

Wonderful Montreal:
A City for Romantics
By George Medovoy, Editor
My wife and I were strolling
up the rue St. Mathieu in a very fashionable downtown neighborhood of Montreal,
when an old woman leaned over the balcony of her house, eyeing us as we passed.
Suddenly, almost on cue, she tossed us a rose and smiled a broad smile.
I looked back and returned the smile. Nothing was said, but in that very
brief moment, we understood everything…
I’ve always remembered
that old woman’s loving act as a symbol of the warmth and charm of this
very special North American city with a distinctly French accent.

(A
bit of Old England even in a city with a distinctly French accent)
Montreal
has a certain carefree ambiance, a wonderful joie de vivre, which makes
it a unique part of North America.
One good way to get to know Montreal
is literally from the top down, starting on Mont-Royal, the wooded mountain, which
rises up out of the city’s urban center. Joggers and bicyclists, strollers
and nature-lovers descend on this urban outcropping, which is graced, by birch,
maple and elm trees and lovely neo-Tudor and neo-Georgian homes hugging the mountain’s
slopes.

(Dining in Montreal can be a wonderful experience...with
a wide variety of food and venues from sidwalk cafes for coffee and a croissant
to upscale restaurants)
One
of the best things about Montreal is the food, the wonderful food…and of
all varieties, not just French. Indeed, I’ve often said that it’s
next to impossible to get a bad meal in Montreal.
I remember one cold
and snowy night descending with friends on a small restaurant just before closing
time in Montreal’s cozy Chinatown. The family who owned the place had locked
the doors and sat down themselves to dinner – but not before serving us
a tasty steamed fish with plentiful bowls of rice.
From Chinese, you
can go Jewish with The House of the Original Fairmount Bagel, a hole-in-the-wall
bakery with bags of flour piled high near the counter at 74 Fairmount Street West
in a once-Jewish neighborhood now mostly Greek.
Opened
in 1919 by Isador Shlafman, a Jewish immigrant from Russia, the Fairmount is a
still goring strong, as evidenced by the long lines that form outside at all hours
of the day and night, come sunshine…or snow.
"As far as we
know," says grandson Irwin Shlafman, who carries on the elder Shlafman’s
profession, " Isador started the first bagel factory in Canada."
Next, try Montreal’s famous smoked meat, a specialty introduced by
Eastern European Jews. It may look like corned beef or pastrami, but it’s
better!
Then there are Montreal’s open-air markets. One of my favorites
is the Jean Talon Market in the heart of Little Italy, where farmers sell fresh
produce near neighborhood butcher shops and cheese counters. You will also find
great Italian restaurants in this neighborhood. With more than 4,500 restaurants
to choose form, Montreal is one of the world’s great restaurant cities.

(Dressed
in period costume, a duo performs outdoors in Old Montreal)
Some
of the best French food is found in Old Montreal, in 18th-century buildings within
the cobblestone quarter near the old port. Meanwhile, any eating experience here
must include a taste of a traditional French-Canadian dish called "poutine"
(poo-teen).
I say "taste" because poutine requires a bit of
getting used to – the mixture consists of the unlikely combination of French
fries covered with warm choose curd and hot barbecue sauce – not quite haut
cuisine, but very Quebecois!
For brochures on Montreal, contact Tourisme
Quebec at 1-800-363-7777, or visit www.tourism-montreal.org.
Air Canada flies to Montreal from many gateway cities.
WHERE
TO STAY:
King Edward VIII called her "The Grand Dame of Sherbrooke
Street."
Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor were married here,
checking into the Royal Suite with a request, dutifully honored, for two crates
of champagne and a dozen glasses.

(The
Ritz-Carlton Hotel, where Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor were married)
She
is none other than Montreal’s Ritz-Carlton Hotel, a classy establishment
that forms an integral part of the city’s history. The nine-story landmark
hotel at the corner of Sherbrooke and Mountain Streets near the Montreal Museum
of Fine Arts is recognized for a refined elegance and an unmatched attention to
service.
An example of the service, given in "No Ordinary Hotel,"
a history written by Canadian writer Adrian Waller, recalls a request by actress
Sophia Loren, who was staying in the Royal Suite with her husband Carlo Ponti,
and their son during the filming of "Angela" in Montreal.
Ms.
Loren had asked the housekeeper for some pots and pans so that she could cook
her own pasta.
"No problem at all," replied the housekeeper,
and the hotel promptly sent someone out to but Ms. Loren a brand new set of cooking
utensils. "Believe me," said the Italian actress, " this is no
ordinary hotel."
The Ritz-Carlton opened in 1912, the creation of
Montreal’s well-to-do families, who lived in what was then known as the
Golden Square Mile. Their aim was to build a hotel to match their tastes. The
hotel has 157 rooms and 43 suites.

(The
famous garden cafe, perfect for dining at the Ritz-Carlton)
One
of my favorite ways to enjoy the hotel is to partake of the tea service, a Montreal
tradition served in the Ritz Garden in warm weather and inside when it gets colder.
The garden dining area, transformed to look like New York’s Russian Tea
Room for the movie "Dreamworld," surrounds a small duck pond with 12
ducklings.
For more information about the Ritz-Carlton, call 1-514-842-4212,
or visit www.ritzcarlton.com.