Two menus side by side solves a common group problem
Evergreen Thai and Vegedelight Vegetarian Restaurant are positioned together, which gives mixed groups a much easier path. Guests who want Thai dishes do not have to give that up, and guests who prefer vegetarian options do not have to settle for one or two token items.
That makes the setup especially useful for friend groups, families, and mixed-preference dinners where everyone wants to feel included without turning the meal into a negotiation.
- Useful when one group wants Thai food and another wants a vegetarian menu
- Reduces the need to split the table into separate restaurant decisions
- Makes downtown group planning much smoother for mixed preferences
Cross-ordering helps the whole table feel like one meal
One of the big advantages is that the two menus do not need to stay isolated. Guests can ask staff for help combining the order so the table feels coordinated rather than divided into separate dining experiences.
That is a better fit for social meals because people can stay in one place, share the occasion, and still order according to what they actually want.
- Helpful for friend groups, couples, and mixed dietary tables
- Lets diners enjoy one shared outing without narrowing everyone to one cuisine
- Works well when one person is vegetarian and others want Thai classics
Use the 175 Dundas entrance for the smoothest experience
One practical detail helps avoid confusion. Even if guests are thinking about Vegedelight at 173 Dundas St W, the best entrance to use is usually 175 Dundas St W, which is the Evergreen Thai door.
That entrance is easier for staff to manage, and it helps the team provide smoother service for mixed tables ordering across both menus. It also keeps the front-of-house flow simpler during colder months, when opening both doors regularly can make the dining area uncomfortably cold. In practice, one entrance is easier to manage well and usually creates a better guest experience.
- If you are dining in, head to 175 Dundas St W first
- Staff can guide mixed Vegedelight and Evergreen Thai tables more easily from one entrance
- In winter, using one door helps the room stay warmer and more comfortable
It is a stronger fit than forcing a compromise dish
A lot of mixed groups end up choosing a restaurant where everyone compromises. This setup works better because the group does not have to flatten itself into one narrow menu. People can order more confidently, and the atmosphere still feels like one gathering rather than two separate plans.
That matters just as much as the food itself when the goal is a relaxed downtown dinner.
- Good for groups that care about both comfort and inclusion
- Better than making vegetarians rely on an afterthought option
- Creates a smoother night out for groups with different habits