Warm focaccia is the first thing Capra Toro puts on the table, and it tells you most of what the kitchen is after. Set in Peterborough's Hunter Street West café district, this is a downtown Italian dining room built less around any single plate than around the act of sharing one. Pizza and pasta sit at the centre, but the house bread is what threads the whole menu together.
That bread does real work. It comes out warm with olive oil and parmesan and a dish of marinara, then reappears under the Focaccia di Pollo chicken sandwich, beside the meatballs and sausage of the Carne Al Forno, and scaled up family-size in the weekly bundles. Around it the antipasti lean fresh and direct: a Caprese of fior di latte, Roma tomatoes and pesto; bruschetta brightened with feta, roasted garlic and a balsamic reduction; a Caesar built on romaine, crostini and prosciutto di Parma; house-marinated olives and a garlic pesto bread for the table still deciding. The Casa Insalata pulls in winter greens, arugula, dried cranberries, pistachios and feta. None of it is fussy, and all of it is meant to be passed around.
The pizzas run from straightforward to characterful. A Margherita keeps to tomato, fior di latte, parmesan and basil; The Rocco's Pie pushes the other way, a spicy red base layered with Calabrese salami, Italian ham and pepperoni and finished with a drizzle of honey. The Diavola leans hot with Calabrian chili, the All In piles on meatballs, sausage and pepperoni, and the Napoli reads quieter — garlic confit, caramelized onion and a finish of Maldon salt. The pastas hold their own. Gnocchi arrives in a rose sauce with sun-dried tomatoes, parmesan and goat cheese; the Fungo Della Vita twists linguine through wild mushroom, summer squash and a creamy pesto white-wine sauce, scattered with toasted almonds and pea shoots. There are the upright classics too — chicken and eggplant parmesan, both breaded and laid over spaghetti marinara — and, for the undecided, the Tour of Italy, a single platter carrying focaccia, Caesar, meatballs, sausages, chicken parmesan, linguini alfredo and spaghetti marinara, very nearly the whole kitchen in one order.
What the menu makes plain, the weekly calendar confirms: Capra Toro is built for planned nights as much as walk-in dinners. Wednesday runs as Date Night, a dinner for two that opens with focaccia and a Caesar before settling on a pair of pizzas or pastas. Sunday turns famiglia — a dinner for four with family-size focaccia and salad and a choice of four mains, the sort of standing arrangement that makes a weekend meal into a small ritual. For birthdays, work dinners and larger gatherings, there is a private dining option called Black 13, booked online ahead. Each format is a way of pre-deciding how the table will eat.
Capra Toro has been part of the downtown food conversation since it opened in 2015 — family-run, and built with an eye on its community. Local reporting has followed the kitchen to Kawartha Food Share's Mac & Cheese Festival, the annual Peterborough fundraiser where restaurants cook for a public vote, and Capra Toro has taken a top prize there. The festival suits the place: a night of generous, shareable food in service of a community cause, close to what the kitchen does the rest of the year.
The café district along Hunter Street West runs on coffee, brunch and small storefronts, and Capra Toro holds down the dinner end of it — the sit-down option for a night that wants more than a quick bite. Order the focaccia first, let The Rocco's Pie and a plate of gnocchi meet in the middle, and the evening mostly runs itself. It is comfort food with enough specificity to feel chosen, in a downtown that knows it by name.