Tasty Vegetarian Vietnamese Food at Dai Bi Chay

Dai Bi Chay
Location
: 2399 Cawthra Road, Mississauga
Website: https://daibichay.com/

I’ll admit that I was a bit skeptical of Dai Bi Chai going in.  An entirely vegetarian Vietnamese place?  With a bunch of mock meats on the menu?  How good could that be?

Dai Bi Chay

Quite good, as it turns out.

Dai Bi Chay

I tried the bun bo hue chay, a zingy, spicy bowl of noodle soup that comes with an assortment of mock meats.  The soup itself was quite tasty, with a zippy flavour (that’s nicely amped up by the smoky chili oil on the table) and a decent amount of depth that keeps things interesting.

Dai Bi Chay

As for the mock meats, I’m pretty sure they’re all tofu-based (they all have the taste and texture of very firm tofu); I don’t think anyone’s going to be fooled, but they’re tasty for what they are.

Quick Bites: Machino Donuts, Fuji Noodle House, Kunafa’s

Various doughnuts from Machino Donuts
Various doughnuts from Machino Donuts

Machino Donuts specializes in vegan doughnuts, and I’ll admit that I’ve dragged my feet  on trying it because of that fact.  I assumed that the vegan-ness of the place would result in compromised, subpar doughnuts, and I was 100% wrong.  I tried three doughnuts here: the apple fritter, the banana bread fritter, and the sour cream orange, and all three were quite tasty.  In particular, the apple fritter was right on par with the better fritters I’ve had in the GTA, with a lightly crispy exterior, a nice and tender interior, and a great apple flavour.

Fuji Noodle House
Fuju signature noodle soup from Fuji Noodle House

Fuji Noodle House specializes in tasty Chinese noodle soups, and yeah, it’s good.  I tried the Fuji signature noodle soup (“signature hand-pulled noodle soup with beef, crispy pork fillet, Fuji meatballs, beef brisket, cilantro, and scallions”), and while nothing about it jumped out at me as mind-blowing, the noodles were nice and chewy, the broth was tasty, and all the meaty add-ons were satisfying.

Kunafa's
Kunafa from Kunafa’s

Kunafa, for the uninitiated, is a delicious Middle Eastern dessert in which a gooey, neutral-tasting cheese is topped with syrup-soaked pastry.  It’s great, though I have yet to find a truly exceptional version in the GTA.  Kunafa’s, which I wrote a few years ago, specializes in the stuff.  As you’d hope, it’s very good — probably the best in the GTA.  I visited the original Scarborough location last time, and the one in Mississauga this time, and it’s clear that they haven’t missed a step in the expansion (they also have a location in Ajax).  It’s a really tasty dessert.

Tasty Korean Noodles at BookChon

Tasty Korean Noodles at BookChon
Location
: 315 Dundas Street East, Mississauga (inside PAT Supermarket)
Website: None

BookChon has a bit of an odd setup — they’re inside PAT Supermarket in Mississauga, and if you want to order, you can’t actually do it at the restaurant.  You have to line up at the grocery store’s checkout area, and then tell the cashier what you want and pay there.

Tasty Korean Noodles at BookChon

I’m assuming most of their business is take-out, but they do have a small seating area around the corner.

Tasty Korean Noodles at BookChon

I ordered the jajangmyun, a Korean dish in which noodles are served with a thick black bean sauce.

It’s not the best version of this dish that you’ll ever have (it’s a bit on the bland side), but it’s tasty enough, with a generous serving of chewy noodles topped with a savoury, slightly sweet sauce.

Tasty Korean Noodles at BookChon

I wouldn’t necessarily go out of my way for it, but if you’re in the supermarket anyway, it’s a pretty solid deal at ten bucks.

Unique Chinese Food at Tangritah Kabab House

Tangritah Kabab House
Location
: 900 Rathburn Road West, Mississauga
Website: None

One of the things I like about living in Toronto is that not only is pretty much every country’s cuisine available to try (which I explore in another blog, 196 Plates — I think it might be about time to bring that one back), you can actually get so much more specific than that.

Tangritah Kabab House

This place — which specializes in Uyghur cuisine — is a great example of this.  “Chinese food” tends to be put under one enormous umbrella, but China is a huge country, and its food is wildly different from region to region.

Tangritah Kabab House

I tried a few things here, and it was all extremely delicious.  First up: a dish the menu only refers to as “fried meat.”  I think it was beef, though it might have been lamb (if it was, it didn’t have much of a lamby flavour).  Either way, it was super tasty, with a bunch of tender meat, nicely cooked onions, and a very cumin-tinged flavour that was extremely addictive.

Tangritah Kabab House

Next up was the Tangritah Special Langmen, which is an Uyghur dish in which hand-pulled noodles are topped with stir-fried veggies and meat.  The flavour here was a bit less distinctive than the fried meat, but the noodles had a really satisfying chewiness, and the veggies and meat were perfectly cooked (again, I’m not sure what the meat was, but I’m gonna say beef).

Tangritah Kabab House

Finally, I tried the samsa, a bun filled with a mix of lamb and onions.  This looks like it might have initially been crispy on its exterior, which would have been nice, but it was either steamed or microwaved to reheat and was soft throughout.  Regardless, it was quite tasty.

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.