Vancouver Magazine
All the Vanmag Restaurant Award Winners Participating in Dine Out Vancouver This Year
25 Must-Try Things to Eat and Drink in 2026
The Best Things Our Editors Ate in 2025
These Are the Wines That Blew Us Away Last Year
Your Booze-Free Guide to Vancouver’s Best Sips in 2026
The Best Beverages Our Editors Drank in 2025
Know-It-All: Why Are the Streets of Fraserhood So Lumpy?
Our Power 50 Tickets Are 80% Sold—Have You Grabbed Yours Yet?
The Best Arts and Culture Events of 2025, According to Our Editors
Indulge in a Taste of French Polynesia
Beyond the Beach: The Islands of Tahiti Are an Adventurer’s Dream
Snowmobiles and Fondue Might Just Be the Perfect Whistler Night Out
Charmed, I’m Sure: Where to Find Unique Charms for Your Necklace and Bracelet in Vancouver
Personal Space: Alison Mazurek and Family Know How to Think Small
The Vanmag Guide to Perfume: How to Find Your Signature Scent
Dessert for breakfast? Don't mind I do.
There was an article I read, maybe back in 2012—I suppose it’s very telling, the kind of news that sticks with you—about how scientists have done all the tests and compiled all the data to determine that breakfast is the best time for dessert. Their thinking was, at breakfast, you have all day to work off the rich chocolate lava cake with raspberry drizzle—that’s far better than after dinner and right before bed where stationary dreaming burns few calories. Of course the headline in the newspaper was something along the lines of “Eat Cake for Breakfast: Scientists.” Classic!It’s this “in-depth study” that sprang to mind when I dug into Matchstick Café‘s french toast. This singular honking piece of thick-cut sourdough bread (baked that morning) was decorated with a generous spread of whip and topped with a cinnamon apple compote (more like a substantial apple sauce) and salted caramel syrup. Bite one evoked an irrepressible, “Daaaaaaamn.” The bread was still crispy, but easy to cut through, revealing a soft eggy interior—but not the kind of soft that makes you wonder if you’re going to get salmonella. The salt and sweet were in perfect balance and even though I’m not typically a fruit compote person (because I need sweet syrup and IMO syrup doesn’t go with raspberries or strawberries), this combo of whip, syrup and apple on the ? fresh bread was killer. I could not finish it, but as long as you brunch with friends this won’t be a problem.French toast, $8, matchstickyvr.com
Uni Custard at Burdock and Co.Acai Bowl at KokomoMushroom and Kale Skillet at Mamie Taylor’s
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week.