
The best local dishes from Vancouver highlight the city’s ethnically diverse population. The bustling seaport sits in the shadow of Mount Seymour and the Coast Mountains, the icy Pacific Ocean sloshing in on one side, snow-capped peaks rising to the other.
The town is a bit of a foodie mecca in Canada. Just check out this guide to famous foods everyone should sample when they swing up Vancouver way. It’s got salty oysters farmed from the ocean, creative Mexican-Canadian street food, and plenty of Japanese fusion cooking in between.
Sushi with PNW salmon
主打特色: 美食
The B.C. roll is a taste of the Japanese-Canadian fusion food that’s particularly popular in British Colombia. It’s served up at many of Vancouver’s top sushi restaurants, which you can find dotting the blocks of so-called Little Ginza in the Japantown district, just east of Downtown.
The dish is essentially a classic uramaki roll – a type of sushi that has rice on the outside with nori and fish in the middle. But there’s a twist because this one’s British Columbian influence comes from the use of the famous regional salmon. It’s thought the roll was invented by celeb chef Hidekazu Tojo at his acclaimed Vancouver sushi kitchen, Tojo’s.
Japanese food, only in a hotdog bun
主打特色: 美食
The Japadog is a collision of two of the world’s most totemic cuisines – North American and Japanese. The clue’s in the name…it’s a combo of “hotdog” and “Japan”. A uniquely Vancouverite treat, you can get your fix of the now-iconic brand at any one of the 12 central-city locations.
The menu is a fantastic melting pot of East Asian flavours all artfully wedged into a hotdog bun. You’ve got the terimayo, a mix of teriyaki and mayonnaise in seaweed. There’s the negimiso, which puts salty miso with turkey sausage. And there’s the ume, which has a plum sauce and a sweet-spicy aftertaste.