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Top 4 Canadian Appetizers

Last updated on May 15, 2026
01

Garlic fingers

4 ·

Garlic fingers is a popular food item throughout Atlantic Canada. Even though it looks like a pizza, garlic fingers are cut in strips or fingers instead of being cut into slices like a regular pizza. The dish consists of pizza dough that is topped with cheese, garlic butter, and parsley. It is baked until the cheese melts, and it can then be additionally topped with dill, vegetables, or pieces of bacon. Garlic fingers are often consumed with regular pizza as a side dish, and they are typically accompanied by dipping sauces such as Donair or marinara. Apart from pizza joints, garlic fingers can be found in many grocery stores.

02

Cretons

4 ·

Cretons is a flavorful Canadian meat spread consisting of ground pork, lard, breadcrumbs, and milk. It is traditionally produced in Québéc. The spread is typically flavored with garlic, cloves, ginger, celery, parsley, nutmeg, cinnamon, onions, and allspice. Its texture is fatty, creamy and tender, and it is often served for breakfast, when it is paired with toast. If the spread is based on veal, poultry, or any meat that is not pork, it is then called a cretonnade.

03

Sushi pizza

3.3 ·

Sushi pizza is an unusual spin on sushi that is popular throughout Canada, especially in Toronto. It consists of a fried rice patty topped with salmon, tuna, or crab, avocado slices, spicy mayonnaise, and soy-wasabi sauce. It is believed that the dish was invented by a Japanese chef Kaoru Ohsada in a restaurant named Nami. Originally, he made the dish by frying sushi rice, topping it with salmon, and garnishing it with tobiko fish roe and chopped onions. Today, sushi pizza is often accompanied by soy sauce or pickled ginger on the side. This food trend has also crossed national borders, so you can occasionally find it in poké restaurants in the United States.

04

Oeufs en gelée

n/a ·

Oeufs en gelée is a traditional, yet rarely seen Canadian dish consisting of eggs in aspic. The dish is made with consommé, leaf gelatin, eggs, sherry or madeira, and a bit of vinegar for poaching the eggs. The combination is placed into small ramekins or bowls, then chilled to set. The eggs are poached and placed into the jelly, then chilled again to set. The eggs in aspic are turned out on serving plates, and the appetizer is usually served with a green salad on the side.

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About this ranking

TasteAtlas food rankings are based on the ratings of the TasteAtlas audience, with a series of mechanisms that recognize real users and that ignore bot, nationalist or local patriotic ratings, and give additional value to the ratings of users that the system recognizes as knowledgeable. For the “Top 4 Canadian Appetizers” list until May 15, 2026, 224 ratings were recorded, of which 201 were recognized by the system as legitimate. TasteAtlas Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food. Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.

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