The Montreal chow report starts with a confession - I also searched in CH and ended up using it as much as a resource as this. And I was working pretty hard while there (which went quite well, thank you) so my chowing was fairly limited. It did make me want to go back.
Arrived late on a Saturday night, and hit the nearby Dunn's for Smoked Meat and chicken soup with a matzoh ball. Quite good really.
The next day had a biz dinner at Cafe Ferreira, a Portugese place on Peel near Sainte Catherine. Good grilled sardines and potato cod fritters. Nice selection of green wine. For some reason I ordered the seafood mixed grill - lobster, shrimp, swordfish - which was predictably dry and lightly flavored. It also made it a pretty pricey meal. A good casserole - seafood rice, or chicken and sausage - that was genuine Portugese food would have been much better, and less pricey. My bad.
Did not get a real Montreal bagel sadly. Stopped at a place called the Bagel for one, but from what I have read, I do not think it was the real deal (way too light and fluffy).
The big business dinner ended up being 25 people at L'Actuel, a Belgian spot with a prix fixe menu between $32 and $44. Good beer and wine selections (though alcohol seemed expensive in Montreal, in general). Located on Peel between Rene Leveque (sp?) and Ste Catherine (convenient to the hotel). I started with a mussel dish that was in butter and pastis. Reasonably tasteful but for some reason they had removed the mussels from the shells which seemed to render them a bit too chewy and with less mussel flavor, for me. Main course of venison medallions in a lovely pepper sauce, and a dessert of profiterolles with Belgian chocolate. A very respectable meal overall in a lovely second floor space overlooking a park. They handled the crowd well, and everyone was quite enthusiastic about the food. Though we did buy a lot of alcohol. A success.
Ate in the next day, and sampled some Poutine, which I liked. But it also was not authentic - having been baked to provide a melted crust of cheese. I look forward to trying the real stuff.
The big dinner was at Anise on the Plateau. Had a 9 course tasting meal with matched wines. I was visiting, drinking and not taking notes and now my memory seems blurred
. Middle eastern flavorings with more French technique. Nice space, complex foods. Started with Salmon Ceviche with lemon and seaweed. Fresh, with a great tang of the sea. Then a red lentil soup, pureed with middle eastern spices, garlic and citrus. Quite good. There was a foie gras pate course, a lamb course, a cheese course, and a dessert. All pretty good, none quite transporting, IMO. The menu on their site is not the current one
http://www.anise.ca/en/menu.php. Worth visiting.
Finished up with a pilgrmage to Scwartz's for a meat plate. Will try to add some pics of the Schwartz a little later. Considered hauling a chicken home, but I was going to climb Mont Royal afterwards and decided this was too much to haul. It was about 10am on a Saturday and not too busy, so the guys were pretty sociable.
Oh, and I also picked up a couple of cans of dark(er) maple syrup as I always do in Canada. One Amber and one dark. Much better flavor for me than the clear that is the norm.
Thanks to all. Since it was such a cheap, short flight, I think I shall go back with the bride to tour and eat in a more focused manner. Darned business!
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Feeling (south) loopy