Delicious Hunan Chinese Food at Chili Cabin

Chili Cabin
Location
: 1100 Dundas Street West, Mississauga
Website: None

As a fan of spice, I’ll admit that Chili Cabin mostly caught my eye because of its name.  They specialize in Hunan Chinese cuisine, which, according to Wikipedia, is similar to Sichuan cuisine, but with a more pure level of spice rather than numbing heat.

Chili Cabin

I tried the Hunan style stir-fried pork and the stewed vermicelli, which both offer a customizable level of spice: mild, normal, or extra.  I went with extra spice for the pork, and normal for the noodles.

Both dishes were very spicy.  Not quite blow-your-face-off hot, but definitely hot enough to put some sweat on your brow and clear your sinuses.

Chili Cabin

And both were very tasty.  The Sichuan comparison seems apt, as both dishes had a similar flavour profile to Sichuan dishes that I’ve had (but without the numbing heat).  I liked both quite a lot, though the pork was my favourite of the two.  The pork was nice and tender, and it comes absolutely doused in a flavour-packed oil that was intensely delicious.  It’s one of those dishes that’s almost too flavourful on its own, but once you have it with rice it really comes alive.

Chili Cabin

I liked the noodles a bit less, but they were still very tasty, with a nice chewy texture, satisfying spicing, and savoury ground pork interspersed throughout.  It’s a winner.  They have a million things on the menu here, and I’m quite keen to come back and try some more stuff.

Tasty Noodle Soup at Wonton Hut Noodle Bar

Wonton Hut Noodle Bar
Location
: 671 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://wontonhut.ca/

There are a bunch of great wonton noodle soup restaurants in the GTA — at least in places like Markham and Mississauga.  In Toronto itself, it’s a bit harder to find.  Enter: Wonton Hut Noodle Bar, which is on Queen Street and serves a very tasty bowl of the stuff.

Wonton Hut Noodle Bar

They actually have a decent variety on the menu (including a handful of Vietnamese dishes, oddly enough) but of course, the place has “wonton” and “noodle” in its name, so you’ve gotta get the wonton noodle soup.

Wonton Hut Noodle Bar

It’s good.  The wontons themselves are seriously tasty, with big chunks of perfectly cooked shrimp and a very satisfying flavour.  And the noodles are satisfyingly springy.

Wonton Hut Noodle Bar

The flavour of the soup itself is a bit on the subtle side, but is nicely amped up by a couple of spoonfuls of the legitimately fiery chili oil they have on the table.

Great Ramen at Kaminari Ramen Bar

Kaminari Ramen Bar
Location
: 1330 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.bykaminari.com/

Kaminari Ramen Bar actually has a few types of ramen on the menu: clear Tokyo-style, creamy, “duck umami,” vegan, and a soupless yuzu ramen.  The waiter said they don’t really have a specialty, so I went with the clear Tokyo-style.

Kaminari Ramen Bar

The ramen, as per the menu: “Clear chicken broth, pork cha-shu, chicken cha-shu, wonton, Tokyo Negi, bamboo shoot, and nori seaweed.”  You can get it either shio (salt) or shoyu (soy sauce); I went with the latter.

Kaminari Ramen Bar

It’s a very good bowl of ramen.  This style of ramen isn’t quite as common in the GTA as the more omnipresent creamy tonkotsu or tori paitan, but done well, it’s just as delicious.

The soup has a very rich and savoury soy-sauce-infused flavour.  It’s the type of broth that never feels one-note or overly salty, no matter how much of it you have.

Kaminari Ramen Bar

And everything else here was quite tasty, from the chewy, thin noodles to the tender chicken and pork.  It’s a top-notch bowl of ramen.

Porky Goodness at C-Block Taiwanese Bento

C-Block Taiwanese Bento
Location
: 690 Bloor Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.instagram.com/cblock.to/

C-Block Taiwanese Bento is a delightful little take-out counter (they have a couple of seats, but mostly, it’s take-out only) serving up a whole bunch of Taiwanese classics.

Their specialty are bento boxes that come with rice, one meat dish, and three veggie sides.  I went with the braised minced pork, green beans, eggplant, and tomato scrambled egg.

C-Block Taiwanese Bento

This actually turned out to be not quite what I was expecting; the dish I thought this was going to be features braised pork belly and is thoroughly delicious.  But then this was quite tasty too, so I can’t complain.

It’s really satisfying, with a spice-packed flavour that reminded a bit of Sichuan cuisine.

C-Block Taiwanese Bento

The sides were solid as well, with the highlight being the tomato scrambled egg; the contrast between the tender chunks of tomato and the firm, meaty egg was actually quite delightful.

Stellar Ramen at Ramen x Remix

Ramen x Remix
Location
: 424 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://ramenxremix.com/

I feel like Ramen x Remix really deserves to be more popular.  I’m going to assume (and hope) that they do better in the evenings, because I showed up for lunch on a Saturday, and the place was a complete ghost town.  Based on the quality of ramen I was served, this is a crime.  The place should be packed with a line out the door.

Ramen x Remix

I  ordered the Signature Yuzu Scallop Shio Consommé (“signature slow cooked clear chicken broth, pork and chicken chashu, clam meat, yuzu, lemon, sashimi grade torched scallop, pork shrimp wonton, menma, onions”) and it was absolutely fantastic.

It reminded me a lot of the ramen from Afuri.  I liked that quite a lot, but I think this was even better.

Ramen x Remix

The soup itself had such a clean chicken/seafoody flavour, with a subtle bright sweetness from the yuzu.  A lot of ramen can be a real face-punch of flavour — and I love that, don’t get me wrong — but I really enjoyed how subtle this was.  But it’s still complex enough that I wasn’t even close to sick of it by the time I got to the bottom of the bowl.

Ramen x Remix

And everything else was great, from the super-tender pork and chicken to the sweet, fresh scallop and the noodles, which were nice and chewy.  It’s a very tasty bowl of ramen.