
The Menu Extra team, including, from left, chef Francis Blais, sommelier Alexis Demers, creative director Samuel de La Courtemanche and creative producer Amanda Prow.shelby fenlon/The Globe and Mail

An eight-course banquet at Montreal’s Habitat 67JEREMY DIONNE/Supplied
The dishes, music, lighting and service were all planned with a brutalist theme in mind. They served an eight-course tasting menu, which included tuna tartare, artichoke pasta, local trout and duck breast. The dessert was pavlova made with shards of grey meringue and B.C. cherries, stacked in a bowl to resemble the building. That desire to curate all angles of the experience was a guiding principle at Menu Extra from the start. “We go to different places, we can change the light, the music, the path of the client,” says Alexis Demers, Menu Extra’s sommelier. “We have a bit more freedom.”

'Being able to open the doors of that iconic building and allow people to walk in and experience the space from inside its core and dine outside was really exciting,' says de La Courtemanche.shelby fenlon/The Globe and Mail
The collective launched in 2020, then just a venture between Demers and Francis Blais, winner of Top Chef Canada’s eighth season. The two had planned to open a small restaurant but cancelled the lease when Quebec went into lockdown. Like many other restaurateurs, they were forced to pivot and launched a high-end bake-at-home meal kit of pithivier, the classic French savoury pie. The pair wanted to offer something more elevated, so they included wine pairings, a written history of the dish, and suggestions for what album to put on.
When restrictions eased, they helped restaurants launch pop-up events and came to appreciate the opportunities for creative curation. So even when restaurants returned to business as usual, they continued and expanded their team to include design and branding experts. In 2024, they served an eight-course dinner around a glowing, 40-foot-long line of taper candles that was inspired by the sculptor Jean Brillant. Recently, they’ve collaborated with Evian and Miele and created the menu for a blockbuster Hermès dinner in Montreal.
This spring, Demers and Blais plan to finally open a casual eatery, but Menu Extra’s high-concept dinner parties will continue. “We’re really creative people,” Blais says. “Being in a box, for us, is hard because we’re always thinking about something else – we’re always evolving.”
Editor’s note: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated that in 2020, Francis Blais and Alexis Demers had just opened a restaurant that shuttered when Quebec went into pandemic lockdown. They had planned to open a restaurant but were able to cancel the lease after the lockdown began. The article has also been updated to clarify that Samuel De La Courtemanche's architectural background relates to the marketing side of the business.