Delicious Dessert at Soul Chocolate

Soul Chocolate
Location
: 20 Wagstaff Drive, Toronto
Website: https://www.soulchocolate.com/

Soul Chocolate is a delightful chocolate shop and cafe where they make their own chocolate, not to mention a bunch of tasty desserts.  They used to have a much smaller location on Gerrard, but have since moved to an industrial area nearby.

Soul Chocolate

I tried a small chocolate bar and one of the desserts, and both were stellar.

Soul Chocolate

They have a variety of dark chocolate bars made with cocoa from different countries; I went with the Dominican 70%, and it was actually pretty amazing.  It’s about five bucks for a 25 gram bar, which is not cheap, but you know what?  You get what you pay for.  If you compare this to better mass-produced dark chocolate like Lindt, the difference is night and day.  The chocolate here has so much more going on.

Soul Chocolate

I also tried a slice of the chocolate pie, which might have the most intense chocolate flavour of any dessert I’ve ever had; it’s great.  It’s ultra rich and fudgy, with an in-your-face dark chocolate / coffee flavour that’s really satisfying.   The crust is made with sourdough, and it’s got a mild tang that works nicely with the deep chocolatiness.  It’s a delicious dessert.

A Meaty Bowl of Noodles at Szechuan Noodle Bowl

Szechuan Noodle Bowl
Location
: 526 Bloor Street West, Toronto
Website: https://szechuannoodlebowl.ca/

Szechuan Noodle Bowl is definitely about more than just noodles, with an impressively deep, multi-page menu that has a whole bunch of tasty-looking Chinese dishes.  Still, it’s called “Szechuan Noodle Bowl,” so clearly, I had to order the first dish on the menu: Noodles, Sichuan style.

Szechuan Noodle Bowl

You can choose from either chicken or pork (I went with pork), and spicy or non-spicy (I went with spicy, of course).

Szechuan Noodle Bowl

It’s a solid bowl of noodles.  The flavour was a bit more muted than I’d like (this is particularly true of the spice level, which was almost nonexistent — and sadly, the jar of chili oil that you’ll often find on the table at a place like this was absent, so there was no way of amping things up), but otherwise this was a really satisfying bowl of noodles.

Szechuan Noodle Bowl

The thick noodles were nice and chewy, the garlicky pork was quite tasty, and the peanuts added a good amount of texture.  It didn’t exactly rock my world, but I enjoyed it (the affordable $11.99 price tag for a very substantial serving of both noodles and pork definitely helps).

Amazing Mexican Food at Puerto Bravo

Puerto Bravo
Location
: 1425 Gerrard Street East, Toronto
Website: https://puertobravo.ca/

When you’re eating a place that’s been featured in the Michelin Guide, it kinda elevates your expectations a bit.  Not that Michelin is an infallible arbiter of taste, but generally speaking, the restaurants they highlight are above average.

Puerto Bravo

Well, Puerto Brave has a “Bib Gourmand” designation from Michelin, my expectations were quite high, and even still, I was pretty blown away by how good everything was.

Puerto Bravo

I tried a few things.  I started with the guacamole (“Avocado, Lime, Cilantro, Jalapeño, Chips,”) and it was fantastic.  A lot of guacamole tends to be a bit too oniony for me, with their harshness overwhelming the relatively delicate flavour of the avocado.  Here, instead of mixing onions right in, they add zippy pickled onions on top, which is a huge improvement that lets the flavour of the creamy avocado shine through.  And the tortilla chips on the side are way above average, with a hearty crunch and a nice toasty corn flavour.

Puerto Bravo

Up next was the carne asada taco (“Grilled Beef, Asadero Cheese, Onions, Cabbage, Radish, Avocado Salsa, Red Salsa”).  Every element here just works, with a nice balance of flavours and some seriously tasty grilled beef (a lot of the time with a taco like this, the flavour of the beef is buried by other stuff, but here it’s clearly the star of the show (and extremely delicious)).

Puerto Bravo

Last and definitely not least was the Wera tostada (“Octopus, Shrimp, Macha Mayonnaise, Pico de Gallo, Avocado, Salsa Macha”).  Wow this was good.  The contrast between the crunchy tortilla, creamy avocado and meaty octopus and shrimp was so satisfying (the octopus, in particular, was almost improbably tender).  I think this was my favourite of the three, and that’s saying something because everything was extremely delicious.

Tasty Cake Doughnuts at Maverick’s Donut Company

Maverick's Donut Company
Location
: 1618 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://mavericksdonuts.com/

Maverick’s is an Ottawa-based doughnut chain that opened their first location in Toronto last year.  You might be thinking that we have enough doughnut joints in the city, but you’re wrong and here’s why: Maverick’s specializes in cake-based doughnuts.  Most doughnut places will have a cake doughnut or two on the menu, but here it’s pretty much all of them.

Maverick's Donut Company

I tried six: cherry glazed, pecan pie, maple bacon, double chocolate, lemon ricotta, and chocolate coconut.

They were all quite delightful.  The cake is dense but not too dense, they’re not overly sweet (aside from maybe the maple bacon, which I still quite enjoyed), and they have a light crispiness on their exterior.  They’re top quality doughnuts.

Maverick's Donut Company

And the flavours were all great, though if I had to pick a favourite, it might be the nutty pecan pie.  Or the double chocolate, which had a really satisfying chocolate flavour.  Or the cherry glazed, which tasted like a doughnut and a maraschino cherry had a baby.  Or the lemon ricotta, which had a nice tartness and a satisfying creaminess.  Or the maple bacon, which had satisfying pops of saltiness from the bacon to offset the sweetness of the maple.  Or the chocolate coconut, which is always a tasty combo.

Oh, I just named all the doughnuts, didn’t I.  Well you know what?  I liked all of them.  They’re all my favourite.  Deal with it.

Big Arch at McDonald’s

Big Arch at McDonald's
Location
1001 Islington Avenue, Etobicoke 
Websitehttps://www.mcdonalds.com/ca/en-ca.html

The Big Arch is kind of a big deal for McDonald’s.  They’re making a pretty big deal about it, at least, and apparently it’s going to be rolling out internationally soon, though right now it’s limited to a few countries.

The idea was to make a bigger, “more satiating” burger, and they’ve certainly succeeded on the size front.  It’s a big boy, that’s for sure.  Just looking at it, it’s substantially heftier than your typical McDonald’s fare.

Big Arch at McDonald's

(For comparison’s sake, the Big Arch is 1065 calories, the Big Mac is 570, and the Quarter Pounder with Cheese is 530.)

The Big Arch, per the McDonald’s website: “Two quarter pound 100% Canadian beef patties, layered with three slices of white processed cheese, and topped with crispy onions, slivered onions, pickles, lettuce and delicious Big Arch sauce, served on a toasted sesame and poppy seed bun.”

Big Arch at McDonald's

I should note that I got lucky.  My burger was well assembled, and the patties were fresh and a little bit juicy (a juicy burger?  At McDonald’s??).  As always at a fast food joint, your mileage may vary.  But I really enjoyed this thing.

The element that stands out the most is the Big Arch sauce.  It’s similar to Big Mac sauce, but like five or six times zestier.  It’s got an almost citrusy brightness to it that actually does a pretty great job of cutting through the richness of the patties and the cheese.  It’s quite tasty, which is a good thing because this is a saucy burger; they put two napkins in my bag and that was just barely enough.

Big Arch at McDonald's

Everything else works quite well.  I’m normally not a fan of raw onions, but here there’s so much stuff going on that you can barely taste them.  They mostly just add crunch (and the crunchiness from the fresh onions and crispiness from the fried ones are a nice combo).

I liked this way more than I thought I would.  It McDonald’s-y in all the best ways.  I guess the idea is that this will become a permanent part of the menu, and I hope that’s the case.  It feels like it could happily live alongside McDonald’s classics like the Big Mac and the Quarter Pounder.