If you can’t teach an old dog new tricks … maybe you should just go with what works
Just how much does a restaurant always identify with its founder? Every time we wind up at Vancouver’s Smoking Dog Bistro we can’t help but think of its founder Jean Claude Ramond, the feisty, pint-sized but tough as nails wrestler turned restaurateur.
Jean Claude passed away far too early, in 2005. Here’s what we said at in the Vancouver Courier at the time (we’d link to it but the archive has vanished):
A far bigger a man than his small but rugged frame suggested was Jean Claude Ramond, who passed away at month’s end, barely a few days after he had eulogised his old friend Joel (Thibault).
Ramond recalled the time when a customer complained his steak was too tough—and Joel came out with a chainsaw and sliced right through the steak, plate, table and all! If there was ever a survivor in a tough business, Jean Claude exemplified it. No doubt some of that resilience came from his former endeavours as a wrestler but he was quite the comeback kid, from Le Beaujolais, La Crépérie, and L’Orangerie to Jean Claude’s and, of course, the Smoking Dog—all testament to his feisty perseverance.
Even though ‘The Dog’ was named ostensibly in deference to Le Chien Qui Fume (the celebrated Parisien bistro), its arrival just happened to coincide with the vigorous debate before the city’s smoking ban—which, once enacted, curiously, took longer to reach the Smoking Dog than any place else in town. Ramond was the consummate, occasionally unpredictable ‘patron’, who not only loved to host but had be part of the scene. His favourite trick (abandoned only recently) was to spin the bottle in the air just inches from your nose before pulling the cork.
Even if characters like these are hard to forget, we shouldn’t—and won’t—dwell any more on the past.
Smoking Dog opening chef Pascal Georges (l) is welcomed back by co-owner Jean Séguin - Tim Pawsey photo
A few weeks before Jean Claude died, he sold the bistro to Jean Séguin and Jude Andrews, who’ve tweaked things at various times over the last few years, endeavouring to do that tricky thing of keeping the old clientele happy while also moving with the times, and also keeping things pretty affordable.
However, arguably the best change they’ve made took place earlier this summer, when the pair re-hired Jean Claude’s opening chef Pascal Georges (who was also in the kitchen when they acquired the restaurant).
Pascal has been busy revamping the menu—often with a new twist but also by reinstating some old favourites… Read about it here in the Vancouver Courier—or, even in the Regina Leader Post! Hmmm. Maybe JC had a Regina connection we don’t know about…





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Tidbit: I love how my dog is unofficially allowed to sit on the patio.
Allo Jean,
Es-tu le bon Jean Séguin? Celui que j’ai déjà rencontré à Hawkesbury? Le frère de Lise Séguin-Marcotte? Et l’oncle du tannant Eric? On s’est déjà rencontré. J’ai travaillé avec ta soeur Lise à l’école Nouvel Horizon. Cet été, je serai à Vancouver avec mon mari et un couple d’amis(qui connaissent également ta soeur) et on pensait manger à ton restaurant. Es-tu situé dans le centre-ville? Est-ce que l’on doit réserver longtemps à l’avance? Merci! J’attends de tes nouvelles, Nathalie Montpetit