Tasty Japanese Sandwiches at Imanishi Sando Bar

Imanishi Sando Bar
Location
: 179 Brock Avenue (inside McCormick Park)
Website: https://imanishisandobar.square.site/

Imanishi Sando Bar is a bit of an odd one — located in an unlabeled shipping container next to a community centre, in an area where you’d absolutely never be able to see it if you were driving by, it’s pretty much the dictionary definition of a hidden gem.

Imanishi Sando Bar

They mostly serve a variety of Japanese sandwiches (or “sandos”), though they do have a few other things on the menu.

I tried the pork tenderloin sando, the aji (mackerel) sando, and the fries; everything was quite good.

Imanishi Sando Bar

Both the pork and the fish are freshly fried, with a delightfully crispy exterior and a perfectly cooked interior.  They’re served on sweet, fluffy Japanese milk bread, which complements them both perfectly.

The aji, with its tartar sauce and slice of cheese, is basically like an upscale Filet-O-Fish.  Both sandwiches are saucy as hell (the pork has what tastes like the same tartar sauce, along with tangy tonkatsu sauce); they’re a bit of a mess to eat, but they’re extremely tasty.

Imanishi Sando Bar

The fries are quite good too — particularly once you dip them in the sweet honey mustard sauce on the side — though they are fairly standard battered fries.

Delicious, Beefy Sandwiches at Marq’s Chicago Beef

Marq's Chicago Beef
Location
: 707 Dundas Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.marqsbeef.ca/

If you’re looking for a tasty, beefy sandwich, look no further: you’ve found it.  Go to Marq’s and thank me later.

As the name implies, Marq’s serves Chicago-style Italian beef sandwiches, which features a whole bunch of roast beef on a French roll, served with a beefy au jus sauce (which, unlike a French dip, is incorporated right into the sandwich).

Marq's Chicago Beef

The sandwich is served as saucy as you like it: either juiced, dipped, or dunked, with dipped being the default level.  You can further customize your sandwich with giardiniera (spicy pickled veggies) or sweet peppers, or if you want to really live it up, both.

I got the sandwich dipped with both, and it was extremely tasty.  It’s exactly what you want it to be — the beef has a great flavour, it’s super tender, and the sauce-soaked bread is the perfect vehicle.  That’s not to mention the zingy giardiniera, which does a great job of adding some brightness to the very heavy sandwich.

There’s not much else to say about it — it’s a great sandwich.  There’s a whole lot I liked about it, and nothing that I didn’t.

A Satisfying Breakfast at A Bing – Chinese Crepe

A Bing - Chinese Crepe
Location
: 895 Bay Street, Toronto
Website: None

I mentioned recently that jian bing — a tasty Chinese crepe — used to be nearly impossible to find in the city, and is now delightfully common.  Case in point: A Bing – Chinese Crepe, which is now the third place I’ve written about specializing in the Chinese breakfast dish.

A Bing - Chinese Crepe

The menu features several different versions with fillings like sausage, chicken, or bacon, but as far as I’m concerned, the classic is where it’s at.

I ordered the traditional style crepe: “egg, crisp fritter, green onion, cilantro, sauce.”

A Bing - Chinese Crepe

It was quite tasty, though the flavour was a bit muted; slightly more of the sweet sauce would have been welcome.  Plus, this dish generally features a hot sauce of some sort, and that was completely absent here.  I’m assuming I could have requested this, but they didn’t mention it and I didn’t think to ask.  Next time.

The taste might not have been quite as vibrant as I would have liked, but the texture was dead-on.  The contrast between the crispy fritter and the slightly chewy eggy crepe was absolutely delightful.

Delicious Thai Food at Thammada Thai Cuisine

Thammada Thai Cuisine
Location
: 2888 Lake Shore Boulevard West, Etobicoke
Website: https://thammada.meemup.com/

I visited Thammada Thai Cuisine on a recent Sunday for lunch; the place was completely deserted for the entire time I was there, which is a damn shame because all of the food was very, very good.

Thammada Thai Cuisine

I had read about this place in the Toronto Star, so of course I had to try the main dish they recommended, which is a whole fried fish that you can either order with fried garlic or nam chim sauce.  I went with the latter, which is a delightfully zesty, zippy sauce that complements the crispy fried fish perfectly.

Thammada Thai Cuisine

The fish looks like it’s going to be one of those dishes you have to eat very carefully, with a minefield of tiny little bones, but it’s actually completely deboned aside from the tail and the head.  It’s all edible and it’s all delicious, with a perfectly crisp exterior and flaky meat within.

Thammada Thai Cuisine

I also sampled the tried-and-true pad thai, which was just as good as the fish.  I sometimes find this dish to be a bit cloying, but the version here had a really great balance of flavours, perfectly chewy noodles, and a mild smokiness from the blazing hot wok.  It was probably one of the better versions of pad thai that I’ve ever had.

Decent Noodles at Lion City

Lion City
Location
: 1177 Central Parkway West, Mississauga
Website: https://www.lioncityrestaurant.ca/

It’s odd — Singapore’s cuisine is incredibly delicious, and yet there’s maybe like half a dozen Singaporean restaurants in the entire GTA?  If that?  I feel like there should be one in every neighbourhood, but at least we’ve got a few of them.

One of those few restaurants is Lion City in Mississauga, which serves a diverse menu of Singaporean classics that, alas, were mostly unavailable when I visited.  I guess they were having kitchen issues?

Lion City

The laksa was one of the few dishes that was available, and hey, I’m never going to be mad about having to order laksa.

The style of laksa they serve here features a really tasty, curry-and-seafood-infused broth that’s made luxuriously creamy thanks to coconut milk, and that comes with a generous amount of thick rice noodles.

Lion City

It was far from the best laksa I’ve ever had, with a flavour that was a bit too muted, and with slightly overcooked noodles, but it was still tasty.  The various toppings — shrimp, fish cakes, chicken, tofu — were all well prepared and complemented the soup quite well.

This is going to make me sound like a maniac, but there’s a type of instant laksa you can find at Asian supermarkets from a Singaporean company called Prima Taste, and… I honestly think it’s a little bit better than the version they’re serving here, with a more vibrant flavour and a better texture on the noodles.

Lion City

I know that recommending instant noodles, of all things, over a restaurant dish sounds like a food crime, but trust me: try those noodles.  They’re so much better than any other instant noodles you’ve ever had.