Numerous ethnic restaurants, independent boutiques, and the city’s oldest bagel shops can be found here. Although Mile End is often overlooked by visitors, it has become an increasingly popular shopping area, and boasts many designer clothing stores. If you're looking for an artistic, bohemian ...
For an afternoon pick me up (or at any time of the day) grab a famous Montreal style St. Viateur bagel. What makes these bagels unique is that they are hand rolled and they are made in a wood burning oven. When directly compared with its counte...
Every city has a dish that puts them on the culinary map, and for Montreal that dish is the humble bagel. Brought to North America by Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe, this unassuming ring of boiled, then baked, dough is ubiquitous in the city with...
Inside St.-Viateur, three people work the wood-fired oven, the rings of dough going in on one side, and a mountain of hot sesames resting on a kind of off-ramp to the cooling bin on the other. No need to fear the weekend-morning bagel line in Montreal. It just moves and moves. ...
Tip: Treat yourself to Montreal’s most iconic eats by grabbing a bagel atSt. Viateur Bagel Shop158 St-Viateur West orFairmount Bagel,74 Fairmount West or a smoked meat sandwich atSchwartz’s Deli, 3895 St-Laurent. (For more information, see10 Quebec Foods You Have to Try). ...
382 Nouilles de Lan Zhou Chinese • $ Closed now 3,420 La Banquise French • $ Open now 709 Brit & Chips Seafood • $ Closed now 490 St-Viateur Bagel & Cafe Cafe • $ Closed now 346 Patati Patata friterie de luxe American • $ Open now 366 Chalet Bar B-Q Ba...
Smoked Salmon Bagel at Beauty’s in Montreal 5. Brunch with a Jewish flavour We stopped for brunch atBeauty’s(93 Mont-Royal West), a classic Jewish diner with blue banquettes and an open kitchen, where they serve smoked salmon and cream cheese bagels, as well as sandwiches, pancakes and...