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.

Great Pastries at Fragrant Bakery

Fragrant Bakery
Location
: 3833 Midland Avenue, Scarborough
Website: None

I recently watched this video about a Chinese pastry called a wife cake; I’d never even heard of this before, but figured it was a safe bet that it was available somewhere in the GTA.

And indeed, Fragrant Bakery — a tiny hole-the-wall bakery in Scarborough — serves the stuff.

Fragrant Bakery

A wife cake (which is probably closer to a pie than a cake) features a filling made of winter melon, sesame seeds, and coconut that’s wrapped in a flaky dough.  It’s really unique, with a mildly chewy texture, a restrained sweetness, and a slight savouriness that sets it apart from your average sweet pastry.

Fragrant Bakery

I’d also heard good things about the egg tart here, so I tried one; I’m generally not crazy about Hong Kong egg tarts (true to their name, I find them to be a bit too eggy), but if you like them, this is a really good one.  The crust is super flaky and fresh, and the filling is luxuriously silky.

This place does well (there was a line to get in when I showed up), and it’s easy enough to see why.

A Tasty Cardamom Bun at French Corner Bakery Patisserie

French Corner Bakery Patisserie
Location
: 1224 Dundas Street West, Mississauga
Website: https://www.instagram.com/frenchcornerpatisserie/

French Corner Bakery Patisserie (the word “bakery” is a bit odd there, isn’t it?  Patisserie is basically just a French word for bakery, so it’s the French Corner Bakery Bakery) has a whole bunch of very tasty looking pastries.

French Corner Bakery Patisserie

I was actually planning on ordering the almond croissant, but then I saw the cardamom bun and couldn’t resist.  I have a hard time saying no to a good cardamom bun, especially since they’re not exactly super common in the GTA.

French Corner Bakery Patisserie

And yeah, it’s a good one.  The bready pastry is dense without being overly tough, the cardamom flavour is unmistakable, and the level of sweetness is delightfully restrained.  It’s has a decent amount of sticky syrup on its exterior (not to mention the pearl sugar on top, which adds a great crunch that contrasts nicely with the toothsome pastry), but is otherwise not particularly sweet.

French Corner Bakery Patisserie

Clearly, I’m going to have to go back to try the almond croissant (and more!) because they know what they’re doing.

Delicious Cakes at Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe

Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe
Location
: 257 Dundas Street East, Mississauga
Website: https://www.instagram.com/tokyocheesecakecafe.ca/

Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe was actually a really delightful surprise.  I went in thinking I’d just check the place out, and wasn’t necessarily planning on buying anything.  Nothing really caught my eye (I was hoping they’d have a Japanese-style strawberry shortcake; they did not), but the store was empty and I felt bad leaving without buying anything, so I got a slice of the original cheesecake.

Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe

I figured this would be a fluffy, eggy, soufflé-style cheesecake like you can get at Uncle Tetsu’s.  I like that style of cheesecake, but it’s not my favourite.

This actually turned out to be completely different from that, with two layers on a chocolatey crust.  The top layer is light and super creamy, and the bottom layer is much more dense, with more of a traditional cheesecake flavour and texture.  There’s also a bit of a lemony flavour (lemon zest, maybe?) that complements it quite well.  And the chocolate crust has a mild bitterness that does a great job of offsetting the sweetness of the cheesecake.

Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe

It’s a seriously delicious dessert.  The silky top layer, the rich bottom layer, and the chocolate crust are a boffo combination.  They also had a bunch of other flavours of cheesecake, and I (and you!) need to try them all ASAP.

Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe

Also: as it happened, I went back a couple of weeks later, and they actually had the Japanese strawberry shortcake I was craving on my first visit.  I tried it, of course, and it was just as delicious as the cheesecake, with the cake itself being maybe the lightest, fluffiest cake I’ve ever had.

Quick Bites: Machino Donuts, Fuji Noodle House, Kunafa’s

Various doughnuts from Machino Donuts
Various doughnuts from Machino Donuts

Machino Donuts specializes in vegan doughnuts, and I’ll admit that I’ve dragged my feet  on trying it because of that fact.  I assumed that the vegan-ness of the place would result in compromised, subpar doughnuts, and I was 100% wrong.  I tried three doughnuts here: the apple fritter, the banana bread fritter, and the sour cream orange, and all three were quite tasty.  In particular, the apple fritter was right on par with the better fritters I’ve had in the GTA, with a lightly crispy exterior, a nice and tender interior, and a great apple flavour.

Fuji Noodle House
Fuju signature noodle soup from Fuji Noodle House

Fuji Noodle House specializes in tasty Chinese noodle soups, and yeah, it’s good.  I tried the Fuji signature noodle soup (“signature hand-pulled noodle soup with beef, crispy pork fillet, Fuji meatballs, beef brisket, cilantro, and scallions”), and while nothing about it jumped out at me as mind-blowing, the noodles were nice and chewy, the broth was tasty, and all the meaty add-ons were satisfying.

Kunafa's
Kunafa from Kunafa’s

Kunafa, for the uninitiated, is a delicious Middle Eastern dessert in which a gooey, neutral-tasting cheese is topped with syrup-soaked pastry.  It’s great, though I have yet to find a truly exceptional version in the GTA.  Kunafa’s, which I wrote a few years ago, specializes in the stuff.  As you’d hope, it’s very good — probably the best in the GTA.  I visited the original Scarborough location last time, and the one in Mississauga this time, and it’s clear that they haven’t missed a step in the expansion (they also have a location in Ajax).  It’s a really tasty dessert.