clock menu more-arrow no yes mobile
A Little Conejo taco topped with avocado sits on a plate with a lime.
A taco from Little Conejo.
Sue O’Bryan

21 Food-and-Drink Destinations in Vancouver, Washington

Local spots offering everything from Cincinnati chili to Georgian wine

View as Map
A taco from Little Conejo.
| Sue O’Bryan

Vancouver, Washington often gets confused with its Canadian namesake or lumped into the greater Portland area, but this city, just north of Portland, is developing its own culinary identity. The Vancouver Waterfront, filled with Washington wine tasting rooms and regional chain restaurants, draws curious visitors for local businesses like Kafiex Coffee Roasters, Dos Alas Latin Kitchen and Tequila Bar, and Pop Local. Nonetheless, it’s downtown Vancouver, only a few blocks away from this shiny new development, which remains the beating heart of this city and the place where most of essential dining spots reside. And farther from the city center, Vancouver’s International District stretches across Fourth Plain Boulevard featuring restaurants (including Su Casa Marquez listed below), bars, grocery stores, and bakeries serving delicacies from around the world.

This list includes the restaurants, food carts, and bars — new and old — that have become the crown jewels of the city, from Hazel Dell to Fisher’s Landing. For more Vancouver dining, check out our happy hour, brewery, and kid-friendly dining guides.

Read More
Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

Dosalas Latin Kitchen + Tequila Bar

Copy Link

Entering Dosalas Latin Kitchen and Tequila Bar feels like a visit to a distant sparkling otherworld. The large glittery chandeliers, enormous bar, and cushy white leather-covered booths overlooking the water provide a bit of Vegas glitz. The menu includes a variety of small plates like ahi tuna tostadas and a deconstructed Mexican street corn with chipotle crema and cotija over tostadas, as well as large shareable plates like grilled octopus with saffron serrano aioli and jalapeño mint chimichurri. Showy cocktails like the Purple Rain with gin and St. Germain, infused with a combination of butterfly pea powder and gold glitter, flow from the sleek bar. Reservations are available through Open Table.

Rick Gencarelli’s pasta palace recently opened on the Vancouver Waterfront, serving fresh pasta in shapes like bucatini and rigatoni in sauces ranging from meaty Sunday pork ragu to a light drizzle of garlic, chili flakes, olive oil, and Grana Padano. Wine by the glass or bottle, as well as craft beer and cocktails, are available to sip while gazing out the floor-to-ceiling windows at the Columbia River. The house red, a blend made by Coopers Hall winery in Portland, pairs well with the red sauce pastas.

Bowls of fresh pasta and meatballs at Grassa.
Fresh pasta and meatballs at Grassa.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

Ella Bakh and her son and co-owner, Nico, opened this bright, cozy space to share the food of their native Tbilisi. The restaurant’s menu features comforting Georgian favorites like khachapuri adjaruli, a boat-shaped bread with fresh cheese, and khinkali, plump Georgian dumplings filled with beef and pork or mushrooms. Any visit should include both, as well as a few fresh salads and a small clay pot of a creamy bean stew called lobio. Dediko’s excellent wine list includes some Georgian wines made in the classic style, fermented in underground ceramic pots called kvevri. Miniature versions of these wine pots are scattered throughout Dediko, giving a traditional Georgian flair to this modern space.

The Smokin' Oak

Copy Link

This upscale barbecue spot serves bonafide Central Texas barbecue based on family recipes from co-owner Bryan Rodgers. ‘Meat butter’ best describes the velvety texture of Smokin’ Oak’s tender brisket; other standouts include pulled pork, chicken, sausage, and pork spare ribs, smoked until the inside is tender and the outside is pleasingly crisp. All of the above go great with traditional sides like mac and cheese, collard greens, and cornbread as well as smoky whiskey-based cocktails from the well-stocked bar.

The Grocery Cocktail & Social

Copy Link

This intimate hideaway tucked from the traffic of Main Street offers a rotating seasonal cocktail list and a well-executed slate of pub fare. Dishes range from seasonal salads and the vegan grilled eggplant stack with tofu sofritas to the hedonistic Grocery burger, a third-of-a-pound Cascade Natural beef patty with bacon jam, sweet onions, garlic mayo, and American cheese on a potato bun.

This photo shows the bar and people drinking cocktails and talking.
The Grocery Cocktail & Social.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

Little Conejo

Copy Link

When Noble Rot’s Mychal Dynes and Nodoguro’s Mark Wooten opened this palace of mezcal and tacos in September 2017, it quickly became a destination. The menu ranges from tacos with fillings like carrot pastor to crispy carnitas as well as hefty tortas like the Suadero Americano with braised beef and melted American cheese. Smoky mezcal cocktails accompany the food menu, with an impressively long mezcal list. Dynes and Wooten opened a second spot in downtown Ridgefield, where they offer a lunch menu that includes burritos; the space splits time with their other business, Bunnie’s Pizza, which features tonda all Romana pizza and pasta dishes like braised beef ragu over penne.

The Sedgwick

Copy Link

Tim and Melissa McCusker, of Feast 316 in downtown Camas, opened their updated speakeasy in the heart of downtown Vancouver at the tail end of the pandemic. The menu includes smaller bites like harissa-roasted cauliflower, as well as duck fat fries with Manchego and a duck-fennel-peppercorn gravy; follow them with a decadent coffee-and-coriander-crusted Delmonico steak with sauces like pine nut mustard puree. The Sedgwick also offers a daily yakitori menu and rotating desserts like guava creme brûlée.

Amaro’s Table

Copy Link

The bar at this downtown spot offers the best seat in the house: These coveted stools provide the perfect perch to dine on classics like medium-rare New York strip steak doused in chimichurri with a mound of mash potatoes, or a crisp wedge salad topped with blue cheese and a thicket of thinly sliced onion rings. Amaro’s also hosts a rotating menu of seasonal cocktails like the Washington Aloha with rum, amaro di angostura, and pineapple juice that’s described as island vibes meet the Evergreen State. Meals should end with creme brulee or fluffy ricotta doughnuts.

Thirsty Sasquatch & Hungry Sasquatch

Copy Link

The Thirsty Sasquatch feels like a summer camp-like retreat for adults. Fake-grass-covered walls, neon signs, and large day-glo murals of Sasquatch fill the indoor and outdoor spaces. At the Thirsty Sasquatch, bartenders shake and stir drinks like La Granja — with mezcal, black currant, blackberry, cinnamon, and citrus — as well as a variety of Negronis and mocktails. The pizza parlor side of the business, called the Hungry Sasquatch, serves enormous slices of New York-style pizzas like “the fungus,” with a seasonal mushroom blend, roasted garlic, and onion. In between the pizza parlor and bar sits an arcade with pinball machines and classic video games. Minors can dine at the Hungry Sasquatch and play in the arcade until 10 p.m.

A slice of pizza with pineapple and jalapeño and a draft cocktail at the Thirsty Sasquatch.
A slice of pizza with pineapple and jalapeño and a draft cocktail at the Thirsty Sasquatch.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

Elements Restaurant

Copy Link

Chef Miguel Sosa’s inspiration for his eclectic menu at this downtown spot stems from his French training, the Mexican culinary influence of his mother and grandmother, a passion for locally sourced produce, and an insatiable curiosity. The rotating menu at this intimate space ranges from Spanish octopus a la plancha with harissa and avocado mousse to a duck breast with a chocolate and morita pepper mole. Chef Sosa sources produce from local farms like Red Truck Farm, Flat Tack Farm, and Wobbly Cart Farm. Other menu items comes from Mayer’s Custom Meats in Ridgefield and PNW Wild Mushrooms. Reservations are available through Resy.

Slow Fox Chili

Copy Link

Former Screen Door chef Derek Saner opened this downtown food cart as an homage to the chili parlors he visited during his childhood in the Cincinnati area. Slow Fox’s Cincinnati 5 Way Chili starts with ground beef, tomato, and onion with cinnamon, allspice, clove, and chocolate, slow-cooked, then mixed with a bowl of spaghetti and beans, and topped with shredded cheddar cheese and diced raw onions. Another stellar dish, Louie’s Lentils, comes cooked to creaminess with tomatoes, onions, peppers, yam, and kale. Saner recently expanded the business into an indoor taproom where customers can sip beer from Clark County breweries like Trap Door Brewing, 54:40, Vice Beer, and Brothers Cascadia Brewing as well as Saner’s chili-friendly cocktails like the Meet the Hatchback Manhattan with bourbon, sweet vermouth, peach liqueur, peach bitters, and pickled peaches.

La Bottega Cafe Deli Wine Shop

Copy Link

La Bottega has offered a rotating menu of antipasti like roasted tomato bruschetta, fresh salads, and Italian entrees like wild boar ragu since 2006. Sandwiches such as grilled portobello with roasted peppers, eggplant, arugula, and horseradish aioli make this a popular lunch spot. In addition to Italian classics served in a cozy space, La Bottega boasts an extensive deli counter, wine cellar, take-and-bake meals, and imported pantry items for easy at-home dining.

Bleu Door Bakery

Copy Link

Several years ago, Bonnie Brasure expanded her popular uptown bakery and cafe into the building next door. A sunflower-filled mural inspired by southern France fills the new space, known for its weekday lineup of breakfast classics like biscuits and gravy and lunch favorites like soup and sandwiches as well as Bleu Door’s own pastries. On weekends, brunch items like beignets with Bleu Door’s lemon curd, shrimp and grits, and biscuits and gravy (vegan and otherwise) are complemented by mimosas and bloody marys.

Cecilia

Copy Link

Amaro’s Table and Gustav’s owner Genaro Amaro opened this lovely brunch spot in honor of his grandmother Cecilia. Cecilia feels like a passion project compared to Amaro’s other businesses, with its elegant chandeliers and decadent daytime fare. Sweet things like the made-to-order Dutch babies and tres leches French toast are juxtaposed with savory shrimp and grits and chilaquiles. Cocktails include individual mimosas as well as a carafe of fresh-pressed orange juice and a bottle of Poema Cava called The Party. Cecilia will soon add a dinner menu.

Su Casa Marquez

Copy Link

This homey restaurant tucked into an International District strip mall serves Mexican favorites like sopes, tacos, burritos, and quesadillas, as well as Salvadoran pupusas. Made-to-order pupusas come with fresh masa and melted mozzarella cheese, combined with fillings like carne asada, jalapenos, mushrooms, and loroco, or edible flower buds. Cheese-filled birria tacos served in fresh, grilled tortillas with a side of warm beef consomé are a standout.

Los Alambres Taqueria

Copy Link

The Hernandez family opened this Mexico City-inspired restaurant several years ago after running a food cart in Portland. Here they serve favorites from their home town like huaraches, tlacoyo, and the Alambre, a platter of grilled Mexican sausage, carne asada, bell peppers, onions, and ham topped with melted cheese and served with warm corn tortillas. The family imported a special tortilla maker to churn out their machetes — a 10 inch long quesadilla filled with things like mushrooms, cheese, huitlacoche, squash blossoms, and grilled or stewed meats. Following the trends of Mexico City, they recently added birria tacos and birria ramen to their menu.

A keka and some tacos from Los Alambres.
A keka and tacos from Los Alambres.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

The Chef Thai Cuisine

Copy Link

Tucked in a strip mall off Mill Plain Boulevard, The Chef Thai Cuisine serves elegantly plated and carefully prepared Thai dishes in a small, understated dining room. The specials menu is filled with dishes hard to find in Portland’s Thai restaurants, let alone Vancouver’s — treasures like a savory crepe filled with mussels (hoi tod), rolled rice noodles in a five spice pork broth (kuay jab), and steamed squid bathed in lime juice, bird eye chiles, and garlic (pla muk neung manao).

Pho Vi Van

Copy Link

Pho Vi Van, found in an unassuming space in an East Vancouver strip mall, consistently serves a wide range of fragrant pho. Pho Vi Van’s vegetarian pho comes with a rich and complex broth filled with rice noodles, puffy fried tofu, shiitake mushrooms, and a rainbow of crisp vegetables. Other highlights include a spicy bún bò Huế — thick swirls of rice noodles and tender meat in a luscious broth — and a comforting egg noodle soup with plump pork wontons.

Tang's Wok

Copy Link

This small East Vancouver spot features Cantonese, Hunan, and Sichuan cuisine with entrees like sizzling happy family with scallops, prawn, squid, and vegetables as well as dim sum classics like siu mai, shrimp dumplings, and steamed barbecue pork buns. The soothing house special wonton soup comes in a large bowl filled with plump pork and shrimp filled wontons, slices of pork, slivers of chicken, shrimp, mushrooms, and tender vegetables like pea pods and cabbage in a light, clear broth.

Soup bowls filled with broth, won tons, pea pods, cabbage, shrimp, and pieces of pork.
House Special Wonton Soup from Tang’s Wok.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

La Sorrentina

Copy Link

La Sorrentina Pizzeria — which Portland Monthly food critic Karen Brooks praised for its Neapolitan pizzas at the Hazel Dell food truck — opened its brick-and-mortar restaurant in a strip mall off 164th Avenue in the midst of the pandemic. Owner and chef Daisuke Matsumoto bakes fire-roasted red sauce pizzas like the classic Margherita, as well as white sauce pies like the Terra Mia with eggplant Parmesan, sausage, mozzarella, pesto, and basil on traditional or gluten-free crusts. The specials menu varies based on chef Matsumoto’s whims. Past offerings range from black truffle and wild porcini mushrooms served with freshly made tagliatelle to delizia al limone, a lemon pastry with fresh whipped cream from Sorrento, Italy, where chef Matsumoto trained with celebrated international chef Biagio Longo. Chef Longo regularly visits from Italy and teaches cooking classes at the restaurant.

Otra Vez

Copy Link

This family-run and owned east Vancouver spot offers brunch items like vegan migas made with Otra Vez’s own tortilla strips, cooked with Just Egg and layered with pico de Gallo, jalapeño, avocado, creamy black beans, and cilantro. For something truly original, the fluffy elote pancakes, studded with sweet corn, arrive topped with whipped queso cream, caramelized banana, and pecans, served with a panela sauce. Expect a wait on weekends, but weekdays are typically quiet.

Vegan migas, a glass of orange juice, and an elote pancake
Vegan migas and an elote pancake at Otra Vez
Rachel Pinsky

Dosalas Latin Kitchen + Tequila Bar

Entering Dosalas Latin Kitchen and Tequila Bar feels like a visit to a distant sparkling otherworld. The large glittery chandeliers, enormous bar, and cushy white leather-covered booths overlooking the water provide a bit of Vegas glitz. The menu includes a variety of small plates like ahi tuna tostadas and a deconstructed Mexican street corn with chipotle crema and cotija over tostadas, as well as large shareable plates like grilled octopus with saffron serrano aioli and jalapeño mint chimichurri. Showy cocktails like the Purple Rain with gin and St. Germain, infused with a combination of butterfly pea powder and gold glitter, flow from the sleek bar. Reservations are available through Open Table.

Grassa

Rick Gencarelli’s pasta palace recently opened on the Vancouver Waterfront, serving fresh pasta in shapes like bucatini and rigatoni in sauces ranging from meaty Sunday pork ragu to a light drizzle of garlic, chili flakes, olive oil, and Grana Padano. Wine by the glass or bottle, as well as craft beer and cocktails, are available to sip while gazing out the floor-to-ceiling windows at the Columbia River. The house red, a blend made by Coopers Hall winery in Portland, pairs well with the red sauce pastas.

Bowls of fresh pasta and meatballs at Grassa.
Fresh pasta and meatballs at Grassa.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

Dediko

Ella Bakh and her son and co-owner, Nico, opened this bright, cozy space to share the food of their native Tbilisi. The restaurant’s menu features comforting Georgian favorites like khachapuri adjaruli, a boat-shaped bread with fresh cheese, and khinkali, plump Georgian dumplings filled with beef and pork or mushrooms. Any visit should include both, as well as a few fresh salads and a small clay pot of a creamy bean stew called lobio. Dediko’s excellent wine list includes some Georgian wines made in the classic style, fermented in underground ceramic pots called kvevri. Miniature versions of these wine pots are scattered throughout Dediko, giving a traditional Georgian flair to this modern space.

The Smokin' Oak

This upscale barbecue spot serves bonafide Central Texas barbecue based on family recipes from co-owner Bryan Rodgers. ‘Meat butter’ best describes the velvety texture of Smokin’ Oak’s tender brisket; other standouts include pulled pork, chicken, sausage, and pork spare ribs, smoked until the inside is tender and the outside is pleasingly crisp. All of the above go great with traditional sides like mac and cheese, collard greens, and cornbread as well as smoky whiskey-based cocktails from the well-stocked bar.

The Grocery Cocktail & Social

This intimate hideaway tucked from the traffic of Main Street offers a rotating seasonal cocktail list and a well-executed slate of pub fare. Dishes range from seasonal salads and the vegan grilled eggplant stack with tofu sofritas to the hedonistic Grocery burger, a third-of-a-pound Cascade Natural beef patty with bacon jam, sweet onions, garlic mayo, and American cheese on a potato bun.

This photo shows the bar and people drinking cocktails and talking.
The Grocery Cocktail & Social.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

Little Conejo

When Noble Rot’s Mychal Dynes and Nodoguro’s Mark Wooten opened this palace of mezcal and tacos in September 2017, it quickly became a destination. The menu ranges from tacos with fillings like carrot pastor to crispy carnitas as well as hefty tortas like the Suadero Americano with braised beef and melted American cheese. Smoky mezcal cocktails accompany the food menu, with an impressively long mezcal list. Dynes and Wooten opened a second spot in downtown Ridgefield, where they offer a lunch menu that includes burritos; the space splits time with their other business, Bunnie’s Pizza, which features tonda all Romana pizza and pasta dishes like braised beef ragu over penne.

The Sedgwick

Tim and Melissa McCusker, of Feast 316 in downtown Camas, opened their updated speakeasy in the heart of downtown Vancouver at the tail end of the pandemic. The menu includes smaller bites like harissa-roasted cauliflower, as well as duck fat fries with Manchego and a duck-fennel-peppercorn gravy; follow them with a decadent coffee-and-coriander-crusted Delmonico steak with sauces like pine nut mustard puree. The Sedgwick also offers a daily yakitori menu and rotating desserts like guava creme brûlée.

Amaro’s Table

The bar at this downtown spot offers the best seat in the house: These coveted stools provide the perfect perch to dine on classics like medium-rare New York strip steak doused in chimichurri with a mound of mash potatoes, or a crisp wedge salad topped with blue cheese and a thicket of thinly sliced onion rings. Amaro’s also hosts a rotating menu of seasonal cocktails like the Washington Aloha with rum, amaro di angostura, and pineapple juice that’s described as island vibes meet the Evergreen State. Meals should end with creme brulee or fluffy ricotta doughnuts.

Thirsty Sasquatch & Hungry Sasquatch

The Thirsty Sasquatch feels like a summer camp-like retreat for adults. Fake-grass-covered walls, neon signs, and large day-glo murals of Sasquatch fill the indoor and outdoor spaces. At the Thirsty Sasquatch, bartenders shake and stir drinks like La Granja — with mezcal, black currant, blackberry, cinnamon, and citrus — as well as a variety of Negronis and mocktails. The pizza parlor side of the business, called the Hungry Sasquatch, serves enormous slices of New York-style pizzas like “the fungus,” with a seasonal mushroom blend, roasted garlic, and onion. In between the pizza parlor and bar sits an arcade with pinball machines and classic video games. Minors can dine at the Hungry Sasquatch and play in the arcade until 10 p.m.

A slice of pizza with pineapple and jalapeño and a draft cocktail at the Thirsty Sasquatch.
A slice of pizza with pineapple and jalapeño and a draft cocktail at the Thirsty Sasquatch.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

Elements Restaurant

Chef Miguel Sosa’s inspiration for his eclectic menu at this downtown spot stems from his French training, the Mexican culinary influence of his mother and grandmother, a passion for locally sourced produce, and an insatiable curiosity. The rotating menu at this intimate space ranges from Spanish octopus a la plancha with harissa and avocado mousse to a duck breast with a chocolate and morita pepper mole. Chef Sosa sources produce from local farms like Red Truck Farm, Flat Tack Farm, and Wobbly Cart Farm. Other menu items comes from Mayer’s Custom Meats in Ridgefield and PNW Wild Mushrooms. Reservations are available through Resy.

Slow Fox Chili

Former Screen Door chef Derek Saner opened this downtown food cart as an homage to the chili parlors he visited during his childhood in the Cincinnati area. Slow Fox’s Cincinnati 5 Way Chili starts with ground beef, tomato, and onion with cinnamon, allspice, clove, and chocolate, slow-cooked, then mixed with a bowl of spaghetti and beans, and topped with shredded cheddar cheese and diced raw onions. Another stellar dish, Louie’s Lentils, comes cooked to creaminess with tomatoes, onions, peppers, yam, and kale. Saner recently expanded the business into an indoor taproom where customers can sip beer from Clark County breweries like Trap Door Brewing, 54:40, Vice Beer, and Brothers Cascadia Brewing as well as Saner’s chili-friendly cocktails like the Meet the Hatchback Manhattan with bourbon, sweet vermouth, peach liqueur, peach bitters, and pickled peaches.

La Bottega Cafe Deli Wine Shop

La Bottega has offered a rotating menu of antipasti like roasted tomato bruschetta, fresh salads, and Italian entrees like wild boar ragu since 2006. Sandwiches such as grilled portobello with roasted peppers, eggplant, arugula, and horseradish aioli make this a popular lunch spot. In addition to Italian classics served in a cozy space, La Bottega boasts an extensive deli counter, wine cellar, take-and-bake meals, and imported pantry items for easy at-home dining.

Bleu Door Bakery

Several years ago, Bonnie Brasure expanded her popular uptown bakery and cafe into the building next door. A sunflower-filled mural inspired by southern France fills the new space, known for its weekday lineup of breakfast classics like biscuits and gravy and lunch favorites like soup and sandwiches as well as Bleu Door’s own pastries. On weekends, brunch items like beignets with Bleu Door’s lemon curd, shrimp and grits, and biscuits and gravy (vegan and otherwise) are complemented by mimosas and bloody marys.

Cecilia

Amaro’s Table and Gustav’s owner Genaro Amaro opened this lovely brunch spot in honor of his grandmother Cecilia. Cecilia feels like a passion project compared to Amaro’s other businesses, with its elegant chandeliers and decadent daytime fare. Sweet things like the made-to-order Dutch babies and tres leches French toast are juxtaposed with savory shrimp and grits and chilaquiles. Cocktails include individual mimosas as well as a carafe of fresh-pressed orange juice and a bottle of Poema Cava called The Party. Cecilia will soon add a dinner menu.

Su Casa Marquez

This homey restaurant tucked into an International District strip mall serves Mexican favorites like sopes, tacos, burritos, and quesadillas, as well as Salvadoran pupusas. Made-to-order pupusas come with fresh masa and melted mozzarella cheese, combined with fillings like carne asada, jalapenos, mushrooms, and loroco, or edible flower buds. Cheese-filled birria tacos served in fresh, grilled tortillas with a side of warm beef consomé are a standout.

Related Maps

Los Alambres Taqueria

The Hernandez family opened this Mexico City-inspired restaurant several years ago after running a food cart in Portland. Here they serve favorites from their home town like huaraches, tlacoyo, and the Alambre, a platter of grilled Mexican sausage, carne asada, bell peppers, onions, and ham topped with melted cheese and served with warm corn tortillas. The family imported a special tortilla maker to churn out their machetes — a 10 inch long quesadilla filled with things like mushrooms, cheese, huitlacoche, squash blossoms, and grilled or stewed meats. Following the trends of Mexico City, they recently added birria tacos and birria ramen to their menu.

A keka and some tacos from Los Alambres.
A keka and tacos from Los Alambres.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

The Chef Thai Cuisine

Tucked in a strip mall off Mill Plain Boulevard, The Chef Thai Cuisine serves elegantly plated and carefully prepared Thai dishes in a small, understated dining room. The specials menu is filled with dishes hard to find in Portland’s Thai restaurants, let alone Vancouver’s — treasures like a savory crepe filled with mussels (hoi tod), rolled rice noodles in a five spice pork broth (kuay jab), and steamed squid bathed in lime juice, bird eye chiles, and garlic (pla muk neung manao).

Pho Vi Van

Pho Vi Van, found in an unassuming space in an East Vancouver strip mall, consistently serves a wide range of fragrant pho. Pho Vi Van’s vegetarian pho comes with a rich and complex broth filled with rice noodles, puffy fried tofu, shiitake mushrooms, and a rainbow of crisp vegetables. Other highlights include a spicy bún bò Huế — thick swirls of rice noodles and tender meat in a luscious broth — and a comforting egg noodle soup with plump pork wontons.

Tang's Wok

This small East Vancouver spot features Cantonese, Hunan, and Sichuan cuisine with entrees like sizzling happy family with scallops, prawn, squid, and vegetables as well as dim sum classics like siu mai, shrimp dumplings, and steamed barbecue pork buns. The soothing house special wonton soup comes in a large bowl filled with plump pork and shrimp filled wontons, slices of pork, slivers of chicken, shrimp, mushrooms, and tender vegetables like pea pods and cabbage in a light, clear broth.

Soup bowls filled with broth, won tons, pea pods, cabbage, shrimp, and pieces of pork.
House Special Wonton Soup from Tang’s Wok.
Rachel Pinsky/Eater Portland

La Sorrentina

La Sorrentina Pizzeria — which Portland Monthly food critic Karen Brooks praised for its Neapolitan pizzas at the Hazel Dell food truck — opened its brick-and-mortar restaurant in a strip mall off 164th Avenue in the midst of the pandemic. Owner and chef Daisuke Matsumoto bakes fire-roasted red sauce pizzas like the classic Margherita, as well as white sauce pies like the Terra Mia with eggplant Parmesan, sausage, mozzarella, pesto, and basil on traditional or gluten-free crusts. The specials menu varies based on chef Matsumoto’s whims. Past offerings range from black truffle and wild porcini mushrooms served with freshly made tagliatelle to delizia al limone, a lemon pastry with fresh whipped cream from Sorrento, Italy, where chef Matsumoto trained with celebrated international chef Biagio Longo. Chef Longo regularly visits from Italy and teaches cooking classes at the restaurant.

Otra Vez

This family-run and owned east Vancouver spot offers brunch items like vegan migas made with Otra Vez’s own tortilla strips, cooked with Just Egg and layered with pico de Gallo, jalapeño, avocado, creamy black beans, and cilantro. For something truly original, the fluffy elote pancakes, studded with sweet corn, arrive topped with whipped queso cream, caramelized banana, and pecans, served with a panela sauce. Expect a wait on weekends, but weekdays are typically quiet.

Vegan migas, a glass of orange juice, and an elote pancake
Vegan migas and an elote pancake at Otra Vez
Rachel Pinsky

Related Maps