Great Filipino Brunch at BB’s

BB's
Location
: 5 Brock Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://www.instagram.com/bbs.bbs.bbs.bbs.bbs/

BB’s is a delightful Filipino joint that’s mostly known for their brunch, though they are open in the evenings on the weekend, serving… not brunch?  I don’t know, they don’t have a website.  Maybe it’s all day brunch?  Who knows; go and find out!

What a useful blog post this is.  Not a waste of your time at all.

BB's

What I can say with some level of certainty is that if you show up between 11:00am and 4:00pm between Friday and Sunday, you can brunch it up.  Even more of a certainty: the food is delicious.

I ordered the BB’s Silog, which the menu describes as “breakfast plate w/ garlic rice, two fried eggs, atsara, & your choice of house made longanisa, corned beef hash, fried milkfish.”

BB's

It’s a seriously, seriously tasty breakfast.  I went with the corned beef hash, which is exactly what you want it to be: it’s super tender, the flavour is great, and it’s got a bunch of delightfully crispy bits from the griddle.  It also has a perfect ratio of perfectly-cooked potato cubes to meat, which is to say that it’s mostly meat, with a few little potatoes interspersed throughout.

I also tried the longanisa, which is basically a Filipino take on chorizo.  This was great, with an interesting sweetness and a great meaty texture.  I’m a big fan of sausages with a more rustic grind, and that was definitely the case here.

BB's

As for everything else on the plate, the garlic rice was, as advertised, extremely garlicky, with an intense browned-garlic flavour and an interesting texture (it’s reminiscent of Vietnamese broken rice).  The eggs were perfectly cooked, and the atsara (pickled papaya) was a perfect zingy counterpoint to everything else on the plate.

The only odd note was the big dollop of ketchup, which could not have been more unnecessary or unwelcome here.  I tried a bit on its own, and as far as I could tell it was just plain old Heinz.  I’m not a ketchup hater, but there was absolutely nothing on this delicious plate that even remotely needed it.

Delicious Thai Food at Thammada Thai Cuisine

Thammada Thai Cuisine
Location
: 2888 Lake Shore Boulevard West, Etobicoke
Website: https://thammada.meemup.com/

I visited Thammada Thai Cuisine on a recent Sunday for lunch; the place was completely deserted for the entire time I was there, which is a damn shame because all of the food was very, very good.

Thammada Thai Cuisine

I had read about this place in the Toronto Star, so of course I had to try the main dish they recommended, which is a whole fried fish that you can either order with fried garlic or nam chim sauce.  I went with the latter, which is a delightfully zesty, zippy sauce that complements the crispy fried fish perfectly.

Thammada Thai Cuisine

The fish looks like it’s going to be one of those dishes you have to eat very carefully, with a minefield of tiny little bones, but it’s actually completely deboned aside from the tail and the head.  It’s all edible and it’s all delicious, with a perfectly crisp exterior and flaky meat within.

Thammada Thai Cuisine

I also sampled the tried-and-true pad thai, which was just as good as the fish.  I sometimes find this dish to be a bit cloying, but the version here had a really great balance of flavours, perfectly chewy noodles, and a mild smokiness from the blazing hot wok.  It was probably one of the better versions of pad thai that I’ve ever had.

Tasty Buffalo Chicken at Harry’s Charbroiled

Harry's Charbroiled
Location
: 293 Palmerson Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://www.harryscharbroiled.com/

Though Harry’s is mostly known for their cheeseburger (which I didn’t care for when Grant van Gameren first took over, though it has supposedly improved in the interim), they’ve recently added a fried chicken sandwich to the menu (because are you even a restaurant these days if you don’t serve a fried chicken sandwich?).

The sandwich, which consists of fried chicken tenders rather than one piece of chicken, comes topped with pickles and ranch, and can be optionally tossed in spicy Buffalo sauce, which is what I went with.

Harry's Charbroiled

It’s a tasty sandwich.  The fried exterior has a good amount of crispiness, and while the white meat within is a bit dry, it’s so thoroughly doused in sauce that it barely even matters.  This might have literally been one of the sauciest sandwiches I’ve ever had.  It was constantly dripping the entire time I ate it.

Harry's Charbroiled

The bun (a potato bun, I think), was nice and fresh, and held up quite well to the sauce-drenched chicken.

I’m a sucker for the Buffalo/ranch combo, so yeah, I quite enjoyed it.  I wish it were spicier — they call it “spicy Buffalo,” but the level of heat here is basically a mild tingle.  It’s flavourful enough that this isn’t a huge deal, but I wish they’d give you the option to crank up the spice a bit.

Harry's Charbroiled

I also tried the fries, which are outstanding.  They’re thicker than the norm, which could be trouble (there’s nothing worse than a thickly-cut fry that’s chalky on the inside), but these are perfect: they’re crispy on the outside and fluffy on the inside.

Lots of Flavour at Crafty Ramen

Crafty Ramen
Location
: 217 Ossington Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://craftyramen.com/

I love ramen.  If you browse through this blog a bit, that much should be apparent.  I think it’s one of the world’s few perfect foods; I could live off the stuff (it would be a short but happy life).

Crafty Ramen

Crafty Ramen — a lauded ramen joint from Guelph — recently opened their first location in Toronto, on the Ossington strip, and yeah, it’s good.  It’s not the best bowl of ramen I’ve ever had, but there was a lot I appreciated about it.

Crafty Ramen

I ordered the Northern Warmer with pork, which the menu describes like this: “A hearty miso ramen inspired by the Hokkaido region of Japan, featuring our very own Miso Robot! Pork chashu, chili miso butter, roasted corn, cabbage, carrot, and menma in our chicken broth.”

Crafty Ramen

There are a lot of neat touches here — there’s the “miso robot,” which I guess is just miso-infused butter shaped like a robot, and the corn is nicely charred, giving it a bit of a smoky flavour.

The broth is very, very salty, however, which does somewhat drown out the would-be complexity from the miso.  I certainly didn’t dislike eating it, but it’s a bit one-note and in-your-face.

Crafty Ramen

I added on an egg, and it was perfectly cooked, with a great, jammy yolk.  But like the soup, it’s a bit salty — it basically tastes like eating soy sauce with the texture of an egg.

Still!  It’s ramen.  It is inherently great, even if it’s not the best bowl I’ve ever had.  The noodles were maybe a touch overdone, but were otherwise chewy and satisfying.

Chewy, Unique Noodles at Rougamo & Noodles

Rougamo & Noodles
Location
: 4905A Yonge Street, North York
Website: https://rougamoxianstylenoodles.com/

I actually wasn’t planning on posting this anytime too soon (I’ve got a bit of a backlog), but I’ve just heard that this restaurant is closing in about a week, so I figured I’d post this now while it’s still around.  Check it out before it’s gone!

Rougamo & Noodles

I could tell you about what Rougamo & Noodles is all about, but Karon Liu wrote about it for the Toronto Star in far more depth than I ever would, so… here’s the link.

Rougamo & Noodles

I tried a couple of things mentioned in that article.  First up was the pork rougamo, a simple dish consisting entirely of stewed pork on a chewy flatbread.  This was a tasty if unspectacular sandwich that’s much improved by adding a healthy dollop from the jar of smoky chili oil on the table.

Rougamo & Noodles

And of course, you can’t go to a place with noodles in the name and not try the noodles, so I went with their specialty, the signature biangbiang noodle.  This is a really unique dish that features a single hand-pulled noodle that’s thicker, broader, and chewier than the norm.  It comes topped with more of that stewed pork, along with a zippy, tomato-y sauce that works really well with the substantial noodles.