Delightful Mochi Doughnuts at Marry Me Mochi

Marry Me Mochi
Location
: 100 City Centre Drive, Mississauga (inside Square One)
Website: https://www.marrymemochi.ca/

Mochi doughnuts are one of those things that were basically impossible to find in the city just a few years ago, and I wouldn’t say they’re everywhere now, but they’re certainly available.  It may be basically impossible to live affordably in the GTA, but on the other hand… mochi doughnuts?  You win some, you lose some.

Marry Me Mochi

Marry Me Mochi features an assortment of permanent flavours, as well as a rotating menu of specials; I went with one of the permanent varieties, creme brulee, which the menu says is their most popular.

The doughnut gets all its flavour from the frosting on top — there’s no custard filling here — but still manages to do a pretty impressive job of replicating the taste of creme brulee.  It actually does have a custardy flavour, and while it’s not crispy on top, it is torched, which helps it to land that flavour.

Marry Me Mochi

It’s also delightfully restrained in its sweetness.  A lot of doughnuts like this are both glazed and then frosted, which makes them a bit of a sugar bomb.  The sweetness here is just in the frosting, which lets you taste the doughnut itself and doesn’t overwhelm.

And, of course, it’s a mochi doughnut, so it has that pleasant springiness (but without being overly chewy).  It’s a great doughnut.

Tasty, Cheesy Pork Katsu at Katsuya

Katsuya
Location
: 1224 Dundas Street West, Mississauga
Website: https://katsuya.ca/

There are very few dishes that wouldn’t be enhanced with the addition of gooey cheese.  Think about a dish.  Now think about that dish, but with gooey cheese.  It’s better, right?

Katsuya

(And if you’re thinking that this isn’t true for dessert, let me tell you: you’re wrong.)

Katsuya

They have a cheese option for the katsu at Katsuya, which finds the traditional pork loin topped with mozzarella cheese before its breaded and fried, and yeah, it’s delightful.  The pork is tender, the cheese is delightfully melty, and the exterior is nice and crispy.  How could that not be great?

Katsuya

I ordered the Katsuya Original, which comes topped with “Katsuya’s house sauce.”  I’d probably order one of their other options next time — the sauce was a bit sweet for me — but the katsu itself was so tasty that this was barely an issue.

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.

Solid Noodle Soup at Kenzo Ramen

Kenzo Ramen
Location
: 3337 Bloor Street West, Etobicoke
Website: http://www.kenzoramen.ca/

It’s hard to remember this now, but there was a time (not that long ago!) when ramen was actually pretty difficult to find in the GTA.  And Kenzo is Toronto’s ramen OG; they opened their first location in 2002, and for quite a while, they were pretty much the only game in town if you wanted to sample ramen in the city.

Of course, these days it’s hard to go more than a few blocks without coming across a ramen joint, but Kenzo’s still around despite all the competition.  So they must be doing something right.

Kenzo Ramen

And indeed, the bowl I had might not have been up there with the city’s best, but there was absolutely nothing wrong with it.

They have a whole bunch of options, but the waiter mentioned that the King of Kings is their most popular, which is a spicy shio broth with an “assortment of stir-fried vegetables with ground pork, topped with charsu, egg, naruto maki, menma, wakame, green onion, nori.”

Kenzo Ramen

You can choose your spice level; I went with the spiciest, and it was indeed quite fiery.

The stir-fried vegetables are actually the most unique part; they give the whole bowl that distinctive stir-fried wok hay flavour, which makes it feel quite distinct.  It actually kind of reminded me of a style of ramen called burnt miso ramen that I don’t believe you can find in the GTA.

Kenzo Ramen

The noodles were a bit on the soft side, and the broth lacked the complexity you’ll find in the best bowls of ramen, but overall it’s a tasty bowl of noodle soup.

Quick Bites: Barbershop Patisserie, Bloom Cafe, Bang Bang

Raspberry almond bread budding from Barbershop Patisserie
Raspberry almond bread budding from Barbershop Patisserie

I’m a big fan of Barbershop Patisserie; I’m also a big fan of bread pudding, but alas, the bread pudding at Barbershop isn’t quite as amazing as you’d hope.  It’s perfectly tasty (I don’t think Barbershop is capable of making something that’s outright bad), but it has basically no custard flavour, and the level of sweetness is so restrained that it borders on bland.  Still, the combo of the almonds and the tart raspberry is a big winner, and it certainly wasn’t unpleasant to eat.

Vanilla Cream Puff from Bloom Cafe
Vanilla Cream Puff from Bloom Cafe

I recently mentioned that the delightful Choux Lab actually reminded me quite a bit of Beard Papa, a Japanese cream puff chain that left the GTA a few years ago, taking a little piece of my heart with it.  Well Bloom Cafe is even more Beard Papa-esque; they specialize in the exact type of Japanese cream puffs they used to sell at Beard Papa.  Alas, I’ll have to stick with Choux Lab to fill the Beard-Papa-sized hole in my heart (and stomach) — the cream puff here could have been tasty, but it was obviously filled way too far in advance, and was pretty soggy.  It didn’t help that it was filled with what tasted like plain sweetened whipped cream instead of delicious custardy cream like BP.

Pumpkin / Cookie Butter at Bang Bang
Pumpkin / Cookie Butter from Bang Bang

Let’s end things on a more positive note.  I’ve written about Bang Bang many, many times on this blog, so I’ll keep this brief.  Bang Bang: still great!  The flavour I recently had, which combines pumpkin and Biscoff cookie butter, is legitimately among the best scoops of ice cream that I’ve ever had.  The two flavours work so well together, and the ice cream itself is amazingly rich and creamy.