Beef Stroganoff
Rich, creamy, and cold-night comforting, beef stroganoff is one of those dishes that made itself at home in Canada—tender strips of beef, buttery mushrooms, and a tangy sour-cream sauce over egg noodles or mash. It feels a bit bistro, a bit prairie kitchen, and entirely weeknight-friendly.
Steak and Kidney Pie
Hearty and nostalgic, steak and kidney pie is the kind of comfort food that made its way from British pubs to Canadian kitchens generations ago. It’s the sort of dish you’d find bubbling away in a family kitchen on a cold prairie evening — tender beef, rich gravy, flaky crust, and that unmistakable aroma that fills the house. It’s old-fashioned in the best way: slow-cooked, deeply savoury, and made to be shared.
Beef Carpaccio
Beef carpaccio may have originated in Italy, but it feels equally at home in Canada, where great beef is an integral part of our culinary identity. Thin slices of tender beef, paired with peppery greens, shaved cheese, and a drizzle of dressing, turn simple ingredients into something luxurious. It captures the elegance of Italian dining while showcasing the quality of Canadian beef — proof that restraint and balance can be just as impressive as complexity.
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.
Steak, Stilton and Avocado Salad
Blue cheese like Stilton first arrived in Canada through English influence, but strict pasteurization laws made importing unpasteurized cheeses difficult through much of the 20th century. This limitation sparked Canadian cheesemakers — particularly in Ontario and Québec — to develop their own creamy, pungent blue cheeses. Paired here with Alberta or Ontario beef, ripe avocado, and fresh greens, this salad becomes a dish that bridges English tradition with Canadian innovation, rustic yet refined.
Family Favourite – Steak and Hummus
This dish is where Greek flavours meet Canadian comfort. Inspired by the Mediterranean pairing of grilled meats with hummus and flatbreads, it found an easy home in Canadian kitchens — where focaccia or naan often takes the place of pita. Tender steak, creamy hummus, and peppery rocket create a starter or light meal that feels rustic yet refined, echoing both Greece’s sunlit tables and Canada’s love of grilled beef and bold, fresh flavours.
Mexican Pork Stuffed Peppers
Stuffed peppers are a dish that has travelled across continents — from Eastern European kitchens to Mexican taquerías — and found a welcome home in Canada. Immigrant families brought their own versions, often filled with rice and pork, and over time, Canadian kitchens adapted them with local abundance. Bell peppers, now a staple of Prairie gardens and Ontario greenhouses, meet Mexican flavours of cumin, chili, beans, and corn to create a dish that feels both global and deeply Canadian. Colourful, hearty, and endlessly adaptable, these peppers are as fitting at a backyard barbecue as they are on a weeknight family 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.
Halifax Donair (Loaf Style)
Unlike its Greek cousin, the Canadian version swaps lamb for spiced beef and is paired with a sweet, garlicky sauce that’s unlike anything else. Created in the 1970s by restaurateur Peter Gamoulakos in Halifax, the donair quickly became a late-night staple, especially after a night on the town. Traditionally cooked on a vertical spit, many home cooks make it loaf-style in the oven: seasoned beef shaped, baked, then sliced thin and served in pitas with onions and tomatoes. In 2015, Halifax even declared the donair its official food — proof of just how iconic this messy, delicious wrap has become.
Reuben / Montreal Smoked Meat
Fermented cabbage, or sauerkraut, has deep roots in Central and Eastern European cooking, and immigrants carried the tradition to Canada where it became part of everyday food culture. Few dishes show this history better than the Reuben sandwich or Montreal’s smoked meat on rye. The combination of tangy kraut, sharp pickles, and savoury meat is deli food at its finest — old-world tradition meeting Canadian identity. Jewish delis in Montreal perfected smoked meat in the early 20th century, turning it into a national icon that now rivals pastrami in fame.
Canadian Bison or Beef Burger
Bison has been central to Indigenous food culture for thousands of years, while Canadian beef reflects the ranching traditions of the Prairies. From Indigenous hunting grounds to Alberta’s cattle country and the Calgary Stampede, these burgers celebrate a proud Canadian food story — lean, flavourful, and best enjoyed straight off the grill.
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.
Grandma’s Chilli and Beans
Chilli is one of those dishes that feels like home — hearty, comforting, and perfect for sharing around a crowded table. My grandma’s version was simple yet full of character, built on fresh garden tomatoes, beans, and whatever ground meat was on hand. In Canada, chili became a staple of potlucks, hockey nights, and winter suppers, when a single simmering pot could feed a houseful of family, friends, and neighbours coming in from the cold. It’s practical, adaptable, and always satisfying — a true reflection of Canadian kitchens.
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.
Swedish Meatballs – IKEA to Home
In Canada, Swedish meatballs aren’t just a Scandinavian classic — they’re a household staple thanks to IKEA, where they’ve fed millions of hungry shoppers since the 1970s. With tender spiced meatballs, creamy gravy, and a side of mashed potatoes or noodles, they became more than cafeteria food: they’re comfort, convenience, and a taste of global culture at the Canadian table. Today, they’re just as likely to appear at family dinners and potlucks as they are in shopping carts, bridging Scandinavian tradition with Canadian practicality.
Holubtsi – Cabbage Rolls
Across the Canadian Prairies, few dishes carry as much heart as holubtsi, or cabbage rolls. Brought over by Ukrainian immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, they quickly became a fixture of church suppers, wedding feasts, and Christmas tables. More than food, they are memory and ritual — families gathered in kitchens to blanch leaves, roll fillings, and line trays for baking. Stretching humble ingredients like rice, meat, and cabbage into something festive and sustaining, holubtsi remain a symbol of resilience and celebration in Ukrainian-Canadian communities.
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.