#Where to eat, drink, play and stay in Prince Edward County

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Prince Edward County is back and bustling after its COVID-induced slumber, thanks in part to the throngs of Torontonians who relocated there during the pandemic and opened new wineries, boutique hotels and restaurants. Nearly half a million visitors will flock to the area by the end of 2023 to check out P.E.C.’s freshest attractions, including cool cocktail bars, tapas-style restaurants and innovative breweries, plus County mainstays like Sandbanks Provincial Park’s pristine stretch of beaches, which are arguably the best in the province. Here is a selection of the top picks—new and old—for drinks and dining out during your next trip to P.E.C.

Domaine Darius

TerraCello Winery
2436 Prince Edward County Road 1, Bloomfield | terracellowinery.com
Tony Auciello was four years old when his nonna from Calabria, Italy, taught him how to make pizza. In the early 2000s, he moved from Toronto to the County and constructed one of the area’s first Neapolitan-style outdoor pizza ovens on his property. He’s been serving guests the best pizza in the County ever since. For a true Neapolitan pie, order the Margherita, which Auciello prepares by following strict regulations that govern the diameter of the dough, how it’s stretched (by hand, of course), the height of the crust and the cooking time—90 seconds exactly. The Calabrese is equally authentic, topped with mozzarella, Calabrian soppressata, green olives, sweet sun-dried tomatoes and a drizzle of Italian olive oil. Auciello calls it “sheer pizza alchemy.”

Flossie’s Sandwich Parlour

Slake
181 Mowbray Road, Picton | slakebrewing.com
Built into a west-facing limestone hill on an 100-acre farm, Slake Brewing is the place to be at sunset with a cold beer. Eric Portelance and Greg Landucci, who previously opened Toronto’s Halo Brewery, launched Slake in 2020 with the goal of making easy-drinking ales, clean lagers and innovative barrel-aged brews. Slake’s brewing team, headed by co-owner Nick Bobas, crafts almost every batch of beer with 100 per cent Ontario malt. The taps rotate regularly, but any of the brewery’s signature juicy, bitter pale ales and IPAs are a sure bet.

Base31
Base31 was originally a military base and training site. After it was decommissioned in 1969, it became a private airport and was later rented out for storage and studio space. Then, in 2021, PEC Community Partners snapped up the site and created Base31. With the help of former property manager Jacqui Burley, who’s credited with saving the site from ruin, they’ve turned the base into a vibrant cultural hub for music, art, entertainment and culinary experiences. Visitors looking to explore Base31’s fall events—including art exhibitions and comedy shows—can also browse galleries and retail stores housed in the site’s former mess halls, barracks and 22,000-square-foot gymnasium.

Bocado


The Royal


The Waring House

This article appears in print in the November 2023 issue of Maclean’s magazine. Subscribe to the monthly print magazine here, or buy the issue online here.
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