The thing about eating in Vancouver is you have to go to the suburb that has a lot of people of that race for the most authentic food--- Richmond = chinese food, surrey = Indian food, commercial drive = Italian, north van = Persian food Obviously you can find diverse food all over the city but that's a little guideline to follow 😂
As someone who is born and raised in Vancouver and the lower mainland, the seafood and the Asian cuisine are the best types of food you can get here. If you ever come to Vancouver as a tourist, DO NOT miss out on Granville island, there are venders, shops, the market, and the food is amazing! Also Richmond is a lot of fun, to walk along the harbour and walk around Steveston village, and don’t forget to go to Pajo’s for some fish and chips! If you are into to history, you can go to fort Langley and see the original fort and walk around town. Vancouver has lots to offer and is a great city!
Granville Island is an absolutely world-class public market. It's much better than Pike Place for food. There are so many excellent snack foods to choose from, all made with lots of love by the merchants, and tables where you can hang out and enjoy it. There are also numerous awesome little shops and stalls selling crafts and other goodies. No trip to Vancouver is complete without a leisurely picnic lunch at Granville Island. Pro tip: My favorite thing to do after Granville Island is brewery hopping! The two best neighborhoods for brews are Mt. Pleasant/South Main and the area of East Van around Commercial Drive and Clark Drive. Both neighborhoods are very walkable from brewery to brewery. Best day ever!!
I will definitely try a Japadog. Friend of mine who lives in the PNW says of Vancouver: "It's like Seattle but with better Asian restaurants and the funny looking money."
Vancouver also has one of the best quality of Asian food in the world actually. A lot of chefs in Asia immigrate to Vancouver when they made a bit more money, so in some cases we have better quality foods than the actual countries.
Not technically food - but the craft beer scene is outstanding. There are two neighbourhoods where you can do a walking brewery tour and visit 4 or more breweries - if you can handle it (Clark and Hastings; Main and 7th).
10 kinda foods you should try in Vancouver: 1)Japanese sushi 2)Japanese ramen 3)Chinese dim sum 4)Authentic Chinese restaurants in Richmond. 5)Taiwanese /Chinese bubble tea drinks 6)Korean fried chicken (we call them KFC here) 7)Korean/Japanese BBQ 8)Vietnamese Pho 9)Great brunch like Heirlooms, Jam, Medina, Red wagon, Yolk etc. (try those organic, vegetarian or even vegan options . They are amazing!!!) 10)Seafood like spot prawn, grilled salmon, oysters, halibut, king crab, sea urchin, scallops, mussels you name. They are so fresh and yummy. Vancouver is multiple cultures in the sense of multiple Asian cultures. Different kinds of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamnese, Indian food. However, Good luck to find a decent Mexican, Caribbean or African food. That is simple very very very limited. You will be shocked to find out in Vancouver, we pretty much have no good Mexican or Thai restaurants which is very common to see in other North American cities.
@@mayalum5972Thank you for recommendation. I never try the one on Commercial Drive, but La Mezcaleria in downtown is very average. I felt it was pricy and the food is just so-so. I think Sal y Limon is much better choice for Mexican food in Vancouver. Sadly we only have literally a handful of Mexican restaurants in the city to choose. Choice is very limited.
Mark, I can't believe you were here in my hometown! You're so right that there's so many good places to eat here in Vancouver. Hope you enjoyed your stay.
North Shore Discount Tour: Lynn Canyon Suspension bridge and forest walk (free!) the Cypress Mountain viewpoint; Lonsdale Quay Market (and Friday night beer garden with band); Seawall walk from Ambleside Beach to Dundarave; Honeys Donuts in Deep Cove. PS - Honeys donuts deserves its own place in your what to eat list. Enjoy!
My Uncle lived in the city, so we walked to Granville Island all the time, parking is difficult anyways. No one is going to say that Nanaimo bars, are from Nanaimo, and I don't think the Island should be missed either.
And don’t forget: we have many great independent coffee shops too!Also many craft breweries. And that’s not a lake, it looks like one of the pools in Stanley Park.
+Shelagh Jackson Yes. It's fun to visit local breweries. At least Mark got to sample some BC craft... @1:24 I see Red Truck, 33 Acres, Persephone and Driftwood made up that flight.
Great video, so glad that you were able to highlight some of the amazing spots here. I just finished my updated Vancouver travel guide too that features local food and activities that are a must see!
Been living in Vancouver for 8 years and Sushi is a staple in Vancouver living (even when its bad its still cheap and filling) .Everything said is good put more on the pricy side (for most locals anyways.) Check out Mount Pleasant, Commercial drive and hastings sunrise areas for more affordable yet good eating spots that locals eat at with out the central downtown prices.
YESSSSSSS! You should also try poutine (of course), butter tarts and beaver tails. I also miss the warehouse in Gastown and all the bars now that I don't live in Vancouver.
Oh my... I went to Vancouver at the very beginning of 2018 for 2 days, and somehow missed every single thing you mentioned (except for Stanley Park)... I still remember the pathetic meals that I had. Clif bars and other snacks for breakfast; food court in Chinatown for lunches (where the food was no different than American Chinese food); and finally, an Indian restaurant somewhere in the center of the city that served food in a steel plate, and the food went cold very fast. I never met any Japadog vendor and have never heard of the market... I need to revisit the city someday when I'm not a poor student.
I wanted to tell you that I appreciate your work. I'm an 18 yo male and I bought my first trip internationally in Madrid, I am scared but also excited, do you have any advice?
Haven't had the hotdogs he talks about but may try one. Several street vendors with hotdogs in some areas of downtown. There is also a Mongolian Grill near Stanley Park that is good and may still do all you can eat for a flat price. Multiple not expensive, casual Middle Eastern places, noodle places and Greek. Davie Street is a good place to start for walking and deciding. Granville Street not so much for food. Two or three good brew pubs in Yaletown. I find it best to combine doing a little research in advance with trying places you walk past that look interesting. You can spend as much as you can imagine or get by on grocery store purchases and one splurge a day like a casual dinner option. There used to be a phenomenal 99 cent pizza slice place with generous sized slices but, alas, that family seems to have made their money and moved back to where they started from. None of the current pizza by the slice places even compare to that one.
If you want some of the BEST homemade Italian Ice Cream/Gelato, check out La Casa Gelato at 1033 Venables St. There are over 238 Flavours at any one time (588 flavours to date)!! You can of course find all the classics but you have to try some of their 'exotic' flavours like Lavendar, Green Tea, Taro, Garlic (yes Garlic!), Honeycomb Cereal, pumpkin, Brandy, even some made from flowers etc. and every thing else you could possibly imagine, there is not much that they haven't tried! I can't remember them all but it is very impressive. The best part is that you can sample as much as you want. Don't let the area it is in fool you (it is in kind of a warehouse area but it is near China town and Commercial Drive if you are going there), it is a must for any ice cream lover and is legendary in Vancouver!
He missed the Punjab Market, Main st and 49th for real East Indian food and EI Sweets like Barfi. Also I get my Sushi for $7.00 for 22 pieces made right in front of you. The food downtown is crap try the food along Commercial Dr for good Italian food. Or good Filipino food around Fraser and 25th. Main and 25 has real good food like Splits Grill for Gourmet Hamburgs and Hawker's Delight for Malaysian and Singaporean cuisine.
I’m in Montréal and now I’m annoyed at you for posting this and making me hungry...the Lower Mainland (region where Vancouver is) is the best for those foods and more. One thing you’ll maybe find out or mention next is that the salmon have seasons, so at your local supermarket one month it will be the coho which are running, next the sockeye, etc. A good Japanese treatment of fish is really common...if only BC was affordable and had any really good night life to speak of.
I totally agree, Vancouver's Asian and seafood scene are among the bests in North-America (if not the best), on the other hand, the night life is mehhh, or even the lack of festivities or other events, can't be compared to Montreal, which is in a whole other league...... I'm also from Montreal ... (saying this for the readers, clearly, you already know it)
Vegetarians, vegans and celiacs: go to MEET in gastown. It’s a vegan/vegetarian restaurant with amazingly delicious food and they accommodate for celiacs as well! There’s another location at main but I’ve never been there and I don’t know how careful they are with accommodating celiacs but it might worth a try :)
Japadog has mall food court/restaurant locations too. Richmond has two different night markets with different offerings. The filling in a Nanaimo bar is buttercream icing. #nativevancouverite #livingineurope #missmyhometown
I tried the nanaimo bar at Granville Market when I went there 3 mths ago after checking out your video. IT IS SO NYUMMY! anyway I incld your video link in my travelblog just fyi. Not up yet will keep you updated
Vancouver... mountains, go to Grouse Mountain and see the bears in their habitat, go out whale watching, walk the seawall around Stanley Park, sit and watch the floatplanes dodge the cruise ships in the harbour, go up to Whistler and ride the chair lift to the top of the mountain... then ride a mountain bike back down, go to Kits and catch a show at Bard on The Beach Shakespeare festival...
If you like big cities and big city things you would probably prefere Toronto or Montreal - one of the things that really sets Vancouver apart is the feeling you get being in such an urban place and being so close to a wild unspoiled natural place - there is no large city I know of where there is such an abrupt division between where the city ends and wilderness begins - you can be in the most densely packed part of the city and look to the mountains to the north and see where it just ends and the wild begins.
In the summer you have to try: Rain or Shine icecream Dragon house BBT Gami sushi in Richmond 2nd beach or Kits outdoor pools Places to go: North Vancouver hikes (Norvan falls, Capilano suspension bridge, Quarry rock) Espot (cool place for Billiards/ arcade games) in Richmond
japadog yes, fun! But the Nanaimo bar (which also, yum, once in yer life cuz) Wolter, Wolter, Wolter, that middle layer? that's not cheesecake. That's Pure. Freakin'. Buttercream. Frosting. which def.s FTW, but whoa not often, honey....
Dude, have you been to the Naam? Internationally famous vegetarian restaurant open 24/7 365 days a year. You must check it out. And have the Miso Gravy.
Japadog is very overrated... I used to work in downtown. Had tried couple different kind of them on the menu. To be honest, you can skip it, not really worth your money to try it. Also, not big fan of Nanaimo Bar either. Instead of Japadog, go and eat Japanese ramen or sushi. Instead of Nanaimo bar, go and book nice afternoon dessert tea, crushed ice with mango ice-cream, or some fancy donuts.
Vancouver Chinatown is does not exist anymore. Many shops and good restaurants long gone. Sad, if you want the best Asian food go to Richmond, BC. Which is a few miles south of Vancouver.
steelhead is not a vancouver delicacy. its catsood. japadogs are terrible. you can get a nanaimo bar whereever you are from, which is where Vancouverites would prefer you to be. honestly.
Also could you talk about how Canadian multiculturalism is different from US’s and how people from different countries get along in Canada? So Caucasian US citizens can assimilate to Canadian ways when they come to Canada. It’s very important.
There is way more interesting places and things to see and do, like Lynn Canyon, why so much focus on the food? It's typical american things. Typical americans freaking out over food.
Many people are interested in food and this is a mostly food related channel the title of the video states "5 Things You Must Eat in Vancouver" did you read that and think it would be about mountain biking on the North Shore?- and Vancouver has a reputation for having the best Chinese, Japanese and Korean food outside of Asia.
The thing about eating in Vancouver is you have to go to the suburb that has a lot of people of that race for the most authentic food--- Richmond = chinese food, surrey = Indian food, commercial drive = Italian, north van = Persian food
Obviously you can find diverse food all over the city but that's a little guideline to follow 😂
As someone who is born and raised in Vancouver and the lower mainland, the seafood and the Asian cuisine are the best types of food you can get here. If you ever come to Vancouver as a tourist, DO NOT miss out on Granville island, there are venders, shops, the market, and the food is amazing! Also Richmond is a lot of fun, to walk along the harbour and walk around Steveston village, and don’t forget to go to Pajo’s for some fish and chips! If you are into to history, you can go to fort Langley and see the original fort and walk around town. Vancouver has lots to offer and is a great city!
Winter time - Ramen 🍜 and then coffee ☕️ yeahhh
Granville Island is an absolutely world-class public market. It's much better than Pike Place for food. There are so many excellent snack foods to choose from, all made with lots of love by the merchants, and tables where you can hang out and enjoy it. There are also numerous awesome little shops and stalls selling crafts and other goodies. No trip to Vancouver is complete without a leisurely picnic lunch at Granville Island.
Pro tip: My favorite thing to do after Granville Island is brewery hopping! The two best neighborhoods for brews are Mt. Pleasant/South Main and the area of East Van around Commercial Drive and Clark Drive. Both neighborhoods are very walkable from brewery to brewery. Best day ever!!
Ah, the Seawall! Thanks for visiting! Hope you have a great time in Vancouver!
Great list Wolter! You nailed it. Most travellers don't know about Richmond night market but it's definitely worth a visit.
I will definitely try a Japadog. Friend of mine who lives in the PNW says of Vancouver: "It's like Seattle but with better Asian restaurants and the funny looking money."
Vancouver also has one of the best quality of Asian food in the world actually. A lot of chefs in Asia immigrate to Vancouver when they made a bit more money, so in some cases we have better quality foods than the actual countries.
Not technically food - but the craft beer scene is outstanding. There are two neighbourhoods where you can do a walking brewery tour and visit 4 or more breweries - if you can handle it (Clark and Hastings; Main and 7th).
10 kinda foods you should try in Vancouver:
1)Japanese sushi
2)Japanese ramen
3)Chinese dim sum
4)Authentic Chinese restaurants in Richmond.
5)Taiwanese /Chinese bubble tea drinks
6)Korean fried chicken (we call them KFC here)
7)Korean/Japanese BBQ
8)Vietnamese Pho
9)Great brunch like Heirlooms, Jam, Medina, Red wagon, Yolk etc. (try those organic, vegetarian or even vegan options . They are amazing!!!)
10)Seafood like spot prawn, grilled salmon, oysters, halibut, king crab, sea urchin, scallops, mussels you name. They are so fresh and yummy.
Vancouver is multiple cultures in the sense of multiple Asian cultures. Different kinds of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamnese, Indian food. However, Good luck to find a decent Mexican, Caribbean or African food. That is simple very very very limited. You will be shocked to find out in Vancouver, we pretty much have no good Mexican or Thai restaurants which is very common to see in other North American cities.
@@mayalum5972Thank you for recommendation. I never try the one on Commercial Drive, but La Mezcaleria in downtown is very average. I felt it was pricy and the food is just so-so. I think Sal y Limon is much better choice for Mexican food in Vancouver. Sadly we only have literally a handful of Mexican restaurants in the city to choose. Choice is very limited.
Wooow! A Wolter's World video about where I live! Awesome. I'm originally from Nanaimo so seeing you talk about the Nanaimo Bar is just....the best.
the way mark talks about food makes you love food you don't even like.
Mark, I can't believe you were here in my hometown! You're so right that there's so many good places to eat here in Vancouver. Hope you enjoyed your stay.
Yay Vancouver!!! I hope you enjoyed your time here, loving the content 😀🇨🇦
Japadog looks really good. 👍
That lake along with the hills is simply stunning. I wish I could live a life like yours, Mark!
That's actually Coal Harbour -- it's a very sheltered area of the Pacific Ocean
North Shore Discount Tour: Lynn Canyon Suspension bridge and forest walk (free!) the Cypress Mountain viewpoint; Lonsdale Quay Market (and Friday night beer garden with band); Seawall walk from Ambleside Beach to Dundarave; Honeys Donuts in Deep Cove. PS - Honeys donuts deserves its own place in your what to eat list. Enjoy!
Oh - I forgot to mention the Seabus ride from Downtown to North Van - a poor man's harbour cruise (for the price of a transit ticket)!
Agree
I WILL be looking for all these things next year. Thanks Mark!
I would highly recommend to you the Pie Company in West Vancouver. You won't be disappointed. Oh I miss Vancouver so much!
My Uncle lived in the city, so we walked to Granville Island all the time, parking is difficult anyways. No one is going to say that Nanaimo bars, are from Nanaimo, and I don't think the Island should be missed either.
Thanks for visiting our beautiful city & Country🇨🇦 I love your RUclips Channel😊
And don’t forget: we have many great independent coffee shops too!Also many craft breweries.
And that’s not a lake, it looks like one of the pools in Stanley Park.
+Shelagh Jackson Yes. It's fun to visit local breweries. At least Mark got to sample some BC craft... @1:24 I see Red Truck, 33 Acres, Persephone and Driftwood made up that flight.
Nice thank you! Going to Vancouver in August for one month! Looking forward trying all foods!
1:27 - Fat Tug IPA is among the most legendary craft beers in British Columbia and, frankly, one of the best IPAs I've ever had.
Fat Tug is a good choice.
Personally, I like the Jasmin IPA the Steam Works makes.
Also a great choice!
One of my favorite cities and you hit a bunch of things I love!
Vancouver is a nice city y used to visit canada three times and I really enjoyed .
Great video, so glad that you were able to highlight some of the amazing spots here. I just finished my updated Vancouver travel guide too that features local food and activities that are a must see!
Been living in Vancouver for 8 years and Sushi is a staple in Vancouver living (even when its bad its still cheap and filling) .Everything said is good put more on the pricy side (for most locals anyways.) Check out Mount Pleasant, Commercial drive and hastings sunrise areas for more affordable yet good eating spots that locals eat at with out the central downtown prices.
For fried chicken try Duffin's Doughnuts on Knight and 41st. For East Indian food try Main and 49th.
WHAAAAAAAT WOLTERS WORLD IN MY HOMETOWN AND I MISSED IT!!! Hope you enjoyed your time!
The Japanese Hot Dogs are KILLER!! Nice job Mark.
Ever out here in Nanaimo (on Vancouver Island), we can show you some awesome stuff.
YESSSSSSS! You should also try poutine (of course), butter tarts and beaver tails. I also miss the warehouse in Gastown and all the bars now that I don't live in Vancouver.
Yesss Japadog is the best. Shoyu shaken fries is the best. Yummm
Oh my... I went to Vancouver at the very beginning of 2018 for 2 days, and somehow missed every single thing you mentioned (except for Stanley Park)...
I still remember the pathetic meals that I had. Clif bars and other snacks for breakfast; food court in Chinatown for lunches (where the food was no different than American Chinese food); and finally, an Indian restaurant somewhere in the center of the city that served food in a steel plate, and the food went cold very fast. I never met any Japadog vendor and have never heard of the market... I need to revisit the city someday when I'm not a poor student.
Mmm if you love dumplings you must try the soup dumpling at any Shanghainese resturant. It is like a pork dumpling with 5 times the juiciness!
I loved Granville Island
Thanks, in Vancouver next month where we're starting Alaskan cruise.
Len Berkowitz it's gorgeous. You will have a great start to your cruise
This should be Vancouver week
Hmmmm.... spoilers
I love Naniamo Bars!
I wanted to tell you that I appreciate your work. I'm an 18 yo male and I bought my first trip internationally in Madrid, I am scared but also excited, do you have any advice?
Haven't had the hotdogs he talks about but may try one. Several street vendors with hotdogs in some areas of downtown. There is also a Mongolian Grill near Stanley Park that is good and may still do all you can eat for a flat price. Multiple not expensive, casual Middle Eastern places, noodle places and Greek. Davie Street is a good place to start for walking and deciding. Granville Street not so much for food. Two or three good brew pubs in Yaletown. I find it best to combine doing a little research in advance with trying places you walk past that look interesting. You can spend as much as you can imagine or get by on grocery store purchases and one splurge a day like a casual dinner option. There used to be a phenomenal 99 cent pizza slice place with generous sized slices but, alas, that family seems to have made their money and moved back to where they started from. None of the current pizza by the slice places even compare to that one.
If you want some of the BEST homemade Italian Ice Cream/Gelato, check out La Casa Gelato at 1033 Venables St. There are over 238 Flavours at any one time (588 flavours to date)!! You can of course find all the classics but you have to try some of their 'exotic' flavours like Lavendar, Green Tea, Taro, Garlic (yes Garlic!), Honeycomb Cereal, pumpkin, Brandy, even some made from flowers etc. and every thing else you could possibly imagine, there is not much that they haven't tried! I can't remember them all but it is very impressive. The best part is that you can sample as much as you want. Don't let the area it is in fool you (it is in kind of a warehouse area but it is near China town and Commercial Drive if you are going there), it is a must for any ice cream lover and is legendary in Vancouver!
What odd timing... I just arrived in Vancouver for the first time yesterday.
Hillax2 enjoy!
He missed the Punjab Market, Main st and 49th for real East Indian food and EI Sweets like Barfi. Also I get my Sushi for $7.00 for 22 pieces made right in front of you. The food downtown is crap try the food along Commercial Dr for good Italian food. Or good Filipino food around Fraser and 25th. Main and 25 has real good food like Splits Grill for Gourmet Hamburgs and Hawker's Delight for Malaysian and Singaporean cuisine.
Japadog is one of the best food ever in here in Vancouver
Looks Great mark. The putiene Fries 🍟 with the Gravy on them are Fantastic. its in Ontario Eveywhere
I’m in Montréal and now I’m annoyed at you for posting this and making me hungry...the Lower Mainland (region where Vancouver is) is the best for those foods and more. One thing you’ll maybe find out or mention next is that the salmon have seasons, so at your local supermarket one month it will be the coho which are running, next the sockeye, etc. A good Japanese treatment of fish is really common...if only BC was affordable and had any really good night life to speak of.
I totally agree, Vancouver's Asian and seafood scene are among the bests in North-America (if not the best), on the other hand, the night life is mehhh, or even the lack of festivities or other events, can't be compared to Montreal, which is in a whole other league...... I'm also from Montreal ... (saying this for the readers, clearly, you already know it)
Go to Cafe Medina! Best breakfast and brunch. Huge lines on weekends BUT WORTH THE WAIT. Get the waffles as your dessert. Trust me!
Vegetarians, vegans and celiacs: go to MEET in gastown. It’s a vegan/vegetarian restaurant with amazingly delicious food and they accommodate for celiacs as well! There’s another location at main but I’ve never been there and I don’t know how careful they are with accommodating celiacs but it might worth a try :)
Hopefully a video on Seattle is coming soon.
You had me at night market😊
I’ve lived in Vancouver all my life and never ONCE had a Japadog 😅
Emily me too
Same I didn’t like Japadog but love the seafood here
I have lived in Vancouver for over 20 years and never heard of it.
Same here 😂 west van
You guys should try one! They're good!
Great vid! He Mark, when are you coming to Scotland? Would love to see an updated video
battle beef updates will have some new Scotland videos out later this summer :)
Wolters World that's awesome, can't wait thank You!
Mark, please visit Greece once again! You're such a great inspiration for my channel. Keep it up :)
More Greece coming later in the summer
Raymart Lipat 😂
Wolters World yeeyyyyy🎉
Keep in mind there are LOTS of Asian owned businesses which means one thing- bring cash because they don't take credit cards.
Japadog has mall food court/restaurant locations too. Richmond has two different night markets with different offerings. The filling in a Nanaimo bar is buttercream icing. #nativevancouverite #livingineurope #missmyhometown
The buttercream has custard powder, so he's on the right track
If you're here in the summer, hit up Earnest Ice Cream - it's the best
I tried the nanaimo bar at Granville Market when I went there 3 mths ago after checking out your video. IT IS SO NYUMMY! anyway I incld your video link in my travelblog just fyi. Not up yet will keep you updated
do you have a video on alaska
Hey! Mark! Is their a chance that you will do a fan 'meet up' while you're in Vancouver?
Bummer... Oh well, it was just 'wishful thinking'.
I was eating salmon in Vancouver while I watched this
It is not food; rather, it is "tummy things." That's the way.
That's how we roll :)
Yummy. I want some
Have you ever visited belek or antalya?
Which Would Be Better For A First Canada Trip: Toronto or Vancouver?
Vancouver... mountains, go to Grouse Mountain and see the bears in their habitat, go out whale watching, walk the seawall around Stanley Park, sit and watch the floatplanes dodge the cruise ships in the harbour, go up to Whistler and ride the chair lift to the top of the mountain... then ride a mountain bike back down, go to Kits and catch a show at Bard on The Beach Shakespeare festival...
If you like big cities and big city things you would probably prefere Toronto or Montreal - one of the things that really sets Vancouver apart is the feeling you get being in such an urban place and being so close to a wild unspoiled natural place - there is no large city I know of where there is such an abrupt division between where the city ends and wilderness begins - you can be in the most densely packed part of the city and look to the mountains to the north and see where it just ends and the wild begins.
have u ever been to zimbabwe?
In the summer you have to try:
Rain or Shine icecream
Dragon house BBT
Gami sushi in Richmond
2nd beach or Kits outdoor pools
Places to go:
North Vancouver hikes (Norvan falls, Capilano suspension bridge, Quarry rock)
Espot (cool place for Billiards/ arcade games) in Richmond
Capilano Bridge is very expensive - try the Lynn Canyon bridge: smaller, but free! And located in a gorgeous coastal rainforest.
Welp, now i gotta go to Canada.
Nice video!!!!
Can you go to philly
Is it Nanaimo cake
BC Ferries make the best nanaimo bars. :-)
japadog yes, fun! But the Nanaimo bar (which also, yum, once in yer life cuz) Wolter, Wolter, Wolter, that middle layer? that's not cheesecake. That's Pure. Freakin'. Buttercream. Frosting. which def.s FTW, but whoa not often, honey....
Average cost of hotel in coaqitalum canada
Dude, have you been to the Naam? Internationally famous vegetarian restaurant open 24/7 365 days a year. You must check it out. And have the Miso Gravy.
Splitz burgers.
Japadog is very overrated... I used to work in downtown. Had tried couple different kind of them on the menu. To be honest, you can skip it, not really worth your money to try it. Also, not big fan of Nanaimo Bar either. Instead of Japadog, go and eat Japanese ramen or sushi. Instead of Nanaimo bar, go and book nice afternoon dessert tea, crushed ice with mango ice-cream, or some fancy donuts.
What about Toronto?
He's been to, and done Toronto
I heard a story that the founders of Starbucks got their coffee fix in Vancouver before they started the chain.
Do many Asians live there Mark?
Ken Yup -YUP there is a lot of Asians
Dude I am jelouse I want to eat something like this
Punjabi salmon in Vancouver
Too expensive for me, and I lived there for a while.
Not a sunny day. it sucks. We have a lot of sunny days in the summer.
Brought the food over from Asia...proceeds to show images of rolls
I lived in Vancouver and never seen the hotdog thing? 🤦🏻♀️ 😂
Vancouver Chinatown is does not exist anymore. Many shops and good restaurants long gone. Sad, if you want the best Asian food go to Richmond, BC. Which is a few miles south of Vancouver.
yes...yes it is.... lololol
First
I don’t like poutine that much.
Dude...looks like you've been enjoying too many Japadogs! Stick with raw fish. Way healthier!
steelhead is not a vancouver delicacy. its catsood. japadogs are terrible. you can get a nanaimo bar whereever you are from, which is where Vancouverites would prefer you to be. honestly.
Also could you talk about how Canadian multiculturalism is different from US’s and how people from different countries get along in Canada? So Caucasian US citizens can assimilate to Canadian ways when they come to Canada. It’s very important.
Shhuuuuuut!!! it's so much nicer ANYWHERE else... nothing to see here, keep moving thank you...
Japadog...please...gross...
There is way more interesting places and things to see and do, like Lynn Canyon, why so much focus on the food? It's typical american things. Typical americans freaking out over food.
It's a video specifically about food. Why would I talk about whale watching, gaslamp or skiing?
Tattle the donts of Vancouver is out there too
Many people are interested in food and this is a mostly food related channel the title of the video states "5 Things You Must Eat in Vancouver" did you read that and think it would be about mountain biking on the North Shore?- and Vancouver has a reputation for having the best Chinese, Japanese and Korean food outside of Asia.