There are restaurants that are ambitious, and then there is aKin. Tucked at 51 Colborne Street in Toronto’s Financial District, this intimate modern Asian fine dining restaurant holds a Michelin Star, seats fewer than 35 people per service, and offers a 10-course blind tasting menu that changes every two months. It is, by any measure, one of the most serious and compelling dining experiences in Canada.
And remarkably, it opened less than two years ago.
The Story Behind aKin
aKin is the creation of two chefs whose paths first crossed on national television. Chef Eric Chong won the first season of MasterChef Canada, where one of the judges was Alvin Leung — already a three-Michelin-starred chef renowned for his boundary-pushing work in Hong Kong. The two connected over a shared background: both self-taught, both with engineering training, both deeply rooted in their Asian heritage while working in Western culinary contexts.
“I wouldn’t think of opening another restaurant in Toronto without him,” Chong has said of Leung. Their first collaboration, R&D Restaurant on Spadina Avenue, earned a Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand award every year since the Guide’s arrival in Toronto. aKin was always the next step — something more refined, more personal, and more ambitious.
“The concept of aKin has been 10 years in the making,” Chong has shared. They opened aKin in November 2024, choosing the Colborne location specifically for its proximity to Union Station and the Financial District. The Michelin Star followed.
The Experience: What to Expect
aKin offers a 10-course blind tasting menu — meaning you don’t see the full menu in advance. The kitchen tells the story of the meal, and your job is to follow it.
The intimate space seats 28 guests in the main dining room, with 4 seats at the chef’s counter offering an up-close view of the kitchen during service. A private underground dining room accommodates groups of up to 8 for special occasions. The room itself pairs gold-leaf finishes with a focused, deliberate layout — formal enough to signal that something special is happening, personal enough that it never feels cold.
Each menu change — approximately every two months — draws from a different Asian culinary tradition or seasonal moment. Chinese New Year, Thai influences, Malaysian spice profiles, Singaporean street food elevated into tasting menu format. The through-line is always Chong’s own heritage and his insistence on sourcing Canadian ingredients from coast to coast — Nova Scotia lobster, British Columbia seafood, Ontario produce.
Past highlights have included lobster cheung fun (a precise Cantonese rice noodle format applied to premium Canadian shellfish), char siu bao filled with Iberico secreto pork, grilled langoustine with house-made silver needle noodles, and dry-aged duck paired with the Indigenous “Three Sisters” — corn, squash, and beans. Desserts have drawn consistent attention for their technique.
The dining experience runs approximately three hours from first course to final glass.
The Chef’s Counter: The Best Seat in the House
The four-seat chef’s counter at aKin deserves specific mention. Seating here compresses the formality of the dining room into something more immediate — plating happens directly in front of you, the pacing of the kitchen becomes audible, and the logic of the 10-course progression reveals itself course by course in real time.
For diners who are curious about technique and want to understand how a Michelin-starred kitchen actually operates during service, the chef’s counter is genuinely one of the best seats in Toronto. The kitchen’s precision and the personable service style both read differently from this vantage point.
Practical Information
Address: 51 Colborne Street, Toronto, ON M5E 1E3 (Financial District, short walk from King Station and Union Station)
Phone: (416) 363-0151
Hours:
- Tuesday – Saturday: 5 PM – 12 AM
- Monday & Sunday: Closed
Reservations: Required. Book through Tock at exploretock.com/akin-toronto. New reservation batches are released monthly — check the Tock page for the next release date and time, as tables fill within minutes of release. Currently taking reservations up to July 31st, 2026; new dates released July 1, 2026 at 10:00 AM local time.
Pricing: $225+ per person for the 10-course tasting menu. An enhanced chef’s counter experience is also available at a higher price point. Beverages, tax, and gratuity are additional.
Dietary restrictions: Due to the nature of the blind tasting menu and the size of the kitchen, aKin has very limited ability to accommodate dietary restrictions. They cannot accommodate vegan, vegetarian, halal, pescatarian, gluten-free, dairy-free, or shellfish-free requests. Raw meat and seafood are featured throughout. Contact info@akintoronto.com at least 72 hours before your reservation with any concerns.
Cancellation policy: Cancellations or changes within 72 hours of your reservation are subject to a $100 per person charge.
Parking: Street parking on Colborne Street. TTC recommended — King Station is a short walk.
Is It Worth It?
This is a $225+ per person, three-hour tasting menu at a Michelin-starred restaurant. If that framing makes it sound like a special occasion rather than a casual dinner, that’s correct. aKin is a destination meal — the kind you book months in advance for an anniversary, a milestone birthday, or the particular kind of evening where the food itself is the entire point.
What distinguishes it from Toronto’s other high-end options is how specific it is. This isn’t a generic European fine dining template applied to expensive ingredients. It’s a deeply personal expression of two chefs’ Asian heritage, executed with Michelin-level precision using Canadian ingredients, in a room small enough that every course receives genuine attention. That specificity is rare at any price point.
For anyone serious about Toronto’s food culture, aKin belongs on the list.
Looking for more Toronto special occasion dining? Read our [Romantic Toronto Guide →] and [Best Restaurants in Toronto →].