The Best Sandwiches in Toronto
The best sandwiches in Toronto help bread reach its finest calling — joining forces with a surplus of savoury, saucy components to become one staggeringly delicious snack. Golden and melty or crisp and fresh, traditional or provocatively new, these sandwiches create buzz, amass throngs of addicts, and leave a happy number of sated diners in their wake.
Here are the best sandwiches in Toronto.
Call it a retro Italian deli, or call it a playground of creamy, spicy, savoury ingredients just waiting to unite in visionary sandwiches. Choose a signature offering, or go nuts with a creation born of imagination and the Yonge & Eglinton store's wealth of meats, cheeses, condiments, spreads and sauces.
The only issue faced by diners at this sandwich shop near Yonge & Dundas is a flood of options, each one more tempting than the last. Italian classics join non-traditional items on a menu that zips from the Marcello Melanzana, with breaded eggplant, to Il Capo, a monster stuffed with smoked roast beef from sister spot Cherry Street Bar-B-Que.
Cheese pulls and meat piles are as common as vegetables elevated to sandwich must-haves at this bodega near Dundas and Dovercourt. Make a meal out of house peameal on a bun, with onions, mustard and barbecue sauce, or a new-age beet, lettuce and tahini BLT certain to turn many a meat-eater's head.
Judge this Rosedale sandwich shop by its diminutive size and risk missing out on some of the city's greatest amalgams of squishy bread and savoury add-ons. From slow roasted beef brisket and pulled BBQ pork to a medley of succulent roasted vegetables, the menu has treats for diners of every persuasion.
A collection of fetching subs greets the hungry at this takeout spot with locations in Leslieville and near Trinity Bellwoods. If you dream in shades of pale pink deli meat, butter-hued cheeses and the bright red pop of pickled peppers, this place won't disappoint. Just be sure to eat the happy cocktail of deli staples, not just pose it for its closeup.
Pastries, bread, cookies, cappuccinos, pizza and more work alongside hefty sandwiches to demand surrender from diners popping by this bakery with multiple Toronto locations. Stacked on house-made ciabatta, focaccia and more, options include a Tuscan chicken number brightened with preserved lemon and grapes and fig-spiked prosciutto di Parma and fior di latte.
Fresh ingredients are loaded onto house-made focaccia, pullman bread and more at this cute Leslieville shop. Inspired by a world of flavours, options run from the deli-counter-in-a-sandwich Nola, with soppressata, pepperoni, capicola, coppa and mortadella, to the 7 E 11, a nod to Japan's skillfully simple egg salad sandos.
Fareen Karim at Leslie's Sandwich Room. Additional photos, @salnanny22 of La Salumeria, @dam_sandwiches
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