A Gigantic (and Delicious) Shawarma Wrap at Flaming Stove

Flaming Stove
Location
: 21 Davisville Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://flamingstove.com/

Flaming Stove is one of those places that seems to perennially come up in conversations about the best shawarma in Toronto, and having just tried it, yeah.  Yeah, that’s accurate.

Flaming Stove

I got the chicken shawarma wrap, and basically everything about it was spot-on.  The house-made saj bread they wrap it in is nice and fresh, with just the right amount of substance and  chewiness to hold up to the very generously-stuffed wrap.  And it’s nicely toasted on its exterior — a must.

Flaming Stove

The wrap features a healthy amount of meat that’s well-balanced by the various  pickles/veggies; I know it looks overstuffed, but the chicken remains the star.

My only real complaint is that the meat has been shaved in advance and is slightly dryer than it should be, and has lost the delightful crispiness that makes top-tier shawarma so great.  But everything else here is so good that this never seems like a huge deal.

Flaming Stove

In particular, they add several sauces to the wrap — tahini, garlic, amba, and hot sauce — and it’s an absolute taste explosion.  The combination of those sauces is magic; it’s tangy, garlicky, savoury, and thoroughly delicious.  You could put those sauces on basically anything, and it would be amazing.

Flaming Stove

Also: this might have been the biggest shawarma wrap I’ve ever had?  It comes cut in half, with each half wrapped separately, presumably because it would be too unwieldy if they tried to wrap them together.  Each half is about the size and heft of a large burrito.  It’s insane.

It costs 15 bucks, which seems a bit pricey until you take a look at it and realize that it can (and should!) be shared among two people.

An Amazing Sandwich at Elsa’s Food & Bakery

Elsa's Food & Bakery
Location
: 30 Baywood Road, Unit 15, Etobicoke
Website: https://www.facebook.com/Elsas-bakery-1905919683049150/

Elsa’s is a delightful hole-in-the-wall Iraqi bakery that specializes in a pita-esque flatbread called samoon; you can get it on its own (you should do this) or stuffed with shawarma or falafel (you should do this too).

This is the latest hidden gem I’ve discovered thanks to the inimitable Suresh Doss, and like basically everything he writes about, it’s great.

Elsa's Food & Bakery

It’s that bread.  It’s chewy, fluffy, flavourful, and amazing.  It’s tasty as part of a sandwich, but it’s also pretty damn good on its own.

I got the falafel sandwich, which comes with the usual toppings, along with the delightful addition of eggplant and fries.  The last time I had eggplant in a falafel sandwich was at L’As du Fallafel in Paris, and I’m starting to seriously wonder why every falafel sandwich doesn’t have eggplant in it.  It’s a fantastic addition.

Elsa's Food & Bakery

The other thing that stands out is the sauce they top it with, called amba — it’s a mango-based sauce, and it’s sweet, sour, tangy, and delicious, with a mildly curry-tinged flavour.  It’s not a subtle sauce; its intense zippiness completely dominated the other flavours in the sandwich, but it’s so tasty that this barely felt like an issue.