 4.4 from 1,524 reviews.

    Plan Your Niagara-on-the-Lake Visit

    Trius sits at the centre of a wine country visit that benefits from planning across multiple categories. See our full Niagara-on-the-Lake restaurants guide, our full Niagara-on-the-Lake hotels guide, our full Niagara-on-the-Lake bars guide, our full Niagara-on-the-Lake wineries guide, and our full Niagara-on-the-Lake experiences guide to build the full itinerary. For contemporary dining benchmarks elsewhere in Canada, AnnaLena in Vancouver, ARLO in Ottawa, ÄNKÔR in Canmore, 529 Wellington in Winnipeg, and Narval in Rimouski offer useful points of comparison for the style of cooking Trius pursues.

    Compare Trius Winery & Restaurant

    How Easy to Book: Trius Winery & Restaurant vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Trius Winery & RestaurantContemporary$$$Moderate
    AloContemporary$$$$Unknown
    Sushi Masaki SaitoSushi, Japanese$$$$Unknown
    Aburi HanaKaiseki, Japanese$$$$Unknown
    AnnaLena$$$$ · Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Don Alfonso 1890Contemporary Italian, Italian$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Niagara-on-the-Lake for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Trius Winery & Restaurant?

    Plan 2–3 weeks ahead for weekend dinners; mid-week tables are easier to secure. Trius is a dinner-only format at a Michelin Plate winery on Niagara Stone Road, which means demand concentrates on Fridays and Saturdays through the warmer months. Book earlier if you're targeting a specific date during peak Niagara wine country season.

    Is Trius Winery & Restaurant good for a special occasion?

    Yes, provided the occasion calls for a wine-focused dinner rather than a high-energy celebratory room. The Michelin Plate recognition, a 600-selection wine list with 4,000 bottles in inventory, and a contemporary seafood-and-steak menu make it a strong choice for anniversaries or milestone dinners where the bottle matters as much as the food. If you want a livelier atmosphere, look elsewhere in Niagara-on-the-Lake.

    What should I wear to Trius Winery & Restaurant?

    The setting is winery-formal — polished casual fits the room without overdressing. Think pressed trousers or a dress rather than jeans, though the venue is not a black-tie environment. The Michelin Plate status and $$$ wine pricing set a tone that rewards dressing with some intention.

    Is Trius Winery & Restaurant worth the price?

    At $$ for food (two courses, $40–$65) and $$$ for wine, Trius is reasonably priced on the food side but can climb quickly once you're working through a list that runs heavily into $100+ bottles. The value case is strongest if you treat the wine program as the centrepiece — Wine Director Dustin Laufenberg and Sommelier Liz Ferro oversee a California- and France-strong list that outpaces most Ontario winery restaurants. If you're wine-agnostic, the food alone at $$ pricing is fair but not the reason to make the drive.

    Can Trius Winery & Restaurant accommodate groups?

    Trius can accommodate groups, though it functions primarily as a sit-down dinner restaurant rather than a private-event venue in the traditional sense. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels to discuss seating arrangements — the winery setting and General Manager Richard Banuelos's team can advise on options. Note the $50 corkage fee if your group plans to bring bottles from the estate.

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