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.

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.

Tasty Fried Chicken at Ghost Chicken

Ghost Chicken
Location
: 74 Ossington Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://ghostchicken.ca/

I think you could make the argument that the city has too many places that specialize in fried chicken sandwiches.  I’m not saying I would, but someone could make that argument.

My counterpoint: fried chicken sandwiches are delicious and there should be a restaurant selling them on every block.

Ghost Chicken

Ghost Chicken serves a variety of chicken sandwiches, along with wings, chicken strips, and a handful of sides.  I went with the Nashville: “fried chicken thigh, Nashville spice blend & oil, sweet pickles, choice of heat: medium, hot, fire.”

It’s a solid fried chicken sandwich.  It’s nice and crispy, generously sized, and the chicken itself is pleasantly juicy.  The slightly sweet, fresh bun suits it well.

Ghost Chicken

I wish it were a bit more flavourful, though.  The chicken is a bit underseasoned, and even the pickles don’t add the zinginess you’re hoping for (I think maybe they weren’t quite pickled enough?  They tasted mostly like soft cucumber slices).  I ordered the “fire” level of spiciness, and while it did have somewhat of a kick, it didn’t put any sweat on my brow.

Still, it’s generally a well-prepared fried chicken sandwich; it’s hard to go wrong there, even if the flavours could have been amped up a bit.

Delicious Sandwiches at Bunmi

Bunmi
Location
: 822 The Queensway, Etobicoke
Website: http://bunmi.ca/

Bunmi is a banh mi shop where everything is available as a banh mi or a bao, and it’s absolutely fantastic.  Seriously, seriously good.

They have a handful of sandwiches on the menu; I went with the signature banh mi, which comes with “BBQ lemongrass AAA tenderloin, with home-made butter, pickled carrots, cucumber, cilantro, topped with our secret BUN MI sauce.”

Bunmi

Everything about this just works.  The beef is tender and flavourful, the creamy Bun Mi sauce complements it perfectly, and the pickled carrots cut through the richness (and add some nice crunch).

I wish it were spicier (it was barely spicy at all, though I think that’s because I wound up with only hot sauce and no hot peppers), but it was so delicious that it barely even mattered.  It’s legitimately one of the tastiest banh mi that I’ve had in the GTA.

Bunmi

And the banh mi itself (i.e. the actual bread) was phenomenal, with a delicately crispy exterior and a fluffy interior.  A lot of banh mi can be a bit of a mouth-wrecker if you don’t eat it carefully, but this one you can eat with aplomb with an uninjured mouth — without ever losing out on the crispiness that makes banh mi so delightful.

I will note that the sandwich is costs more than the norm at $11.55, but this is an absolute steal for a sandwich this delicious (and this crammed with meat).  I’ve mentioned before that I think the expectation that Asian food needs to be dirt cheap is unfair; if you’re going to complain that a sandwich this good is overpriced at $11.55, you need to GTFO with that nonsense.