COMFORT-FOOD

THE ARBOR

THE ARBOR

THOUGHTFUL VEGETARIAN COMFORT FOOD 

The Arbor, Vancouver’s newest vegan, comfort-food eatery, is a consolidation of backgrounds ranging from The Acorn (owners Scott Lewis and Shira Blustein) to Farmer's Apprentice and Royal Dinette (Sommelier Paul McCloskey) as well as Bishop’s (Chef Rob Clarke). Fortunately, in pursuing their new endeavour, the team did not retreat from a philosophy of ecologically minded, freshly produced ingredients. The focus on quality transferred over from their respective backgrounds flawlessly, all while creating a complementary inverse to The Arbor’s vegetarian fine dining sister restaurant just five storefronts up Main Street: the still-popular Acorn.
 

ASK FOR LUIGI

ASK FOR LUIGI

UNFORGETTABLE ITALIAN PASTA MADE FRESH

As children, what pasta represented was a dish you could play with: it was accepted as one of the few excuses to slurp up your food at the dinner table. Our parents would buy it at the grocery store, rock hard in a package and it would take 15 to 20 minutes to boil before they served it on a plate. Pasta was plain and simple; there was no breaking down the complexity of a sauce or an invitation to discover tenderness and texture.

THE BIRDS & THE BEETS

THE BIRDS & THE BEETS

THE FORMULA OF BOTANICALS, BREADS, AND BARISTAS

Stepping into Powell Street's The Birds & The Beets, you'll enter a bustling shop. On the left are rows of brilliant fresh flowers for purchase supplied by The Wild Bunch Floral Studio and smaller square tables align along the right. If it’s summertime, the large pane windows will be folded open steeping fresh air and sun into the café. There will be a quick moving line, but there’s always a chance to gaze at the day’s enticing goodies in their glass encasement. Before you know it, you'll find yourself wanting to order a hops kombucha, a rhubarb soda, their homemade lemonade, and a macchiato all before even looking at the food options. Once you see a miso barley bowl glide by in an employee's hands, you'll be instantly back to scanning the menu board: the options for deliciousness are endless.

MISSION: NOW A LA CARTE

MISSION: NOW A LA CARTE

A CULINARY JOURNEY THROUGH THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST

Top Chef Canada's "All Star" alumni, Chef Curtis Luk constructs distinctive dishes using his philosophy of nose-to-tail and root-to-tip cuisine in this award-winning Kitsilano dining room. Showcasing the abundance of the vast Pacific Northwest region, Luk offers both share-plate and tasting-menu options to lead guests on a mouthwatering adventure through the province's fields and oceans. With virtuosity, mastery, and flare, each seasonally-changing plate at Mission delights. The kitchen's novel and ingenious tastes are never simply following trends, but rather, are creating them.

CHAMBAR RESTAURANT

CHAMBAR RESTAURANT

WITH AN AMOROUS GLOW, CHAMBAR WILL TAKE YOU AWAY

Located in Crosstown (the ambiguous mid-zone between Chinatown and Yaletown), the remodel of the second location of Chambar was a collaboration between co-owner Karri Schuermans and Carscadden Stokes McDonald Architects, who are also based in Vancouver. Their design goal was to parallel the reach of the restaurant’s ambitions with "exquisite cuisine, exceptional service, and a room that glows", branding it as "an unpretentious fling with fine dining.”

WAY DOWN IN KOKOMO

WAY DOWN IN KOKOMO

CHINATOWN'S NEW BEACH CAFÉ ON GORE

Kokomo is a winsome new addition to the Chinatown/Strathcona neighbourhood. The area has had a significant influx of new cafés and eateries sprouting up over the past couple of years, but none quite as vibrant and refreshing as Kokomo. We’d like to get you excited about Kokomo for two reasons: their robust vegan food (the whole menu is “gluten-free, refined sugar-free, vegan, and largely nut-free”) and our favourite part... they're open early! Finally, our ethereal chow prayers have been heard! Accessible from 7:00 am to 3:00 pm Kokomo grants us early birds the perfect stop for a nourishing breakfast on a quick dash to work. 

NIGHTINGALE: LARGE SCALE MODERN CANADIAN

NIGHTINGALE: LARGE SCALE MODERN CANADIAN

CASUAL DINING, QUALITY CUISINE

Only recently has the term "Modern Canadian" become so reiterated. It's often offered up as an erudite way to describe a Chef's interpretation of their menu and where they draw inspiration from. Cooks across the country are seeking vision from traditional fare but putting a modern spin on each dish, while respectably trying to "keep it Canadian". The term is rooted in the mass Farm-to-Table movement that has taken restaurant culture by storm, championed by the likes of chef personalities like Dan Barber and famous food journalists like Michael Pollan. But Modern Canadian cuisine has rightly found that a focus on local produce--and a connection to the farmers they source their ingredients from--lends exceptionally to achieving the richest of flavour, texture, and succulence.

HOMER STREET CAFÉ

HOMER STREET CAFÉ

A ROMANTIC ROOM, HEARTY DISHES, & CLASSIC SERVICE

Situated in a building deeply rich with local history, Homer Street Café stops you in your tracks as soon as you enter the room. Featuring an open-concept Rotisserie, this upscale Café is known for a focus on its juicy and perfectly seasoned chicken - so much so, that with an order of chickpea dip and bread thins you get a crispy, fried chicken skin. By sourcing from BC estates like Salt Spring Island's Foxglove Farm, the team behind Homer Street's menu is committed to seeking out humanely raised proteins and freshly harvested produce - a place where nothing sits in a fridge or on a shelf for longer than it should.