Amazing Sandwiches at BEAR Steak Sandwiches

BEAR Steak Sandwiches
Location
: 550A College Street, Toronto
Website: https://bearsteak.ca/

BEAR Steak started out small, serving sandwiches out of someone’s house — a pandemic-era pop-up that was popular enough to graduate to a real-deal restaurant (albeit a tiny one with just enough room to grab your sandwich and go).

BEAR Steak Sandwiches

The place has gotten an enormous amount of hype since it opened, and let me tell you: it’s all 100% deserved.  The hype is real.

They only have a couple of sandwiches on the menu: roast pork, and their specialty, the original steak sandwich. The sandwich is beyond simple — it’s just thickly-sliced flank steak and chimichurri sauce on a Portuguese roll.  It’s so good.

BEAR Steak Sandwiches

You have to be pretty confident in what you’re serving to slice the steak this thick; if the meat isn’t perfectly tender, you’re going to end up pulling it out of the sandwich after your first bite, and no one wants that.  But the medium rare beef here somehow manages to be buttery tender while still having a satisfying meaty bite.

BEAR Steak Sandwiches

It’s also got a great beefy flavour that lets you know they’re using the good stuff.  The zippy, garlicky chimichurri adds a nice brightness that complements the beef perfectly, and the lightly crusty bread has just enough substance to hold up to the meat without overwhelming.  It’s one of the best sandwiches in the city.

Delightful Mochi Doughnuts at Marry Me Mochi

Marry Me Mochi
Location
: 100 City Centre Drive, Mississauga (inside Square One)
Website: https://www.marrymemochi.ca/

Mochi doughnuts are one of those things that were basically impossible to find in the city just a few years ago, and I wouldn’t say they’re everywhere now, but they’re certainly available.  It may be basically impossible to live affordably in the GTA, but on the other hand… mochi doughnuts?  You win some, you lose some.

Marry Me Mochi

Marry Me Mochi features an assortment of permanent flavours, as well as a rotating menu of specials; I went with one of the permanent varieties, creme brulee, which the menu says is their most popular.

The doughnut gets all its flavour from the frosting on top — there’s no custard filling here — but still manages to do a pretty impressive job of replicating the taste of creme brulee.  It actually does have a custardy flavour, and while it’s not crispy on top, it is torched, which helps it to land that flavour.

Marry Me Mochi

It’s also delightfully restrained in its sweetness.  A lot of doughnuts like this are both glazed and then frosted, which makes them a bit of a sugar bomb.  The sweetness here is just in the frosting, which lets you taste the doughnut itself and doesn’t overwhelm.

And, of course, it’s a mochi doughnut, so it has that pleasant springiness (but without being overly chewy).  It’s a great doughnut.

Tasty Fried Goodness at Len Duckworth’s Fish & Chips

Len Duckworth's Fish & Chips
Location
: 2638 Danforth Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://lenduckworthfishandchips.ca/

Whenever I see that a restaurant has been around for decades, my first thought is, “well, they must be doing something right.”  Len Duckworth’s Fish & Chips has been around since 1929 (!), and yeah, they’re clearly doing something right.

Even setting aside the quality (which is quite high), if you come at lunch, you can get a fantastic deal: a four ounce piece of haddock, fries, and a drink, all for a delightfully affordable $8.50.

Len Duckworth's Fish & Chips

I’m not sure if you get a good sense of scale from that picture (I think the big, chunky fries make the piece of fish look smaller than it is), but it was actually a decent size.

And it was really, really tasty.  My problem with a lot of fish and chips in the city is that they go a bit overboard with the batter, with a thick, overly crunchy layer that completely overwhelms the delicate fish.  That’s absolutely not the case here, with batter that’s thick enough to give you a satisfying crispiness, but thin enough to let the fish be the star of the show.

Len Duckworth's Fish & Chips

And the fries were just what you want them to be, with a crispy exterior and perfectly creamy interior.

The fish was slightly on the dry side (potentially because the lunch piece is smaller than the standard), but this was otherwise a stellar plate of fish and chips.  Bonus: the zippy tartar sauce is quite tasty, and they give you a whole bottle of it instead of the stingy little cup that a lot of places offer.  As someone who likes to dip his fries as well as the fish into the tartar sauce, this was appreciated.

Tasty Korean Pastries at Hodo Kwaja

Hodo Kwaja
Location
: 656 Bloor Street West, Toronto
Website: http://hodokwaja.ca/

Hodo Kwaja is a delightful Korean bakery that specializes in walnut cakes, which are bite-sized walnut-shaped cakes that are traditionally filled with sweet red bean paste.

Hodo Kwaja

They have three flavours here: red bean with walnuts, mashed potato with walnuts, and mashed potato with almonds.  An order of six is delightfully cheap at $3.75, and if you want you can try all three flavours, which is what I did.

Hodo Kwaja

They’re all very tasty, though the traditional red bean was my favourite of the three.  The mashed potato is interesting; it actually has a similar texture to the red bean, but a milder flavour.  All three have a restrained sweetness that works quite well.

As for the pancake-like pastry, it complements the soft filling very well.  If you’ve ever tried taiyaki, it’s similar to that, but without the exterior crispiness.  It’s a top-notch dessert.

Quick Bites: Union Chicken, Poke Poke, Bake Code

Nashville Lightning Hot sandwich from Union Chicken
Nashville Lightning Hot sandwich from Union Chicken

I had the Buffalo chicken sandwich from Union back in 2019 and found it to be absolutely delightful; well, I recently tried the Nashville hot chicken sandwich, and yeah, it’s very, very good.  It’s got that same addictive combo of exterior crunchiness and interior juiciness, and it’s really tasty, with a nice zippy flavour that cuts through the richness of the chicken.  The toasted bread it comes on was a bit dry/boring, and I wish the sandwich were spicier (it’s barely hotter than mild), but overall it’s a superlative fried chicken sandwich.

Poke from Poke Poke
Poke from Poke Poke

Poke Poke is thoroughly okay.  I had the O.G. bowl (“classic salmon, seaweed salad,
avocado, corn, edamame, masago”) on white rice (brown rice, cauliflower rice, greens, and noodles are also choices), and it was perfectly tasty.  Nothing about it particularly blew me away (it’s a bit overstuffed with toppings and understuffed with salmon — given that it came up to just over twenty bucks with tax, a more generous helping of fish would have been nice), but I’m not mad I ate it.

Salted Egg Yolk Croissant from Bake Code
Salted Egg Yolk Croissant from Bake Code

I tried the PB&J croissant from Bake Code a few years ago and enjoyed it, though I found the croissant itself to be just okay.  I have very similar thoughts about the salted egg yolk croissant, which features a generous amount of tasty, custardy filling, but is otherwise nothing too mind-blowing.  I’m also not convinced that a croissant is a better vehicle for this particular filling than a more traditional bun, but I can’t deny that it’s tasty.