Mama Squires’ Zucchini Pasta
This recipe carries the heart of home cooking — tender chicken meatballs in a rich tomato sauce, served not over pasta but over zucchini noodles, a clever twist that feels both comforting and fresh. In Canada, where backyard gardens overflow with zucchini each summer, this dish has become a seasonal ritual. Families who once baked endless zucchini loaves or handed off extras to neighbours now spiralize them into silky noodles — a modern answer to an age-old garden surplus. It’s a meal that blends tradition with creativity, offering comfort that’s lighter on the plate but just as satisfying at the table.
Spaghetti Bolognese
Bolognese, or ragù alla bolognese, is the heart of Italian comfort cooking — a sauce that rewards patience, slowly simmered until rich, silky, and full of depth. When Italian immigrants arrived in Canada, they brought this tradition with them, adapting it with local beef, pork, and pantry staples. Over time, Bolognese became a family favourite from coast to coast — whether ladled over spaghetti, layered into lasagna, or even spooned onto a baked potato on a snowy Prairie evening. It’s a dish that bridges old-world heritage with Canadian warmth and practicality.
Ravioli with Sausage and Ricotta
There’s something magical about making pasta from scratch — the feel of the dough under your hands, the rhythm of rolling, and the joy of sealing each little pillow of filling. This version, with sausage, ricotta, and spinach, has the heart of Italian tradition but feels perfectly Canadian when made with artisan ricotta and market-fresh greens. In Toronto’s Little Italy or Montreal’s Jean-Talon Market, dishes like this became part of Canada’s food story, bridging family kitchens and community tables with a sense of both heritage and home.
Bacon, Onion and Tomato Pasta
There’s something wonderfully nostalgic about this dish — smoky bacon, sweet onions, and the burst of fresh tomatoes straight from the garden. For me, it captures late Canadian summers when the tomato plants were heavy with fruit, and the kitchen always smelled of something bubbling on the stove. Using Canadian bacon gives it a uniquely local touch, turning a humble, quick supper into a dish that celebrates both harvest and homegrown flavour.
Tuna Pasta with Capers
This pasta is quick, light, and endlessly forgiving — exactly the kind of dish that shows up on the table when Canadian summers run hot and the last thing you want is to fuss in the kitchen. It was always a kids’ favourite in our house: bright with tomato, salty with olives and capers, and just enough tuna to make it hearty. Best of all, it tastes just as good cold the next day, ready to be packed into a picnic basket or served on the back deck in the evening sun.
Grandma’s Macaroni and Cheese
Macaroni and cheese was a staple at my grandma’s table — rich, creamy, and always made with Balderson cheddar, that iconic Ontario cheese with a sharp, nutty bite. She never bothered with fancy toppings or baking it in the oven; her version went straight from the pot to the plate, gooey and comforting. For us, it wasn’t just supper — it was tradition, rooted in Canadian flavour and simplicity.
Chicken and Broccoli Pasta
Some recipes just feel like home on a cold Canadian night, and this is one of them. Creamy, hearty, and quick to throw together, it was the kind of weeknight favourite that warmed the kitchen while snow fell outside. With tender chicken, bright broccoli, and that nostalgic creaminess from mushroom soup and sour cream, this dish carried many families through long winters — comfort food that proves simple can be deeply satisfying.
Sundried Tomato and Chicken Pasta
Some dishes carry a wave of nostalgia, and for me this one brings back the buzz of Canadian chain restaurants in the ’90s and early 2000s — places like Jack Astor’s, where oversized bowls of creamy pasta meant comfort, fun, and a night out with friends or family. Their sun-dried tomato chicken pasta was a standout: tangy, rich, and indulgent enough to feel special, yet familiar enough to become a weeknight favourite at home.
Potato and Cheese Perogies
Perogies take me straight back to Christmas gatherings — flour dusting the counters, family crowded into the kitchen, and trays of dumplings waiting to be boiled and fried. As kids, they were always the best part of the meal: soft pillows stuffed with potato and cheese, piled high with bacon, tomatoes, and sour cream. Making them from scratch is a labour of love, but one that tastes like home and tradition in so many Canadian families.