Deep Fried Sushi Rolls
A North American classic that Canada fully embraced — the California roll goes Saturday-night snack mode when it’s battered, fried, and finished with glossy teriyaki and mayo. You’ll see versions at pubs and sushi spots from Vancouver to Halifax: crunchy outside, creamy-crab-and-avocado inside, built for sharing with friends.
Bao Buns (Gua Bao, Steamed Folded Buns)
From Richmond night markets in BC to Spadina in Toronto, bao buns feel right at home in Canada’s mosaic — soft, cloud-light pockets you stuff at the table and pass around family-style. This version gives you a reliable bun dough plus simple toppings that nod to our East-meets-West pantry.
Sushi Pizza
A true Canadian creation, sushi pizza was first dreamed up in Toronto in the 1990s — a perfect blend of East-meets-West creativity that defines our multicultural food scene. Crispy rice “crust,” creamy sauces, and fresh fish make it both familiar and exotic. You’ll find versions in sushi bars across Canada, from Vancouver to Halifax — each bite a reminder of how innovation and diversity come together at the Canadian table.
Aburi (Flame-Seared) Sushi
Aburi sushi — lightly torched so the fish just melts — found a home in Canada on the West Coast, where Vancouver’s sushi scene helped popularize the style. It’s elegant yet unfussy: warm, smoky top; cool, seasoned rice beneath. Perfect for a dinner party starter or a hands-on night at home.
Tomato Gazpacho
A bowl of pure summer, this chilled Spanish classic feels right at home in Canada — think greenhouse tomatoes, market cucumbers, and patio lunches on hot prairie or coastal days. It’s bright, fresh, and no-cook: blitz, chill, and pour.
Classic Stir Fry
Quick, colourful, and full of fresh crunch — this classic stir-fry brings together the best of east-meets-west cooking. It’s the kind of weeknight dish Canadians love: a mix of market veggies, lean chicken, and that perfect glossy sauce that ties it all together. Fast, healthy, and endlessly adaptable, it’s dinner on the table before the rice cooker even clicks.
Mexican Rice Bowl
Bright, fresh, and endlessly adaptable — this Mexican-inspired rice bowl brings a little sunshine to the table. It’s the kind of meal that feels at home anywhere in Canada: simple enough for a weeknight, vibrant enough for a backyard barbecue. With grilled lemon chicken, smoky chili yogurt, and all the colours of summer corn and peppers, it’s comfort food with a healthy, west-coast feel.
Asparagus–Parmesan / Sweet Potato, Rocket and Feta Puff
These are the kind of starters that make a house feel full—store-bought puff, a hot oven, and market veg piled on top. Perfect for cottage lunches or holiday nibbling, they’re quick, flaky, and look fancier than the effort it takes.
Ramen
Snow on the sidewalk, steam on the glass—ramen feels made for our winters. A deep, savoury broth, slices of tender pork, and a jammy egg turn a simple bowl into a small celebration. This version follows time-tested ramen principles—broth + tare (seasoning) + aroma oil—so every slurp lands just right.
Chicken Or Pork Dumplings — With Vegan Option
When the weather turns stubborn—rain on the windows or soft snow piling up—we gather at the table with a stack of wrappers and a bowl of filling. Someone mixes, someone fills, someone pinches the corners into little boats. A tray fills, the kitchen warms, and soon there’s a pot or skillet hissing away. These dumplings are humble, hands-on, and perfect for batch cooking—they freeze beautifully for the next stormy night.
Dumpling Soup With Chilli And Bok Choi
A fast, cozy bowl for cold nights: good chicken stock brought to a simmer, dumplings slipped in, bok choi for fresh crunch, and a spoon of jarred chilli to wake everything up. It’s pantry-simple, weeknight-quick, and exactly the kind of comfort that gathers everyone to the table.
Chinese Egg Fried Rice (With Peas And Ham)
A true weeknight classic—leftover rice from yesterday, a handful of frozen peas, and a bit of Sunday ham become a hot, savoury bowl in minutes. It’s the kind of skillet supper that fits Canadian kitchens: practical, fast, and perfect after hockey practice or a cold walk home.
Paella
Paella, the way we make it here, feels like humble food with a big heart—rice taking on the flavours of what’s at hand, a little chorizo for warmth, peas for sweetness, and chicken crisped in the oven so everyone gets a crackly piece. It’s the kind of pan you set in the middle of the table after a long day—boots by the door, stories starting—proof that simple ingredients, cooked with care, can gather a room and feed it well.
Bubble and Squeak
Bubble and squeak is the ultimate leftover magic: yesterday’s roast potatoes and cabbage (plus whatever veggies you have) turned into a crisp-bottomed, flavourful fry-up. It’s British comfort-food at its best — hearty, forgiving, and perfect for breakfast, lunch, or brunch sitting beside eggs or roasted meats.
Mexican Salsas and Pickled Onions
Mexican condiments feel right at home in Canada—set out on summer patios beside grilled corn and fresh greenhouse tomatoes, bright bowls that turn a meal into a gathering. This collection features Classic Mexican Salsa, Pico de Gallo (with avocado, cumin, chilli), Guacamole, Pickled Red Onions, and Peach (or Mango) & Avocado Salsa —simple, fresh recipes that bring colour, crunch, and sunny, zesty flavour to tacos, grilled fish, and weeknight spreads.
Enchiladas with Tomatillo Sauce
Bright, tangy, and built for a crowd, these enchiladas brought a little Mexico into our Canadian kitchens—first as a restaurant discovery, then as a weeknight staple. The tomatillo sauce is fresh and zippy, the filling flexible (chicken or sweet potato), and the whole tray disappears fast at family dinners.
Earthy Mushroom Tart
This tart brings back the memory of mushroom picking in the fall — the joy of spotting chanterelles, morels, or field mushrooms tucked away in the woods and fields. Rich, earthy mushrooms layered on crisp pastry with cream, herbs, and a splash of sherry turn simple ingredients into something elegant yet comforting. Perfect as a starter, a light lunch, or even a centerpiece for a Canadian-inspired feast, it celebrates the deep, woodsy flavours of foraged food.
English Style Piccalilli
Golden, tangy, and a little fiery, piccalilli is a true English classic that’s found a second life in Canadian kitchens. Made from cauliflower, beans, cucumbers, and carrots (or whatever the garden gives), it’s preserved in a mustardy, spiced sauce that gets better with time. For me, it’s tied to Ontario summers, when garden zucchini overflow and jars are shared with neighbours — a chutney that feels as at home on a pub ploughman’s plate as it does at a family cottage table.