The World Cup Dining Guide To Canada's Host Cities, According To Top Chefs
As fans descend on Toronto and Vancouver, two of Canada's most celebrated chefs share the local restaurants they recommend dining at.
Forbes

For the first time ever, Canada is co-hosting the menâs FIFA World Cup, welcoming the tournament alongside the United States and Mexico. Running from June 11 to July 19, 13 matches will be played across the two cities of Toronto and Vancouver as the country prepares to welcome significant international crowds.
While fans will of course come for the sporting excitement, they'll also have the opportunity to experience two of North America's most exciting culinary destinations. Toronto's multicultural neighborhoods and Vancouver's ingredient-driven, Pacific Northwest cuisine offer distinctly different tastes of Canada, shaped by each cityâs geography, history and communities.
To help visitors eat like locals, I asked a celebrated chef in both Toronto and Vancouver to share some insight into restaurants they return to and recommend.
From its iconic skyline featuring the CN Tower to its significant financial, cultural and sporting influence, Toronto is one of North Americaâs most dynamic urban centers. And its restaurants reflect the city's international character, with neighborhoods offering cuisines from nearly every corner of the globe.
As a legend of the Toronto food scene, Susur Lee is nearly synonymous with the city itself. Born in Hong Kong and based in Toronto for over 40 years, Lee has earned international acclaim for his innovative blend of French technique with Asian flavors and ingredients. Frequently recognized among the worldâs leading chefs, Lee has had a lasting influence on contemporary Canadian cuisine, and his flagship, Lee Restaurant, has remained a fixture of Toronto's dining scene for more than two decades.
In addition to sampling Chefâs signature 26 Ingredient Singaporean Style Slaw, tossed table side at Lee, I asked him to point World Cup visitors in the direction of another delicious local spot that he loves to frequent.
On the other side of the country lies Vancouver, a nature-centric metropolis framed by the Pacific Ocean and the rugged North Shore Mountains. Long known in the culinary world for its hyper-fresh seafoodâcaught from the cold Pacific watersâ Asian cuisine and farm-to-table dining, few chefs embody the cityâs ethos better than Chef Andrea Carlson.
A pioneer of Vancouverâs seasonal, locally sourced cuisine, Carlson has become one of Canadaâs most respected culinary voices. Her restaurant Burdock & Co., was awarded a Michelin Star in October 2022âthe first Canadian restaurant owned and operated by a female chef to receive a Michelin Star. But her commitment to showcasing Vancouverâs botanical, wild and vegetal ingredients stretches outside of the kitchen through her embrace of the 100 mile diet (only using foods grown within 100 miles of residence).
In addition to sampling her tasting menu at Burdock & Co., her Hi-Fi wine bar, Bar Gobo, or her neighborhood eatery/grocery Harvest Community Foods, I asked her to point World Cup visitors in the direction of another delicious local spot that she loves to frequent.
Saturday, June 27, 2026