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.

Solid Banh Mi at Bot Chien Saigon

Bot Chien Saigon
Location
: 888 Dundas Street East, Mississauga
Website: None

If you’re looking for banh mi, this particular stretch of Dundas in Mississauga is clearly the place to be.  I think there’s something like a half dozen banh mi shops within a few blocks, not to mention a bunch more Vietnamese restaurants that have sandwiches on their menu.

Bot Chien Saigon

I don’t think Bot Chien Saigon has the best banh mi in the area (that would be Ba Le), but it’s still very tasty.

Bot Chien Saigon

I ordered the classic assorted cold cuts banh mi, and it was thoroughly delicious (and thoroughly affordable at four bucks).  The cold cuts were all tasty, the pate was on point, the veggies were fresh and crunchy, and the optional chili sauce adds some kick.

Bot Chien Saigon

The bread was a bit overly crunchy, but it was otherwise a top notch sandwich.

Tasty Eats at Do West Fest

Du West Fest
Do West Fest is a surprisingly massive street festival (it covers about 1.5 km, from Landsdown to Ossington) with a whole bunch of tasty eats.  I tried a few things.

Du West Fest
Heirloom’s Hot & Honey Big Crunch from Heirloom Food Truck

I was actually quite excited about this one.  I tried the Szechuan fried chicken sandwich from this food truck a few years ago, and thought that it was basically fried chicken perfection.  It was crazy good.

So when I saw the Heirloom truck, I figured another fried chicken sandwich was a safe bet.  They have a few on the menu (though not the Szechuan, sadly), but the Hot & Honey Big Crunch caught my eye.  “Crispy chicken breast, hot & honey sauce, creamy slaw, pickled cucumber, iceberg lettuce, chipotle aioli, brioche bun.”

Du West Fest

It’s a solid fried chicken sandwich.  It’s nice and crunchy, and features a good balance of sweetness and acidity (alas, very little spice).  It’s tasty.  But, in my sandwich at least, the chicken itself was pretty dry, as was the thick brioche bun.  I still enjoyed it, but that was a bit of a bummer.  Certainly, it wasn’t the mindblower that the Szechuan sandwich was.

Du West Fest
Strawberry Rhubarb cake from Moonmilk

Moonmilk is a great little ice cream shop and bakery on Dundas.  I’ve tried the ice cream on a previous visit, and it was quite tasty.  They also sell a handful of cakes; I went with the strawberry rhubarb, and yeah, this place knows what they’re doing.

Du West Fest

It’s a pretty simple cake — basically just strawberry and rhubarb layered with buttercream frosting and a fairly plain cake — but it’s thoroughly delicious.  It’s kinda strawberry shortcake-esque, with a great balance between the slightly tart strawberry/rhubarb filling and the silky buttercream.  The cake has a good amount of substance to it, but isn’t too dense.  It’s very good.

Du West Fest
Margherita pizza from Acute Pizzeria

Acute boasts that their pizzas are made from sourdough, and yeah, the crust does have a bit of that sourdough tang.  It actually works quite well.  It’s also clear that they know exactly how to bake it, as it has a nice crackly crust, a bit of char, and a fluffy interior.

Du West Fest

I got the margherita, and it was really good for all the reasons that margherita pizzas tend to be really good — they nailed it.  I’d say this place is only a teeny-tiny step below top-tier pizzas like Badiali and North of Brooklyn.

Du West Fest
Crispy Coconut Shrimp Dumplings from FeasTO

FeasTO is a dumpling truck that’s been around a while (I last tried it in 2019), and given how good their dumplings are, it’s easy enough to see why.

Du West Fest

I tried the crispy coconut shrimp dumplings, which feature a great balance between the crispy fried exterior and the perfectly cooked shrimp within.  The sauce they put on top was a bit sweet for me (it’s pretty intense), but otherwise these were quite satisfying.

Satisfying French Tacos at Brick ‘N’ Cheese

Brick 'N' Cheese
Location
: 678 College Street, Toronto
Website: https://brickncheese.com/

Brick ‘N’ Cheese specializes in French tacos, which is basically a French burrito that’s crammed with meat and pressed flat in a panini press.

Brick 'N' Cheese

There used to be a great restaurant in the city called Mister Frenchy that served these things; alas, that place shut down.  So if you’re looking for a French taco in the GTA, I think Brick ‘N’ Cheese might be the only game in town.

Brick 'N' Cheese

The menu at Brick ‘N’ Cheese is pretty customizable; you can either make your own creation by picking from an assortment of meats and sauces, or you get get one of six of what they call “premade bricks.”  I went with the original premade brick: “extra lean ground beef & chicken, ketchup, cheddar, and pickles” (the menu doesn’t mention it, but there are fries in there as well).

Brick 'N' Cheese

Nothing about it particularly blew my mind, but it’s a satisfying wrap.  It’s meaty, cheesy, and rich.  I couldn’t help but compare it to the French taco I had at Mister Frenchy, which was greatly enhanced by a delicious, zippy sauce that helped to cut through the richness of the wrap.  I wish they had something like that here (and the fries tasted like stale fries that had been dunked in oil prior to assembling the wrap, which meant that they were roughly a trillion times hotter than the other fillings), but this was otherwise a solid wrap.