The Most Unique Restaurant in Every Province

Ready to expand your dining horizons? These incredible eateries serve up one-of-a-kind menu items in truly unforgettable surroundings.

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unique restaurant - dishes at Altitude Restaurant
Photo: Altitude by Pursuit

10 Unique Restaurants Across Canada

No matter where you go in this country, a tasty meal is usually never far away. But dining out is about more than good food—we’re also looking for exceptional service, magical ambiance, and a heaping serving of fun to make a memorable experience. Whether you want to be immersed in nature, get a taste of local history or take a walk on the wild side, these unique restaurants offer incredible food and unforgettable experiences in equal measure.

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Unique restaurant - a dish of food at Table Restaurant in PEI
Photo: Rachel Peters Photography

The Table Culinary Studio

New London, Prince Edward Island

If you want to learn more about Prince Edward Island’s delicious history, there’s no better place to start than The Table Culinary Studio. The restaurant, housed in a beautifully-converted church in rural New London, offers experiential culinary classes and intimate dining experiences that honour the history, food and culture of the island. Make sure to check out the Chef’s Table: a 7-course tasting menu of dishes crafted using ingredients fished, farmed, foraged and produced in P.E.I.

Dishes include bar clam chowder with quahogs (hard-shell clams), mirepoix and seaweed crumble as well as malted sweet clover cheesecake with rhubarb curd, caramelized milk and honey meringue. “Our cuisine is as unique as the place in which it is served,” says executive chef Hunter Guindon. “We have created our own Canadian cool-climate cuisine by eliminating all non-Canadian ingredients from our menus, and focusing our time and energy on truly expressing the terroir of P.E.I. by showcasing the best ingredients the province has to offer.”

Discover more essential experiences on Canada’s east coast.

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Unique restaurant - diners in the sky at Ciel Terre Restaurant
Photo: Diner Entre Ciel et Terre

The Diner Entre Ciel et Terre

Montreal, Quebec

This might be one of the most thrilling restaurant experiences of all time. With Diner Entre Ciel et Terre, a Quebec-based dining adventure, guests are strapped to a table with safety belts (along with two waiters and a “sky” chef”) and are hoisted 50 metres into the air by a crane to enjoy an expertly-prepared five-course meal “between heaven and earth.” With palms sweating and feet dangling, this is one meal that’s fit for an amusement park. Not heading to Quebec anytime soon? No problem. Diner Entre Ciel et Terre offers pop-up (and we truly do mean pop-up!) experiences across Canada and can be booked for festivals and special events.

These hidden gems in Quebec are worth adding to your itinerary.

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Unique restaurant - an interior shot of the Eatery Restaurant
Photo: The Eatery

The Eatery

Vancouver, British Columbia

With more than 600 sushi restaurants crammed into 2,883 square kilometres, good sushi is never hard to find in Vancouver. So what has kept people coming back to The Eatery, Kitsilano’s famed Japanese restaurant, for 40 years? The good vibes! From the creative and playful food, like the Salmon L. Jackson (salmon katsu, cucumber and avocado topped with crab meat, smoked salmon and tobiko) to the upbeat music and decor, which features model underwater creatures bathed in black light and dangling from the ceiling, The Eatery feels like it was plucked directly from a half-remembered dream.

Discover the 10 places in Canada every Canadian needs to visit.

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Unique restaurant - a car outside of the Dutch Drive In Restaurant
Photo: Dutch Drive In

Dutch Drive In

The Pas, Manitoba

What’s the easiest way to make your vehicle feel like a flux capacitor-powered Delorean? Pull up to the Dutch Drive In in The Pas, near the Saskatchewan border. The old-school 1950s-style drive-in restaurant will make you feel like you’ve travelled back in time. This Manitoba institution opened more than 60 years ago, back when drive-ins were still the bee’s knees, and never stopped delivering tasty fast food to customers’ car windows. The menu features everything you’d expect from a drive-in, including homemade cheeseburgers, “Dutch” fries (hand-peeled, deep-fried potato slices), footlong hotdogs, and, of course, milkshakes. You can either eat your meal in the car (for an authentic experience) or take it to one of the nearby picnic tables.

For more 50s-style nostalgia, check out the best drive-in theatres across Canada.

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Unique restaurants - a plate of food at Wild Restaurant
Photo: Michelle Doucette Photography

Wild Caraway

Advocate Harbour, Nova Scotia

People travel from all over Nova Scotia to visit Wild Caraway. It’s not hard to see why. This coastal cafe offers seasonal, hyper-local food—using many foraged ingredients—and beautiful views of the driftwood-strewn beach of Advocate Harbour, a small protected fishing harbour opening on the Bay of Fundy. Open seasonally from May to November, Wild Caraway serves up some of the best food in the province, including dishes like seaweed popcorn, sunchoke chips, sumac pork crackling and weir-caught mackerel tartare with applewood smoked sour cream, corn lilies and sweet cicely. Make sure to plan your visit around their annual wild foraging dinner, where they gather wild produce to create a tasting menu inspired by nature.

Discover more incredible day trips from Halifax.

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Delta Windjammer
Photo: Delta Hotels by Marriott Beausejour

Windjammer

Moncton, New Brunswick

Ever wondered what it would be like to eat a fancy meal in the private officers’ mess of a merchant ship? Look no further than Delta Hotels Beausejour’s Windjammer on Moncton’s main street. With its nautical decor and rich wood panellig, you’ll feel like you’re charging toward the waters of the Bay of Fundy to catch some Atlantic cod, as white-gloved servers attend to your every need. In the summer, be sure to order from Windjammer’s 100-Mile Menu, featuring food sourced within 100 miles of Moncton, including the hotel’s rooftop garden and beehive.

Discover Canada’s most enchanting botanical gardens.

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Unique restaurant - diners atAltitude Restaurant
Photo: Altitude by Pursuit

Altitude Restaurant

Jasper, Alberta

An ice field glacier discovery centre might not be the first place you’d think to go for a delicious meal, but Altitude Restaurant, perched at the edge of ancient ice and the towering peaks of Jasper Provincial Park, offers outstanding feasts for mouths and eyes alike. The Canadian-inspired, locally-sourced menu features dishes such as the Alberta bison burger topped with applewood smoked cheddar and green peppercorn aioli and local charcuterie to share including cured bison, wild boar paté, smoked duck breast, artisanal cheese and Saskatoon berries. Or you could always just sip your Athabasca Falls cocktail (made with gin, elderflower, lemon and thyme) while gazing out at the majestic Athabasca Glacier.

Discover 10 more things do in Jasper on your next visit.

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unique restaurants - dining bubbles at Trestle Restaurant
Photo: Trestle Brewing Company

Trestle Brewing Company

Parry Sound, Ontario

What was once one of the largest train stations in Northern Ontario has been transformed into a beer-, food- and nature-lover’s paradise known as the Trestle Brewing Company. Grab a seat on the scenic patio (overlooking the waterfront where the Seguin River meets the Georgian Bay) or settle into one of this unique restaurant’s heated outdoor dining bubbles and enjoy a seasonal (and often beer-infused) meal made from locally-sourced ingredients. Take your pick from menu items such as a sharing platter of Georgian Bay smoked trout served with grébiche, Wasauksing maple syrup jellies, crackers, crudite and pickles, or a vegan burger made using local organic beans, Thai peanut sauce, carrot slaw, pickled red onion and spicy aioli, served with house cut fries and a pickle.

Looking for something sweet to cap it off? Follow Ontario’s famous butter tart trail.

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unique restaurant - an exterior photograph of the Railway Restaurant
Photo: The Railway Ave. Pub

The Railway Ave. Pub

Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan

With departure and arrival signs, railcars and a train crossing, you wouldn’t be faulted for showing up at The Railway Ave. Pub in Hudson Bay with a suitcase. Despite its old-school appearance, however, this “train station” only dates back to 2020, and was built entirely from salvaged, thrifted and reclaimed materials. The Railway Ave. Pub is now a great adults-only place to enjoy a locally-brewed beer (like a Back Forty Brewery Peach Cobbler fruit beer), delicious comfort food (like chorizo nachos or cheeseburger poutine) and desserts (like waffle berry smores).

Discover the fascinating origins of the Caesar—Canada’s unofficial cocktail.

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Grounds Cafe Newfoundland
Photo: The Grounds Cafe

The Grounds Cafe

Portugal Cove-St. Philip’s, Newfoundland

The Grounds Cafe takes the concept of farm-to-table goodness to a whole new level. Nestled within Murray’s Garden Centre in Portugal Cove, about 15 minutes northwest of St. John’s, just about everything at this unique Newfoundland cafe is grown on site, from the hanging plants adorning the walls to the vegetables expertly prepared and presented on your plate. The Grounds Cafe serves daily brunch and lunch with fresh and creative sandwiches, bowls and burgers (and plenty of vegetarian options) bursting with farm-fresh goodness. Want to learn more about the hidden treasures found in nature’s pantry in Newfoundland? The cafe also hosts regular foraged food tours and tastings.

Now that you’ve added these unique restaurants to your bucket list, discover 10 must-try Canadian dishes (and the best places in the country to find them).

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