Frisee Salad
Bitter greens, warm bacon, and a soft egg—simple bistro comfort that suits a cold Canadian evening. The maple-kissed vinaigrette pulls it all together, turning pantry staples into something you want to linger over.
French-Canadian Macarons
From Montreal patisseries to small-town bake sales, these almond shells feel like a celebration—few ingredients, fussy technique, and that first crackly bite with a chewy centre. On snowy days or humid summer afternoons, they ask for patience: sift, fold, rest… and then drop the tray hard, just like we learned. A maple buttercream makes them taste a little more like home.
Lemon Madeleines
Shells that taste like sunshine on a winter morning—light, lemony cakes with crisp edges and a tender crumb. These are the kind you bake for neighbours after a snowfall or to brighten a rainy afternoon, a small ritual that makes the house feel warm and welcoming.
Pâté de Campagne — Country Pâté
Rustic, hearty, and deeply flavourful, country pâté is a celebration of humble ingredients elevated with care. A mix of pork, chicken livers, herbs, and spices, it’s pressed and chilled into a loaf, then sliced and shared. Its roots are French, but in Canada it became especially tied to Québec, where charcuterie and rustic cooking were woven into daily life. Served with mustard, pickles, or crusty bread, this pâté carries the spirit of gathering — simple food that feels celebratory.
Chicken Truffle Parfait
Chicken liver parfait may sound like fine dining, but in Canada it often appears in the most down-to-earth places — from Québec bistros to farmhouse kitchens. Smooth, rich, and elegant, it proves that humble ingredients can create something indulgent and memorable. This version, with a touch of truffle oil, bridges rustic comfort and sophistication, much like Canadian food culture itself.
Beef Choux Buns with Horseradish
Light, golden choux pastry filled with tender slices of beef, peppery rocket, and a sharp horseradish cream. Elegant yet playful, these little canapés bring together French technique and bold flavours — perfect for entertaining, whether at a dinner party or a casual gathering.
Split Pea Soup
Split pea soup is a Canadian classic, especially in Quebec, where it dates back to the 1600s with French settlers. Made from dried peas that lasted through long winters, it was often simmered with salted pork to create a hearty, nourishing meal. Thick, golden, and comforting, it remains a staple across the country — a simple soup with deep roots in Canadian history.
French Onion Soup
Few dishes are as comforting as French onion soup, with its rich broth, caramelized onions, and gooey layer of melted cheese. While its origins are firmly French, the dish has long been embraced in Québec, where French culinary traditions have shaped Canadian cooking for centuries. On cold winter nights, it’s a bowl that feels both rustic and elegant, bringing warmth and history together.
French Inspired Salad Nicoise
Salade Niçoise is one of those timeless French classics that has travelled beautifully, finding a place on Canadian tables, especially in Québec where French culinary traditions run deep. Fresh tuna seared rare, or even a can of olive-oil-packed tuna, brings substance to a platter of potatoes, beans, tomatoes, eggs, and olives. With its balance of colour, flavour, and texture, it feels rustic and elegant at once — a dish that shows how Canadian kitchens blend heritage with what’s fresh and local, like BC albacore tuna.
Salmon with Hollandaise
Hollandaise is one of France’s great mother sauces, but in French Canada it took on a life of its own, brought over by settlers and adapted to local ingredients. In Québec kitchens, French refinement met Canadian staples — salmon from the St. Lawrence, potatoes from the fields, and seasonal vegetables from small farms. This dish captures that blend: roasted salmon, buttery fondant potatoes, crisp broccoli, and a silky hollandaise. Rustic yet refined, it reflects how French culinary traditions shaped Canada’s food story.
White Fish with Beurre Blanc
In Quebec’s kitchens and bistros, French elegance meets Canadian staples. Beurre blanc, a butter sauce born in France’s Loire Valley, crossed the Atlantic with settlers and found new life alongside local fish and potatoes. Here, Atlantic cod, hake, or sole are paired with creamy Quebec-grown potatoes and finished with a silky caper beurre blanc. It’s rustic yet refined — the kind of dish that reminds us how French technique transformed humble Canadian ingredients into something extraordinary.
Quiche Lorraine (Bacon & Cheese)
Classic French in origin, Quiche Lorraine has been warmly embraced in Canada. With crisp pastry, smoky bacon, and creamy egg filling, it’s become a favourite for brunches, family gatherings, and even school lunches packed the next day. Comforting yet elegant, it’s a dish that always feels at home on the Canadian table.
Poached Eggs with Hollandaise
First served in New York in the late 1800s, Eggs Benedict quickly found a second life in Canada. By the mid-20th century, it had become a brunch favourite in Montreal, Vancouver, and beyond — with local touches like West Coast smoked salmon, East Coast ham, or even lobster giving the dish its distinctly Canadian identity.
Montreal Style Bagels
Nothing beats a homemade bagel in the morning — warm, chewy, and spread with cream cheese. Brought to Montreal by Jewish immigrants in the early 1900s, these bagels are smaller, denser, and sweeter than their New York cousins. Dipped in honey water and traditionally baked in wood-fired ovens, they carry a flavour that is both comforting and distinct. Fun to make at home, they freeze beautifully, and always feel like a treat — especially with smoked salmon, lemon, and capers.
Pâté Chinois - Shepherd’s Pie
Shepherd’s pie may have roots in Britain and Ireland, but in Canada it found a second life as pâté chinois — a French-Canadian classic that’s become part of everyday food culture. Simple layers of seasoned beef, sweet corn, and buttery mashed potatoes made it a staple in Quebec households, school cafeterias, and community suppers. It’s comfort food at its most familiar: hearty, humble, and tied to Canadian winters where a single dish could feed the whole family.
French-Canadian Beef Bourguignon
Beef Bourguignon, born in France’s Burgundy region, is a dish where humble ingredients — beef, red wine, and vegetables — become something extraordinary through slow simmering. In Quebec, it took root as part of the province’s deep culinary ties to France, evolving into a hearty stew that suited long Canadian winters. Often served with mashed potatoes instead of noodles, it feels rustic yet elegant, the kind of comfort food that bridges French technique and Canadian tradition. Whether cooked with a Burgundy or a local Pinot Noir from Niagara or the Okanagan, it’s a dish that embodies both heritage and adaptation.
Steak and Chips with Béarnaise
Steak and chips may be a French bistro classic, but in French-speaking Canada it has an added layer of meaning. Quebec’s cuisine has long been influenced by France, and steak frites with Béarnaise feels like a natural bridge between Parisian refinement and Canadian heartiness. Whether served in a Montreal brasserie or grilled in a Prairie backyard, a perfectly seared steak with golden fries and tangy Béarnaise captures the spirit of both worlds — elegant yet comforting, rooted in tradition yet proudly Canadian.
Tourtière with Chili Sauce
Few dishes capture the essence of French-Canadian tradition like tourtière. Golden and spiced, this meat pie has graced holiday tables since the 1600s, when early settlers adapted Old World pies to the ingredients of New France. Over time, it became inseparable from réveillon, the late-night Christmas Eve feast, where families gathered after midnight mass to share food, stories, and song. In many homes, including Grandma’s, tourtière was paired with homemade chilli sauce. Today, tourtière endures not just as a holiday classic but as a symbol of French-Canadian heritage, a dish that ties family, memory, and culture together in every slice.
Canadian Beef Wellington
Beef Wellington is the ultimate showstopper — rich, indulgent, and perfect for holidays or celebrations. In Canada, it often appears on special-occasion tables, blending British elegance with local ingredients like Prairie beef and wild mushrooms. Wrapped in golden pastry with a creamy, sherry-kissed mushroom filling, it’s a dish that feels both festive and deeply comforting.