Delicious Jamaican Food at Potluck Caribbean Cuisine

Potluck Caribbean Cuisine
Location
: 1707 Britannia Road East, Mississauga
Website: https://potluckrestaurant.ca/

I wasn’t expecting a whole lot from Potluck Caribbean Cuisine — I mostly checked it out because it’s close to my work, and it kinda blew me away.

It’s popular, that’s for sure.  I showed up at around 4:15pm on a weekday and the place was shockingly busy for such a random time.  It seemed odd, but then I ate the food and oh, okay, I get it.

Potluck Caribbean Cuisine

I was hoping to order the jerk chicken, but they were out of dark meat, so I went with the BBQ chicken instead.  You have your choice of sides; I got rice and peas (which they top with oxtail gravy), and coleslaw.

The chicken comes doused in a ketchupy BBQ sauce, and at first I thought it was too sweet (it’s a bit intense), but it grew on me.  It’s especially good when you combine it with the rice and peas, which are nicely seasoned and feature perfectly creamy beans; it’s one of the best versions of the dish that I’ve ever had.  The combo of the sweet sauce and the savoury rice is thoroughly delightful.

Potluck Caribbean Cuisine

I got the “small” size, which is a comical designation considering that the overstuffed container is crammed with what has to be a couple of pounds of food.  At 13 bucks, it’s a fantastic deal.

Quick Bites: Tarboosh Restaurant, Maji Curry, The Night Baker

Shawarma and falafel plate at Tarboosh Restaurant
Shawarma and falafel plate at Tarboosh Restaurant

I ordered the Tarboosh combination plate here (because you should always order a dish with the name of the restaurant in it), which comes with chicken shawarma (beef is also an option), falafel, and two sides (I went with hummus and tabouleh).  It didn’t rock my world, but it was all tasty enough.  The chicken tasted more like baked chicken breast than like shawarma; it was nicely seasoned, but I wish it had been a bit juicier.  The falafel was actually quite unique — it was easily the lightest, fluffiest falafel I’ve ever had, and the flavour reminded me more of a hush puppy than typical falafel.  And the two sides were pretty solid, particularly the hummus, which was a bit heavier on the tahini than I generally prefer, but super creamy and luxurious.

Pork Cutlet Curry with Cheese from Maji Curry
Pork Cutlet Curry with Cheese from Maji Curry

Maji Curry is a Japanese curry chain that recently opened in Toronto.  I’m a big fan of Japanese curry (what’s not to love?), so yeah, I checked it out.  I ordered the pork cutlet curry with cheese, which is one of their signature dishes.  It’s odd; I figured the pork cutlet would be panko-breaded tonkatsu, but it looked and tasted more battered than breaded (and the pork itself was a bit on the dry side).  The “cheese” seemed to be more decorative than anything else, as it had a milky texture and not much flavour.  As for the star of the show — the curry — it was perfectly tasty (I certainly didn’t dislike eating it), but it wasn’t substantially better than the Japanese curry bricks you can get at Asian supermarkets.

Classic chocolate chunk cookie from The Night Baker
Classic chocolate chunk cookie from The Night Baker

I actually assumed I had already blogged about this place, which is why I only took one quick photo and then scarfed the cookie down.  Apparently I haven’t!  Oh well, next time I guess.  And there will definitely be a next time: the classic chocolate chunk cookie here (which also has walnuts and sea salt) is top notch.  It’s nicely chewy with a crisp exterior, the flavours are all where they should be, and the walnuts do a great job of adding a mild crunch and tempering the sweetness of the cookie a bit.

Tasty Eats at Gushi Fried Chicken

Gushi Fried Chicken
Location
: 707 Dundas Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.eatgushi.com/

There are a bunch of great options in Market 707, a collection of street vendors that operate out of shipping containers near Kensington Market.  I’ve previously tried (and loved) Marq’s Chicago Beef, and I think the fried chicken at Gushi is just as good.

Gushi Fried Chicken

I ordered the original Gushi chicken meal, which comes with a generous amount of karaage (Japanese fried chicken made from bite-sized pieces of thigh meat) on top of purple rice, topped with spicy mayo.

The fried chicken is stellar.  It’s super crispy, nicely seasoned, and features perfectly cooked chicken.  It’s incredibly satisfying, and works very well with the sticky purple rice.

Gushi Fried Chicken

The only thing I would change is that I’d probably ask for the spicy mayo to be on the side next time.  It’s quite tasty — and its zippy flavour complements the fried chicken very well — but there’s a lot of it.  It’s a bit overwhelming.  The chicken is so tasty on its own that such a thorough deluge of heavy sauce is probably overkill.

Quick Bites: Union Chicken, Poke Poke, Bake Code

Nashville Lightning Hot sandwich from Union Chicken
Nashville Lightning Hot sandwich from Union Chicken

I had the Buffalo chicken sandwich from Union back in 2019 and found it to be absolutely delightful; well, I recently tried the Nashville hot chicken sandwich, and yeah, it’s very, very good.  It’s got that same addictive combo of exterior crunchiness and interior juiciness, and it’s really tasty, with a nice zippy flavour that cuts through the richness of the chicken.  The toasted bread it comes on was a bit dry/boring, and I wish the sandwich were spicier (it’s barely hotter than mild), but overall it’s a superlative fried chicken sandwich.

Poke from Poke Poke
Poke from Poke Poke

Poke Poke is thoroughly okay.  I had the O.G. bowl (“classic salmon, seaweed salad,
avocado, corn, edamame, masago”) on white rice (brown rice, cauliflower rice, greens, and noodles are also choices), and it was perfectly tasty.  Nothing about it particularly blew me away (it’s a bit overstuffed with toppings and understuffed with salmon — given that it came up to just over twenty bucks with tax, a more generous helping of fish would have been nice), but I’m not mad I ate it.

Salted Egg Yolk Croissant from Bake Code
Salted Egg Yolk Croissant from Bake Code

I tried the PB&J croissant from Bake Code a few years ago and enjoyed it, though I found the croissant itself to be just okay.  I have very similar thoughts about the salted egg yolk croissant, which features a generous amount of tasty, custardy filling, but is otherwise nothing too mind-blowing.  I’m also not convinced that a croissant is a better vehicle for this particular filling than a more traditional bun, but I can’t deny that it’s tasty.

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.