8 Best Restaurants in Side Trips from Toronto, Ontario

Background Illustration for Restaurants

The dining in Stratford and Niagara-on-the-Lake is enough to boost a whole other genre of tourism, as there are a number of outstanding restaurants thanks to the area's many chefs being trained at the area's reputable culinary schools, and impeccably fresh ingredients from local farms. Produce, meats, cheeses, beers, and wine are all produced in Ontario, and some restaurants even have their own gardens, vineyards, or farms. In the immediate areas surrounding Niagara Falls, the dining is a little more lackluster, as views, convenience, and glamour take precedence over food, but there are some great pubs and upscale restaurants to be found among the tourist traps. Reservations are always encouraged, if not essential.

RPM Bakehouse

$ Fodor's Choice

This cozy cafe set up to look like a farmhouse is famous for gooey caramel sticky buns, crusty sourdough wheels and to-die-for breakfast sandwiches using locally sourced grains and produce grown on the farm of their international powerhouse of a big brother, Restaurant Pearl Morissette. The wraparound patio on Jordan Station's Main Street makes for perfect people-watching.

Arowhon Pines Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

A meal at this breathtaking hexagonal restaurant in the heart of Algonquin Provincial Park is the highlight of many visits. A view of the lake is a great accompaniment to the food, as is the towering stone fireplace in the center of the log-walled dining room. Menus change daily, but you can expect hearty Canadian dishes with local and seasonal ingredients. Bring your own wine for no corkage fee.

Algonquin Provincial Park West Entrance, Huntsville, ON, P1H 2G5, Canada
705-633–5661
Known For
  • Children's menus and babysitting service
  • Limited seating for non-resort guests
  • Weekend lunch buffet
Restaurant Details
Closed mid-Oct.–late May
Reservations essential

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Bartlett Lodge Restaurant

$$$$

In the original 1917 lodge building, this small lakeside pine dining room offers an ever-changing prix-fixe menu of contemporary Canadian cuisine, which might kick off with fennel and mustard-rubbed pork belly and move on to pistachio and cherry-crusted Australian rack of lamb or the house specialty, beef tenderloin. Fish and vegetarian options, such as sweet-potato gnocchi with shaved Gruyère, are always available. Desserts, included with the meal, always include some variation of crème brûlée (perhaps a chocolate-chili version), and homemade pie.

Boat from Algonquin Provincial Park Cache Lake Landing, Huntsville, ON, P1H 2G8, Canada
705-633–5543
Known For
  • Bring your own wine
  • Four-course prix-fixe dinners
  • Complimentary water taxi pickup
Restaurant Details
Closed late Oct.–mid-May. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Boathouse Restaurant

$$

Consistent with the aesthetics of Taboo Resort, the Boathouse offers luxurious and contemporary international cuisine in a subdued dining room with sleek furnishings, hardwood floors, and a wall of lakefront windows. The kitchen has oriented the menu to appeal to a health-conscious crowd.

Features of Stratford

$

Brave the long lines for breakfast, and you'll be rewarded with skillets heaped high with melted cheddar, scrambled eggs, home fries, and tender brisket, triple-decker breakfast sandos layered with melt-in-your-mouth slow-smoked pork belly, or classic corned beef hash. It really is where Stratford meets for breakfast. Lunch is also available, with good burgers and other sandwiches.

10 Downie St., Stratford, ON, N5A 1W5, Canada
519-272--1878
Known For
  • Hearty meals
  • Dedicated gluten-free fryer and buns
  • In-house smoked BBQ options
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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The Flying Saucer Restaurant

$

This kooky 1950s-style diner is a hit with the kids—and with parents looking for ample portions and well-priced meals. Menus are dressed up like a tabloid newspaper and feature an extensive list of flame-broiled diner classics, and then some.

Tiara Restaurant at Queen's Landing

$$$$

Niagara-on-the-Lake's only waterfront restaurant, the regal Tiara sits beside a marina with a view of the Niagara River beyond the sailboat masts. The elegant, amber-hue Georgian-meets-contemporary dining room is buttoned up but accented by a pretty stained-glass ceiling and near-panoramic windows that give nearly every table a water view. The outdoor tables next to the marina, however, are the ones to request to go with the exquisite French-influenced menu. Round out the meal with homemade ice cream topped with seasonal berries.

Zees Grill

$$$$

For alfresco dining, it's hard to beat Zees Grill for its huge wraparound patio with heat lamps across from the Shaw Festival Theatre. More informal than most similarly priced restaurants in town, its seasonal menu brings panache to homegrown comfort foods such as grilled swordfish with purple potato hash and buttered baby bok choy or beef ribs with shallot, garlic, and fingerling potato hash. Appetizers follow a similarly elegant, yet whimsical, philosophy.

92 Picton St., Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON, L0S 2J0, Canada
905-468--5715
Known For
  • Brined turkey breast sandwich with cranberry-infused aioli
  • Carmelized peach and bacon pancakes
  • One of the best local places for outdoor dining
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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