
Canadian Food: What to Eat and What It Costs
Poutine (fries, cheese curds, hot gravy) is Canada's most famous dish, invented in rural Quebec in the late 1950s — try it there, or at Montreal's 24-hour La Banquise. But Canada's deeper food identity is its immigrant communities: Toronto's Chinatown, Little India, Greektown, and Little Portugal are each genuinely excellent, and Vancouver's Richmond suburb is often ranked among the best Chinese-food destinations outside Asia itself. A casual meal runs $12–20 USD, a nice dinner $30–60 USD per person, plus tax and an expected 15–20% tip.
Ask someone what Canadian food is, and 'poutine' is usually the whole answer — which is a real dish worth trying, but a genuinely incomplete picture. Canada's actual food identity was built by waves of immigration, and the results in Toronto and Vancouver especially rival the food scenes of the countries those communities came from.
The classics worth trying
| Dish | What it is | Where it's best |
|---|---|---|
| Poutine | Fries, cheese curds, hot gravy | Quebec (its birthplace) or Montreal's La Banquise |
| Montreal bagel | Smaller, sweeter, wood-fired — a genuinely different style from New York bagels | St-Viateur or Fairmount, Montreal |
| Montreal smoked meat | A brined, spiced beef brisket sandwich | Schwartz's, Montreal — expect a line |
| Butter tart | A small, gooey pastry tart, a genuine Canadian original | Bakeries across Ontario |
| Nanaimo bar | A no-bake layered chocolate-custard-coconut dessert bar | Anywhere in British Columbia |
| Caesar cocktail | Canada's answer to the Bloody Mary, made with Clamato juice | Any bar, nationwide — genuinely more common here than a Bloody Mary |
The real story: immigrant food scenes
- Toronto — Chinatown, Little India (Gerrard Street), Greektown (the Danforth), Little Portugal, and Jamaican food around Eglinton West are all genuinely excellent, not tourist-facing approximations.
- Vancouver / Richmond — Richmond's food courts and dim sum restaurants are frequently cited among the best Chinese food available outside China itself, spanning Cantonese, Sichuan, and beyond.
- Montreal — a strong Middle Eastern, Vietnamese (the city has its own banh mi and pho traditions), and Haitian food scene alongside its French-Canadian specialties.
Dietary needs
Vegetarian and vegan travelers eat very well in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal specifically — all three have large dedicated restaurant scenes. Halal food is widely available in cities with significant Muslim communities. Packaged food and most restaurant menus carry thorough allergen labeling by law, but always tell your server directly about anything severe (peanut and shellfish allergies are taken seriously, not dismissed).
What it costs, all in
| Meal type | Price per person (USD) |
|---|---|
| Food-court / casual counter meal | $8–15 |
| Casual sit-down restaurant | $15–25 |
| Mid-range restaurant | $25–45 |
| Nice dinner out | $45–80+ |
Remember tax and tip are added on top of the menu price, not included — sales tax varies by province (roughly 5–15%), and 15–20% tipping is standard and expected at sit-down restaurants and bars, similar to US norms.












































