logo
Why sandwich shops are the latest slice of London's food scene

Why sandwich shops are the latest slice of London's food scene

CBC02-05-2025

Social Sharing
Some London restaurateurs are working to fill a niche in the city which they believe has been lacking for too many years: a good sandwich shop.
From the downtown core to Old East Village, at least three new sandwich shop storefronts have popped up in the last six months.
"Sandwiches are a comfort food for people," said Shaddy Alkhatib, owner of The Bread Bowl, a new sandwich shop set to open in mid-May at 354 Wellington St., across from Citi Plaza.
"I think it all goes back to when we were kids. The first thing your mom makes you for lunch is sandwiches. You grow up eating sandwiches for lunch, and then when you outgrow that and actually get into a work career, you start to feel like you want a sandwich to feel that comfort and nostalgia."
With the goal of catering to downtown's office crowd, Alkhatib plans to sell traditional deli sandwiches, such as pastrami, corned beef and turkey, with Halal options available. While the take-out spot will also serve soups and bread bowls, Alkhatib said he primarily wanted to open a sandwich shop because it seemed to be missing from the area.
"When I was doing my research, trying to come across sandwich shops was hard to find," he said. "I feel like sandwiches are something that needs to hit the city harder."
A 15-minute walk away at 525 Richmond St., Zack Agathos had the same idea when he opened Al Paninos in April.
"There was a niche in the market that had to be captured, and I felt with the experience of us being in the industry, it was something that we could bring to London," said Agathos, whose family has run several restaurants throughout the city, including Huron House and Icarus.
The increased interest in one type of food isn't something exclusive to sandwich shops, according to Renee's Sandwich Shop co-owner Renee Kaplansky, who added food trends happen often.
"It's very indicative of London; London has nothing and then all of a sudden, has 10 of them," said Kaplansky, who opened her sandwich shop at 1018 Dundas St. in October.
"I feel like sandwiches have been trendy a little bit," she said. "Maybe it's my algorithm, but it pops up a lot on my TikTok and Instagram, and I just think that London's catching up to the other cities that probably already had a few sandwich shops there."
Simple meal, without the work
While the three restaurateurs all agree that sandwiches can be a relatively simple meal, they say there is something special about getting it from a restaurant.
"Everything tastes good if somebody else makes it for you," Alkhatib said.
Agathos said he wants his customers to enjoy the service and atmosphere of his restaurant when they pick up a bite.
"It's a family feel, what we're doing here," he said. "Most people are good cooks, but when you come here, you just see it put together a little differently. We don't complicate things and just try to give everybody a good, comfortable experience."
Despite more sandwich shops opening in the city, it's the personal touches that will allow them to exist among each other, Kaplansky said.
"The beautiful thing is that we're a huge city so there's more than enough business to go around and I wish everybody great success," she said.
Her shop serves both hot and cold items, including chicken schnitzel and turkey brie sandwiches, all using homemade sauces and bread baked in-house daily.
Meanwhile, Al Paninos has a Greek-Italian menu, with classic items such as chicken parmesan, Philly cheesesteak and club sandwiches. The shop uses homemade ingredients and bread from a local London bakery, Agathos said.
"It's the best thing I've eaten in my entire life," said Travis Moffat, who was eating the "Big Al" meatball sandwich at Al Paninos Thursday. He said it was already his second visit to the shop since it opened three weeks ago. "I get to get out of the house and I don't have to do any of the work."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

International crackdown targets influencers promoting financial products
International crackdown targets influencers promoting financial products

Toronto Sun

time2 days ago

  • Toronto Sun

International crackdown targets influencers promoting financial products

Nine regulators from Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Italy, UAE and the UK were involved in the crackdown Published Jun 06, 2025 • 1 minute read The City of London. Photo by Jason Alden / Bloomberg Influencers promoting financial products on social media have been targeted by an international investigation led by the UK's Financial Conduct Authority. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Three people were arrested in the UK, while a further four were invited for interview, the FCA said in a statement Friday. It did not name the individuals, but said it also issued 50 warning notices and seven cease-and-desist letters for promoters operating without authorization. 'Our message to finfluencers is loud and clear. They must act responsibly and only promote financial products where they are authorized to do so or face the consequences,' said Steve Smart, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA. Nine regulators from Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Italy, United Arab Emirates and the UK were involved in the crackdown, according to the statement. The FCA has been scrutinizing the surge of interest in finance content on social media platforms such as Instagram and TikTok in recent years. Last summer, it brought charges against several reality TV stars and influencers for promoting foreign exchange trading. They have pleaded not guilty and a trial is scheduled for 2027. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. As part of its latest investigation, the FCA has issued 650 take-down requests to social media companies. Those requests can take Meta Platforms Inc. as long as six weeks to action, Lucy Castledine, director of consumer investments at the regulator, told the Treasury select committee in April. Meg Hillier, chair of the committee, wrote to the US technology giant on June 2 asking for clarification on the delays, according to a separate statement from the TSC on Friday. 'There was an isolated incident in late 2024 which resulted in a delay in actioning a small number of reports from the FCA,' Meta said in a statement in response to the Treasury. 'This was rectified and all other relevant reports made by the FCA have been promptly processed.' Sunshine Girls Sunshine Girls Toronto & GTA Toronto & GTA Olympics

Walmart's cake decorators stir up some rivalry with their affordable creations
Walmart's cake decorators stir up some rivalry with their affordable creations

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Walmart's cake decorators stir up some rivalry with their affordable creations

NEW YORK (AP) — Inside a Walmart store in New Jersey, a worker puts the finishing touches on a cake with an edible ink Sponge Bob on top. A colleague creates a buttercream rosette border for a different cake, while another co-worker frosts a tier of what will be a triple-deck dessert. It's graduation season, the busiest time of year for the 6,200 employees the nation's largest retailer trained to hand-decorate cakes per customers' orders. The cakes themselves come, pre-made, frozen and in a variety of shapes and sizes, from suppliers, not Walmart's in-store bakeries. But there's no sugar-coating the importance the company places on its custom cake business. Its army of icing artisans are the highest paid hourly workers in a typical U.S. Walmart, excluding managers. Cake decorators earn an average of $19.25 per hour, compared with $18.25 for all non-managerial store workers, a company spokesperson said. Melissa Fernandez, 36, started working in the electronics area and then the wireless services department of the Walmart in North Bergen, New Jersey, before she transferred to the deli area in search of better pay. But Fernandez had her eye on a cake decorating job and after spending two months getting trained by a store colleague, she picked up a piping bag full-time in 2021. 'I love baking at home. I love painting,' Fernandez said. 'I love doing anything artistic, and I just always wanted to be a part of it.' After 11 years with Walmart, she said she now makes about $24.40 an hour. Despite their elite status within Walmart, the retailer's cake decorators have attracted detractors on social media. The company promotes its personalized baked goods on TikTok and encourages the workers behind such creations to do the same. Critics have accused Walmart decorators of stealing ideas and undercutting the work of professional cake artists with their low-priced products. After TikTok videos praising Walmart's $25 heart-shaped cakes with borders that resemble vintage lace cropped up before Valentine's Day this year, a few bakers produced their own videos explaining why their cakes cost so much more and critiquing Walmart's. Debates ensued in the comments sections over whether Walmart represented evils of capitalism or served the needs of the masses. A customized sheet cake that can be sliced to serve 96 people costs $59 at Walmart, about one-third to half the price that a nationwide sample of independent bakeries list online for similarly sized cakes. For $5.20 more, Walmart customers can add strawberry or 'Bavarian creme' fillings, which like the bare cakes, are vendor-supplied. The slice of the celebratory occasion cake market Walmart holds appears vast based on company-supplied figures. One out of four cakes sold in the U.S. comes from Walmart, and its employees will collectively decorate more than 1 million cakes during May and June, according to a company spokesperson. The number of cakes decorated each day at the location where Fernandez works nearly doubles to 50-60 when school graduations come around, compared to 30-35 a day during the rest of the year, said Michael DeMarco, the manager of the store's fresh food department. He credits the decorators' talent and promotional efforts on TikTok. 'We're getting a lot of repeat customers. We're doing a lot more business because of just the viral sensations,' DeMarco said. A TikTok video that showed Fernandez designing a $24 version of a customized bouquet cake — 12 cupcakes that are individually decorated and arranged to look like a bunch of flowers — received nearly a half-million views. The bouquet design was one of the North Bergen store's most popular cakes last month, a company spokesperson said. The dressy heart-shaped cakes, as well as cakes that resemble meals like sushi or a pile of spaghetti and meatballs, are popular too, she said. Fernandez also has created 'burn away' cakes: an iced cake topped with an image printed on paper, which is set ablaze to reveal a different image underneath. 'TikTok helps me stay up to date,' she said. 'A lot of trends that I see on there, within that week or within that month, customers will come asking about it. And we're pretty up to date as well.' Jazzing up a cake by hand requires skill, whether or not someone else did the baking, she said. Funneling buttercream frosting through a bag and various sized piping tips to yield the desired design without misplaced blobs is not the same as drawing or painting, Fernandez explained. 'There's a lot of pressure points that you have to practice in order to get the borders correct and the right thickness or the right texture,' she said. Tiffany Witzke, who has been a Walmart cake decorator since July 2016 and works at a store in Springfield, Missouri, has more than 912,000 followers on TikTok. The job attracts people who 'can be extremely skilled and talented,' Witzke said, adding that customers want increasingly complicated designs. 'When I first started, it was basically just borders and writing,' she said. 'Now, everybody wants more and more and more on their cake.' Liz Berman, owner of The Sleepy Baker, in Natick, Massachusetts, said she's not worried about losing customers to Walmart because of her attention to detail and the premium ingredients she uses. She charges $205 and up for a half-sized sheet cake, the bouquets made up of two dozen miniature cupcakes cost $110. All the cakes are made from scratch, and Berman said she designs everything herself. 'It's just a totally different business model,' she said. 'Everything I do is custom.' For Walmart, the cake decorating business delivers higher profit margins than some other areas, such as groceries and electronics, according to Marshal Cohen, chief retail advisor at market research firm Circana. But it's also resonating with shoppers looking for affordable luxuries. 'We've gone into a period where the consumer is saying, 'This is good enough,'' Cohen said. Customers interviewed at the North Bergen store on a recent weekday seemed to be satisfied. George Arango, 34, picked up two customized cakes, one to celebrate a co-worker's retirement and the other for a colleague getting another job. After researching prices on various store websites, he decided to give Walmart a try. 'The price is fantastic,' he said. 'I'm walking out with two cakes for $40.'

From shoppers to taxpayers: Citi Plaza touted to become interim City Hall
From shoppers to taxpayers: Citi Plaza touted to become interim City Hall

CTV News

time3 days ago

  • CTV News

From shoppers to taxpayers: Citi Plaza touted to become interim City Hall

Owners of Citi Plaza want it to become an interim London City Hall. (Sean Irvine/CTV News London) The owners of Citi Plaza want it to become an interim London City Hall. The mall is pegged as the perfect space to house city employees while the current city hall is renovated and redeveloped. In its early years, Citi Plaza, then Galleria Mall, was briefly a vibrant shopping centre. But that was three decades ago. Today, it is a mix of a few retail outlets, a health club and offices. The rest of the space, which spans some 300,000 square feet, remains vacant. The realtor representing the property concedes it will never be what it once was. 'We are transitioning from a retail facility to a large floor plate office campus. So that's their plan. And they've already got some success in parts of the building,' said George Kerhoulas, of Cushman & Wakefield Commercial Realty. Some of that success is office space occupied by the Middlesex-London Health Unit and the City of London. Now, Citi Plaza wants City Hall to expand its footprint. With the municipality in the earliest stages of planning the renovation and redevelopment of the current city hall, Citi Plaza proposes serving as an interim hub as construction takes place at 300 Dufferin. Kerhoulas said an architect has drawn up renderings of what the space could look like. 060405 - City hall Owners of Citi Plaza want it to become an interim London City Hall. (Sean Irvine/CTV News London) 'We figured it's going to take a lot longer than they think. And you're already in our building, so why don't we move everybody over to our building for a decade while you're doing everything you need to do on Dufferin & Wellington.' The proposal has been in the hands of City Hall since late last year. But as it was unsolicited, there has been no feedback from 300 Dufferin. On the streets outside Citi-Plaza, lifelong Londoner Materia Steele recalled more vibrant days. 'I spent a lot of time in the library and whatnot. It was always packed with people,' said Steele. 'But since then, and since COVID, obviously, just everything has completely collapsed, and it's been very disappointing to see.' This is why she would welcome the temporary move to City Hall. 'Having it in a more accessible location would be significantly better, especially near the library, it is a decent idea,' said Steele. 'I would prefer to see some retail in there, I don't think in-store shopping is necessarily dead yet,' said Richard Cliffen, before adding, 'I do think it is an acceptable solution for the time being.' As part of the enticement package, Kerhoulas said the package reminds the city of the ample parking, plans for a roof garden, and flexible design options offered at Citi Plaza. 'There are just a lot of things that we can do to make it attractive for, you know, ten years while the transition goes.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store