Family Favourites
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.
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.
A backyard-and-skillet classic: peppers and onions sizzling, tortillas warming, and a platter of marinated chicken, steak, or pork so everyone can build their own. It’s weeknight-friendly, cottage-worthy, and perfect for feeding a crowd after a long day outside.
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.
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.
Comfort-food classic with a Canadian wink, sausage and mash went from pub fare to weeknight staple here—think Yukon Gold potatoes, prairie-style grainy mustard, and good butcher’s sausages sizzling in a skillet. Piled high with creamy mash and a glossy onion gravy, it’s cabin-cozy, city-friendly, and perfect for cold nights.
Quick, melty, and hockey-night reliable, quesadillas slid into Canadian kitchens on the strength of leftovers and greenhouse produce—rotisserie chicken, peppers and mozzarella. Sizzled in a skillet and served with salsa, guac, and sour cream, they’re a cross-border classic that feels right at home here.
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.
Golden, crisp, and hearty, Scotch eggs are a true British pub classic — a soft or hard-boiled egg wrapped in seasoned sausage, coated in crumbs, and fried until crunchy. While rooted in England, they’ve found their way onto Canadian breakfast and brunch tables, often at farmers’ markets and gastropubs. Hearty enough for a meal yet portable like a snack, they fit beautifully into Canada’s love of breakfast-on-the-go, especially when paired with local sausage and farm-fresh eggs.
Warm, creamy, and bubbling from the oven, spinach and artichoke dip is one of those dishes that feels right at home in Canada — whether it’s served at a hockey night potluck, a summer cottage gathering, or as a holiday appetizer. Cheesy, garlicky, and loaded with greens, it’s indulgent yet comforting, a dish that always disappears fast when set on the table.
Smoked fish pâté is Canadian at heart — simple, rustic, and refined all at once. I usually make it with smoked trout, a nod to Canada’s lakes and rivers, but…
On Canada’s West Coast, salmon is more than food — it’s a way of life, a symbol of the coast itself. Flaky, tender salmon or trout served with a bright dill and caper sauce feels effortlessly elegant yet remains wonderfully simple. Piled on toasted bread or served over greens, it captures the balance of richness and freshness that defines West Coast cooking.
Tuna tataki — a Japanese classic of lightly seared tuna with a cool, raw centre — has found a home in Canada’s mosaic of flavours. On the West Coast, where sushi culture thrives and fresh seafood is part of daily life, tataki has become a favourite starter. This version takes on a Canadian twist with seasonal fruit: sweet peaches from Niagara or juicy mangoes from Toronto markets, adding brightness, balance, and a touch of local character.
Samosas are one of those dishes that need no introduction — crisp pastry pockets filled with spiced potatoes, peas, and herbs. In Canada, they’ve become more than just an Indian snack: you’ll find them in food trucks in Toronto, bakeries in Vancouver, and at family potlucks across the country. Affordable, bold, and endlessly satisfying, samosas are proof of how global traditions have been warmly folded into Canadian kitchens.
Few dishes are as comforting as tomato soup with grilled cheese. In Canada, this pairing is pure nostalgia — warming bowls of tomato-basil soup served alongside golden, gooey sandwiches made with chedder cheese on white bread were a childhood staple. Simple, nourishing, and endlessly adaptable, tomato soup is as welcome on a snowy afternoon as it is at a summer table made with fresh garden tomatoes.
Chicken noodle soup is the go-to comfort food in Canada — the cure-all for colds, the warm hug on a snowy day, and the dish that makes the most of leftover chicken or turkey from holiday dinners. Simple yet deeply satisfying, it’s the kind of soup that carries both nostalgia and nourishment in every spoonful.
This creamy chowder, inspired by the version at Earls, is hearty, rich, and deeply comforting — the kind of bowl that feels like home on a chilly Canadian day. Made with chicken stock, potatoes, smoky bacon, and cream, it’s a versatile dish that works with or without clams. Whether served on the coast or far inland, it has become a Canadian favourite for its warmth and flavour.
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.
The Caesar salad was first tossed together in 1924 by Caesar Cardini, an Italian immigrant in Tijuana, Mexico. What started as a resourceful mix of lettuce, egg, cheese, and croutons quickly spread across North America. In Canada, it became a favourite during the steakhouse boom of the 1950s–60s and never left our tables. This lighter version keeps the bold, garlicky flavour but adds chicken, crisp Parma ham, and eggs to turn it into a meal.
Pulled pork may have Southern roots, but it has found a true home in Canada. From backyard barbecues and hockey nights to rib festivals that fill Ontario and Alberta towns with smoke and music, slow-cooked pork has become a dish of celebration. Sweetened with maple, simmered in local barbecue sauces, and stretched to feed a crowd, it captures the Canadian way of cooking: resourceful, hearty, and built around gathering.
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.
Pizza night in Canada is more than dinner — it’s tradition. From Friday nights to birthday parties, homemade pizza means family gathered around the table, kids stretching dough with flour-dusted hands, and everyone claiming a corner or slice with their favourite toppings. While Italian immigrants first brought pizza here, Canadians made it their own — from Ontario’s world-famous Hawaiian invention in 1962 to the bacon-mushroom-pepper “Canadian classic.” It’s a dish that feels homemade, celebratory, and endlessly adaptable.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Few dishes shout Canada as loudly as poutine. Born in rural Quebec in the 1950s, when a diner customer asked for cheese curds on fries and the cook replied “ça va faire une maudite poutine” (“that’s going to make a damn mess”), it has since become a national icon. Today Canadians eat it everywhere from hockey arenas to gourmet bistros, with more than 36 million servings enjoyed each year. Crispy fries, squeaky cheese curds, and silky gravy come together in a dish that is indulgent, comforting, and unmistakably Canadian.
Tacos are about gathering, sharing, and packing bold flavour into small bites. In Canada, they’ve taken on their own identity — filled with West Coast salmon or halibut, Prairie beef or bison, and East Coast shrimp or lobster. Whether piled with chicken and crisp cabbage, smoky pulled pork and pickled onions, or fish topped with mango salsa, tacos feel just as at home at a Canadian barbecue as they do on a beachside street in Mexico
Fish burgers are a West Coast classic — fresh, hearty, and full of the flavours of the sea. In Canada, tuna and salmon both play starring roles, whether seared and served rare in Victoria or grilled over cedar planks on the BC coast. These burgers balance smoky bacon, crisp lettuce, and juicy tomato with a bright pickle–caper mayo, all tucked into a soft homemade bun. It’s a dish that captures the casual, coastal spirit of Canadian summers.