Cheesy Noodles at Garden Hong Kong Cafe

Garden Hong Kong Cafe
Location
: 28 South Unionville Avenue, Markham
Website: None

I’ve mentioned before that I make it a general policy on this blog to not compare dishes to the real deal in whatever country they’re from.  I just don’t think it’s particularly useful or fair, for a number of reasons.

But sometimes I’ve gotta do it.  In this case, I pretty much fell in love with the cheese noodles I had in Hong Kong, and was very excited when I saw that they had them on the menu at Garden Hong Kong Cafe in Markham.

Garden Hong Kong Cafe

It’s a really simple dish; it’s basically just instant noodles with cheese sauce.  In Hong Kong, it was served with braised pork cheek on the side; here, it was chicken wings.

I will say that the version at Garden Hong Kong Cafe was tasty enough, especially when you top it with a generous spoonful (or two, or three) of the garlicky, sweet chili oil they have on the table.  That chili oil is doing about 95 percent of the heavy lifting in making this as good as it is, but hey — tasty is tasty.  I’m not complaining.

Garden Hong Kong Cafe

Sadly, the cheese sauce here is pretty bland, and is applied very sparingly to the noodles (as opposed to Hong Kong, where the sauce completely smothered the dish and had a delightfully sharp cheesy flavour).

Still, that aforementioned chili oil is delicious enough to smooth over any of the dish’s faults, and at $8.50 (!) — which includes a mug of delicious milk tea — it’s hard to deny that it’s an absolute steal.

I should note that this place is very small and very busy (it was already packed and had a waiting list when I showed up a few minutes after they opened on a recent Saturday), so keep that in mind.

Solid Gelato at On Third Thought

On Third Thought
Location
: 6 Markham Street, Toronto
Website: https://www.onthirdthought.com/

I recently saw On Third Thought on a list of the best gelato in the city, and I thought, wait — this place serves some of the best gelato in the city?  And I haven’t heard of it??

Obviously I needed to try it ASAP.

On Third Thought

They have about a dozen flavours on the menu, mostly fruity.  Interestingly, they have a handful of booze-infused scoops for a one dollar upcharge.  I went alcohol-free and got chocolate and caramelized fig.

On Third Thought

It’s not bad at all.  I personally wouldn’t put this in my top 10, but I’m certainly not mad I ate it.  The gelato is served at the perfect temperature and is decently creamy, and while the fig flavour was more tart than I was expecting (and both were leaning a bit sweeter than I prefer), the chocolate had a richness to it that I found quite enjoyable.

On Third Thought

They also serve the gelato in a glass bowl with a metal spoon if you’re eating on the patio, and I found this to be unexpectedly delightful.  You wouldn’t think it would make a difference, but there’s something about it that just feels better than eating out of the usual disposable cup.

A Cheap, Tasty Lunch at Brandt European Food Market

Brandt European Food Market
Location
: 1878 Mattawa Avenue, Mississauga
Website: https://brandtmeats.com/brandt-food-market/

I’ve written about hidden gems on this blog before, but it doesn’t get much more hidden than this place.  It’s located along a dead-end industrial road, and unless you happen to work in the area, there is zero chance that you’d drive by the place.

Brandt European Food Market

(And even if you did, it’s so nondescript that you likely wouldn’t even realize that a delightful little Eastern European supermarket and restaurant can be found within.)

Brandt European Food Market

It’s actually a factory outlet for Brand meats, a Mississauga-based manufacturer of various Eastern European sausages and meats, and it features the aforementioned supermarket, along with a hot table with a nice spread of stuff like schnitzel and cabbage rolls.

Brandt European Food Market

I went with the BBQ pork chops, which features tender braised pork and mushrooms in a zippy sauce.  The meal comes with two chops piled on top of a mountain of sides (you can pick two, and  they are generous).  I had the potatoes, which are basically like hash browns, and the sauerkraut, which is well above average.

Brandt European Food Market

Nothing about it particularly blew my mind, but the plate cost ten bucks and was piled high with food, so it’s a fantastic deal.

Tasty Wraps at I Am Doner

I Am Doner
Location
: 433 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.iamdoner.ca/

I Am Doner is an oddly-named doner chain from the UK that serves beef doner and chicken shawarma (along with various vegetarian options like falafel and halloumi) that you can either get as a wrap or a bowl.

I Am Doner

I ordered the house special, which comes crammed with chicken shawarma, beef doner, falafel, and halloumi.  Because why get one thing when you can get everything??  That’s just science.  I ordered it as a wrap, which, by default, comes with chili sauce, mayo, and a whole bunch of veggies.

I Am Doner

Between the meat, the cheese, the falafel, the various veggies, and the generous amount of sauce, it’s a bit of a mess.  It’s ridiculously crammed with stuff.  They’re not kidding around, that’s for sure.

It’s very tasty, but there’s so much going on here that it’s hard to even gauge the quality of the individual components.  It’s just one meaty, saucy mass of food.  I liked it a lot, but I’d probably just pick one of the meats next time so I can have a better idea of what I’m eating.

I Am Doner

The bread they wrap it in definitely has a big job to do, because this thing is so overstuffed that it really needs something with heft to hold up to it all.  And yeah, it does its job.  It’s nice and chewy, and holds together nicely.  It’s a very good wrap.

Tasty Fried Chicken Sandwiches at Knuckle Sandwich

Knuckle Sandwich
Location
: 969 Coxwell Avenue, East York
Website: https://knucklesandwich.ca/

Though Knuckle Sandwich has a variety of sandwiches on the menu, their specialty seems to be fried chicken — it comes first on the menu, and they offer three different varieties (classic, Buffalo, and Korean).

Knuckle Sandwich

(You’d think there would be a titular “Knuckle Sandwich,” but there is not, which strikes me as a bit odd.  You’re really going to name your restaurant Knuckle Sandwich and not have a knuckle sandwich on the menu?  Come on.)

Knuckle Sandwich

I went with the Korean fried chicken (“Gochujang Glaze, Miso Kimchi Slaw, House Pickles”), and I enjoyed it.  The sauce was nice and zippy, though the level of crunch wasn’t quite where it should be, the spice level was basically nonexistent, and the chicken itself was a bit dry.

Still, those aren’t huge complaints; the fact that I’m even nitpicking this sandwich is more indicative of how spoiled we are for great fried chicken sandwiches in the GTA than of the actual quality level of this particular one.  A few years ago, I would have been blown away by this sandwich, but the current bar for fried chicken sandwiches is impossibly high.