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Village Squire, 1979-02, Page 15own cooking and baking goods from the Hill 'n Dale Bakery at Belmont all natural foods of course. The price is a little steeper than you'll find at your neighbourhood supermarket, but for many it's worth it. Bread. for instance. is 98 cents a loaf the day we checked in. Doughnuts were $2.15 for a dozen. You could buy 48 oz. of granola -type cereal for $2.90. The store opened Oct. 11 under the management of Pam Showier of Stratford. Though one tends to think of such a store catering to the concerned younger generation out to find an alternative to adulterated foods, she says that the most support comes from the middle-aged people, not the young. While you can get food to work with in your own kitchen at Grains. Beans and Things. next door at the Mediterranean, you can get foods that are already prepared. Such things as homemade pastries. quiche, sausage rolls, frozen yogurt are all there to tempt your palate. Next door to Grains. Beans and Things on the other side, you can find a shop handling seafood. Just around the corner from that again is the Leslie Cheese House outlet. This is the third outlet for the famous Stratford company. The main branch of course is out on Erie Street and it's become a regular shopping place for visitors to the city for years. They carry a full line of cheese and also put together picnic baskets for those who want to picnic by the river in the summer. The company has had a second outlet for years at the Stratford Farmers Market but only recently opened up the third in Festival Square. It's a large, bright. spotless looking shop with a large cooler counter down one side filled with cheeses. The Cheese House specializes of course in its Millbank cheese produced a few miles away in Perth County. As well as the tart cheddars. though. there are also such cheezes as Stilton. Ricolta. Oka, Camembert and Koch. The bottled juices that provide a tasty accompaniment for the gourmet picnic baskets from the Cheese House are available here too. An interesting sidelight in the shop is the coloured photographs of the making of cheese. And twice weekly there are cheese tasting sessions held. By this time as you wander down the corridor, the smell for food from the Cookery buffet in the Engine Shed will probably have captured you and you'll have to stop in. But if you escape that there are more temptations up on the main floor. Greeting visitors when they first arrive through the main doors of the mall is Crunchy's. a candy counter owned by Linda Kleinheinz of Toronto and operated by Marjorie Porter of Stratford. Here the snacker and the sweet tooth can run wild. The coulter contains all sorts of candies and dried fruits and nuts. Even those who are diabetic can sample here since imported candies. biscuits and chocolates especially made for diabetics are available. Just around the corner again from Crunchy's is the informal Cafe Moliere, an outdoor style cafe that's indoors. protected from the weather. A summery canope overhangs the little tables. Here the shopper can again be tempted whether for lunch or just for a stop during busy shopping outings. There are homemade soups and sandwiches available and tasty pastries. Even just getting a cup of coffee becomes a little more complicated because there is Expresso. Cappuccino and Coffee Moliere as well as regular coffee. With a little imagination or a very bad memory, you might even see yourself relaxing outdoors on a sunny summer day instead of coming indoors out of the winter weather. That's what a trip to this tempting collection of food places can do, make you get a little carried away. Pam Showier of Stratford manages the Grains, Beans and Things outlet in Festival Square. February 1979, Village Squire 13