
Parlor at 236 2nd Ave S brings a dual personality to Saskatoon's bar scene: a classic-cocktail program polished to a high standard sits alongside a deliberately playful menu of whimsical originals. A rooftop garden supplies select seasonal ingredients, and the For the Fat Cat section of the menu draws on rare, premium spirits for guests who want depth over novelty.

Saskatoon's Bar Scene and Where Parlor Fits
Canada's mid-sized prairie cities have quietly developed cocktail programs that hold up against the country's larger urban centres. Saskatoon is no exception. The city's bar offering has moved well past the beer-and-rail-spirit default, with a cluster of serious operations on and around 2nd Avenue South building a recognisable downtown drinking corridor. Within that corridor, bars tend to fall into one of two camps: the technically rigorous, low-irony spirits programs, and the venues that treat the bar as a social engine first. Parlor sits at the intersection of both, which is a less common position than it sounds. Whimsy and craft usually trade off against each other; here, they share the same menu without obvious compromise.
For a wider read on where Parlor fits inside Saskatoon's full hospitality picture, our full Saskatoon restaurants guide maps the city's dining and drinking scene across neighbourhoods and price points.
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Get Exclusive Access →The Back Bar and the Spirits Collection
The editorial angle on any serious cocktail bar begins with what's behind the bar, and Parlor's For the Fat Cat menu is the clearest signal of where the program's ambitions sit. That section is reserved for rare and higher-priced spirits, the kind of pour that most casual bars either don't stock or don't know how to use. The presence of a dedicated high-end spirits tier inside what is otherwise a fun-first lounge is notable precisely because it resists the usual segmentation. Bars built around premium back bars tend to project seriousness through their room design and service register; Parlor carries the same depth of selection while keeping the atmosphere deliberately social.
Across Canada, a similar tension plays out in different ways. Botanist Bar in Vancouver resolves it through botanical sourcing and a design-led environment; Atwater Cocktail Club in Montreal leans into mid-century lounge references; Bar Mordecai in Toronto anchors itself in a specific spirits-forward identity. Parlor's approach, a rooftop garden for seasonal ingredients alongside a rare-spirits list, is a particular combination that reflects the prairie resourcefulness the city's hospitality scene keeps returning to.
Two Menus, One Room
The menu structure at Parlor is worth reading carefully before you arrive, because it organises around intent rather than spirit category. The Giggle Juice section carries the playful originals: the Danky Kang, built on rye whisky with banana liqueur and absinthe, is a signal that the bar isn't treating creativity as a liability. Absinthe is a difficult ingredient to use without overwhelming a drink, and placing it alongside banana liqueur requires a specific kind of confidence. The fact that this menu section holds together suggests the drinks are engineered rather than improvised.
At the other end of the spectrum, the classics are described in the venue's own language as finely polished, which is the right standard to hold a bar to. A classic cocktail program is only as good as its execution consistency; anyone can list a Negroni or a Manhattan, but the gap between a listed classic and a well-made one is where programs actually differentiate. The For the Fat Cat tier extends the offer for guests who want to drink around rare bottles rather than mixed applications.
The Teetotaler section, anchored by the Zero Suit tropical build, confirms that the bar is thinking about the full table rather than just the drinkers at it. Non-alcoholic programming has become a genuine marker of a bar's seriousness in recent years; a Zero Suit that reads as a real drink rather than an afterthought signals that the kitchen behind Parlor's program is applied consistently across the menu.
The Rooftop Garden as Ingredient Source
Seasonal ingredient sourcing has become a standard talking point for bars across Canada, but a 1,000-square-foot rooftop garden attached to a downtown bar address is a material commitment rather than a marketing position. When in season, that garden feeds directly into the cocktail program, which means the menu has a built-in temporal dimension: what's available shifts with what's growing. This connects Parlor to a wider Canadian bar tradition of working with local and seasonal ingredients, a practice you see applied differently at venues like Humboldt Bar in Victoria and Bearfoot Bistro in Whistler. The rooftop scale here gives the program a degree of ingredient control that imported or purchased seasonal produce can't replicate.
The practical consequence for a visitor is that a spring or summer visit and an autumn or winter visit will produce different drinks. That's a feature rather than an inconsistency.
How Parlor Compares in the Canadian Bar Context
Canadian cocktail bars have been building more distinct identities over the past decade. The shift away from speakeasy aesthetics and toward clearer program identities has produced a generation of bars with sharper editorial positions. Missy's in Calgary and Grecos in Kingston both reflect this tendency toward programs with a defined point of view. Kenzington Burger Bar in Barrie and Auberge Saint-Antoine in Quebec show how food-and-drink pairing anchors a different tier of the offer. Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu demonstrates how tight curation of spirits and format can produce a program with national recognition outside its immediate geography.
Parlor's position in Saskatoon is analogous in one specific way: it's operating at a level of drinks seriousness that could hold its own in a larger city, while keeping a social register that fits its downtown prairie context. The Pop Wine Bar nearby points to the same upward movement in Saskatoon's bar programming.
Planning Your Visit
Parlor is located at 236 2nd Ave S in downtown Saskatoon, walkable from the city's main hotel strip and the riverfront precinct. Hours and booking policies are not listed publicly at time of writing; for a lively lounge with a known cocktail following, arriving early on a weekend or checking ahead for busier periods is sensible. The dress code is informal, consistent with the fun-first atmosphere the bar projects. The tiered menu means the visit scales with your intent: a casual round from the Giggle Juice menu and a considered rare-spirit pour from the Fat Cat section are both valid approaches to the same room.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Parlor more formal or casual?
- Parlor reads as a casual lounge with a serious drinks program underneath it. The fun-first atmosphere and playful cocktail names set the room's social register, but the presence of a dedicated rare-spirits menu and polished classic cocktails means the quality floor is higher than the casual register might suggest. If you're in Saskatoon for a relaxed evening that doesn't require a dress code but still want access to well-made drinks, it fits that brief.
- What drink is Parlor famous for?
- The Danky Kang, a rye whisky cocktail with banana liqueur and absinthe from the Giggle Juice menu, is the most frequently cited signal of the bar's playful original program. The For the Fat Cat menu is the reference point for guests interested in the rare-spirits tier. Both sit within the same venue and the same visit.
- What's the standout thing about Parlor?
- The combination of a genuine rare-spirits collection, a rooftop garden feeding seasonal ingredients into the program, and a deliberately fun atmosphere in a single downtown Saskatoon address. Most bars that carry premium back bars project that seriousness through their room tone; Parlor keeps the room light while the drinks program carries the weight.
- Should I book Parlor in advance?
- Current booking details are not publicly listed. As a lively lounge with a known cocktail following in a mid-sized city, demand is likely to concentrate on Friday and Saturday evenings. Arriving before peak hours or contacting the venue directly at its 2nd Ave S address is the practical approach for groups or specific occasions.
- Does Parlor's menu change with the seasons?
- Yes, in a material way. The bar draws on a 1,000-square-foot rooftop garden for select ingredients when in season, which means cocktails built around garden-sourced components will shift across the year. A visit during peak growing season in Saskatchewan, roughly late spring through early autumn, gives access to the fullest expression of the garden-to-glass element of the program.
Price and Positioning
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parlor | This venue | ||
| Botanist Bar | World's 50 Best | ||
| Laowai | World's 50 Best | ||
| Prophecy | World's 50 Best | ||
| Civil Works | World's 50 Best | ||
| Atwater Cocktail Club | World's 50 Best |
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