Monthly Archives: August 2013

Yukon Gold: Fine Eats and Drinks in the Great White North—Part 2

If you're foraging for Yukon berries, you might be competing with this grizzly

If you’re foraging for Yukon berries, you might be competing with the grizzlies

Klondike Highway North

Another good Yukon paved road with little traffic, the Klondike Highway (#2) is primarily used to reach Dawson City, some 550 kilometres north of Whitehorse. Forty kilometres before Dawson, the Dempster Highway branches north and extends past the Arctic Circle all the way to Inuvik, just shy of the Beaufort Sea in the Northwest Territories. This good gravel road also provides quick access to Tombstone Territorial Park, which offers excellent hiking and vibrant red and yellow fall colours, usually peaking in late August.

Just north of Whitehorse, it’s well worth taking a short side trip off the Klondike to *Bean North Coffee Roasting and perhaps a dip in the nearby Takhini Hot Springs. Normally when I see large pump pots of coffee, I blanche, bracing myself for the inevitable disappointment of stale, weak or flavourless fluid. But when the server at Bean North puts out a fresh carafe of the Wilderness Wake Up blend and hands me a large mug warmed on the espresso machine tray, it’s a revelation. The coffee is strong and aromatic, and I can actually taste the advertised notes of chocolate, berry and nuts. On a subsequent visit, the double-shot Americano is even better, with just enough steamed water to let the complex flavours linger on my palate.

Good soup and sandwiches to go with the great java at Bean North Coffee Roasting just outside Whitehorse

Good soup and sandwiches to go with the great java at Bean North Coffee Roasting just outside Whitehorse

Bean North, one of Canada’s first fair-trade coffee roasters, also serves lunches, such as a fragrant carrot ginger soup with a warm biscuit or a cheesy panini, which can be enjoyed in the outdoor, flowery garden. But really, it’s the outstanding coffee that makes it worth the detour off the highway. Like Midnight Sun Coffee Roasters, Bean North coffee is offered at many Yukon establishments, but none seem to serve it as expertly as the home base.

Bean North Coffee Roasting
9.3 km up the Takhini Hot Springs Road off Klondike Highway just north of Whitehorse
Daily 11 am-5 pm

Like much of the Alaska Highway, the number of eateries along the Klondike Highway has dwindled in recent years to a handful of often dilapidated “lodges”, some no more than a gas bar and convenience store. There are only two worth stopping at, as long as you can avoid the four or so tour buses that disgorge their camera-toting loads each summer’s day.

The first, some 90 kilometres up the highway, is Braeburn Lodge, famous for its cinnamon buns and curt, silver-bearded owner. I did a double take when the latter said the former cost $9.50, till I saw the much-lauded size, enough to feed a sweet-toothed family of four. They were actually pretty tasty, especially if you could get them fresh from the oven and not wrapped in plastic. Considering they bake and sell up to 100 of these “loaves” a day, they’re all pretty fresh, though contributing to North Americans’ growing waistlines. To keep pace with the monster buns, Braeburn also serves mammoth sandwiches and some decent soups. The furnishings, if you eat in, are pretty bleak, but it all adds up to a Yukon character experience.

Everything's bigger in the Yukon, including these cinnamon buns at Braeburn Lodge

Everything’s bigger in the Yukon, including these cinnamon buns at Braeburn Lodge

It’s another 280 km north to Moose Creek Lodge, giving you perhaps enough digesting time to work up a fresh appetite. Most folks, however, stop just for treats like fresh-baked rhubarb tarts or sausage rolls, though you can order standard breakfasts, hamburgers and the like. But I’d advise steering clear of the coffee, unless you need to stay awake for the homestretch drive into Dawson.

Dawson City

Situated at the junctions of the Yukon and Klondike Rivers and the famous Bonanza Creek, Dawson City heartily celebrates the gold rush of the 1890s and beyond. The false-front buildings, the mud-packed side streets with their boardwalks and the entry into town past sinuous piles of gold tailings gravel (some now turned into subdivisions with names like Dredge Pond) all lend a rough authenticity to a community of 1,300, which swells to many times that size during the brief summer tourist season. Parks Canada offers a number of excellent, reasonably priced programs that interpret this rich gold-rush history, though unfortunate budget cuts have closed its tours of the impressive, restored Dredge No. 4.

Klondike Kate's serves up fabulous food, with a local theme, in Dawson City

Klondike Kate’s serves up fabulous food, with a local theme, in Dawson City

The best of a surprising number of good places to eat for lunch and certainly dinner in Dawson City is *Klondike Kate’s, located in a 1904 building. At 64 degrees latitude, with 90 frost-free days and permafrost lurking not far below the surface, Dawson is an unlikely place for a restaurant to be participating in the local food movement, other than perhaps the odd caribou stew. Yet Kate’s takes advantage of the surprising gardening season under the midnight sun to buy locally-grown lettuce and cauliflowers for its dishes and to forage for wild mushrooms, berries and spruce tips, the latter to add zip to the sauce on its Ibex Valley (outside Whitehorse) burger. Indeed, I spotted a sign in the window that said “We’re buying fresh morels.” Perhaps the most riveting sight on the dinner table was not the smoked chicken leg, the Alsek River salmon, the beer-poached elk sausage or the pulled pork salad. Instead, it was a side dish of brilliant green romanesco, a fractal-shaped cross between a cauliflower and broccoli, grown on an island in the nearby Yukon River. The lunchtime menu features fine soups, burgers, quesadillas and house-made, grilled cornbread.

Would you believe this romanesco veggie grows at 64 degrees latitude?

Would you believe this romanesco veggie grows at 64 degrees latitude?

Klondike Kate’s
Corner of 3rd Avenue and King Street
Open in summer Monday to Saturday 11 am-3 pm (lunch) and 5 pm-10 pm (dinner), Sunday 8 am-3 pm (brunch) and 5 pm-10 pm (dinner)
Klondike Kate's on Urbanspoon

Over on Front Street, Sourdough Joe’s packs in the tourists, who mainly devour fish and chips (halibut, cod or a very nice salmon). A good before- or after-dinner stop is Bombay Peggy’s (“The Yukon’s only restored brothel,” at 2 Avenue and Princess Street), where you can quaff an ale or order a lewdly-named martini such as Bloomer Remover or 50 Below Job. Hey, it’s the Yukon. Speaking of improprieties, no visit to Dawson would be complete without a spirited, professional dancehall show at Diamond Tooth Gerties Gambling Hall (4th and Queen Street). You can even order a decent slice of pizza to go with your drink of choice. But if you really want to sample the underbelly of Dawson where few tourists would think of venturing, sidle up to the bar at the aptly named Snake Pit in the Westminster Hotel (975 3 Avenue).

No Dawson City visit is complete without a trip to Diamond Tooth Gerties and its leg-kicking dance show

No Dawson City visit is complete without a trip to Diamond Tooth Gerties and its leg-kicking dance show

The most popular sit-down spot for breakfast is Riverwest Bistro (958 Front Street), where you’ll find a steady stream of customers ordering breakfast sandwiches, omelets, huevos rancheros and lots of Midnight Sun coffee. But I like heading down a few doors, with locals mostly, to *Cheechakos Bake Shop (905 Front Street), a takeout spot with a few stools. They make fine muffins and sweet and savoury scones, pizza slices and hot loaves of sourdough bread. What’s most impressive is that each morning, they roast a large, house-marinated ham, turkey and roast of beef and carve them up to be stacked inside their English muffins for the breakfast and lunch sandwiches. But you’d best hurry. Most of the baked goods are long gone by early afternoon. Cheechakos Bakeshop on Urbanspoon

House-roasted ham and fresh muffins at Cheechakos Bake Shop

House-roasted ham and fresh muffins at Cheechakos Bake Shop

Klondike Highway South

Forty-five minutes south of Whitehorse, Carcross is scenically situated at the north end of Bennett Lake. Make sure to stop at Caribou Crossing Coffee, situated in a building with a large Tlingit mural and a brightly lit interior with local art on the walls. It serves good Bean North coffee as well as sandwiches and baked treats.

Terrific Tlingit mural at Caribou Crossing Coffee in Carcross

Terrific Tlingit mural at Caribou Crossing Coffee in Carcross

Yukon Gold: Fine Eats in the Great White North—Part 1

Spectacular fall colours in the Yukon's Tombstone Territorial Park

Spectacular fall colours in the Yukon’s Tombstone Territorial Park

There are seven times more caribou and twice as many moose as humans (the two-legged population is only 35,000 in 483,000 square kilometres of terrain). And it’s a hearty three-plus-day drive from the “civilized” south just to get there, unless you prefer flying to Whitehorse and then renting a vehicle.

Still, the Yukon Territory, in Canada’s far northwest, exercises a strong pull on the imagination of many road trippers, whether they’re driving up the Alaska Highway, backpacking or climbing in Kluane National Park or reliving the Dawson gold rush. The good news is you can drive through beautiful country, and maybe spot a roadside grizzly bear, without encountering another vehicle for perhaps half an hour at a stretch.

From a road-food perspective, there’s a surprising number of good dining and bakery/coffee shop options, though outside Whitehorse many places shut down after Labour Day. Considering the distance most groceries must be shipped from the south, prices aren’t unreasonable. And in this northern frontier, almost no eatery expects you to change out of your muddy pants and boots. Throughout the territory, you can wash that dust off with excellent Whitehorse-produced *Yukon Brewing beer (www.yukonbeer.com), available in a variety of flavourful styles such as Midnight Sun (espresso port) and the flagship Yukon Gold, an English pale ale.

Whitehorse

With a population of 26,000 and growing, the rather sophisticated capital of the Yukon dwarfs the combined citizenry of the remaining territorial villages and outposts. Its rich arts and cultural life is bolstered by an active outdoors community that mountain bikes and river canoes in summer and cross-county skis on kilometres of trails during the long winter. Located near the territory’s south end, Whitehorse is the launching spot for nearly all Yukon road trips to the north and west.

Whitehorse boasts a vibrant café scene. While Baked Cafe + Bakery (108, 100 Main Street) is the most popular coffee gathering spot, with nice organic scones, the best bet is The Claim, featuring good breakfast snacks, homemade chocolates, paninis and daily lunchtime specials such as lentil curry soup and tabouleh salad with local tomatoes.

The Claim
305 Strickland Street, Whitehorse
Weekdays 7:30 am-6 pm, Saturday 9:30 am-5 pm. Closed Sunday
Chocolate Claim on Urbanspoon

Craving a strong jolt of java? Head to Midnight Sun Coffee Roasters, attached to a bicycle shop, and sip an espresso or pick up a pound of Bushwacker’s Blend while you watch a batch of beans being roasted.

Enjoy a brew at Midnight Sun Coffee Roasters while you're getting your bike tuned up

Enjoy a brew at Midnight Sun Coffee Roasters while you’re getting your bike tuned up

Midnight Sun Coffee Roasters
9002 Quartz Road, Whitehorse
Weekdays 8 am-6 pm, Saturday 10 am-5 pm. Closed Sunday

A Whitehorse landmark is *Alpine Bakery, where all of owner Suat Tuzlak’s (love that name) products are vegetarian and organic. The bakery churns out a large selection of hearty loaves including sourdough, rye, ciabatta, flax and spelt; some are baked in a brick oven. We carried a couple of these dense, sustaining loaves on a 10-day backpack, without any crumbling or mold forming. A lunchtime treat here is a square of pizza (the roasted beet and onion is delicious), eaten on the back patio and washed down by a strong coffee.

How about a delectable slice of beet and onion pizza at Alpine Bakery

How about a delectable slice of beet and onion pizza at Alpine Bakery?

Alpine Bakery
411 Alexander Street, Whitehorse
Tuesday to Friday 8 am-6 pm, Saturday 8 am-4 pm. Closed Sunday and Monday

For a combination of historic ambience and good food, it’s hard to beat Klondike Rib & Salmon BBQ, located in Whitehorse’s two oldest buildings, including a former 1900 tent-frame bakery. The portions are generous and the service attentive at this popular spot, which might have a mid-summer lineup in prime times (prices are considerably cheaper at lunch). The lightly battered Alaska halibut and chips is bursting with fresh-caught flavour; one piece is enough for most appetites. Another good choice is Sockeye Sally, with smoked salmon stacked on house-made focaccia bread and topped with sautéed garlic and Portabella mushroom. If you have room, the oversized desserts include fruit pie, brownies or bread pudding.

The Klondike Rib & Salmon building dates back to  around 1900

The Klondike Rib & Salmon building dates back to around 1900

The halibut and chips is bursting with fresh-caught flavour

The halibut and chips is bursting with fresh-caught flavour

Klondike Rib & Salmon BBQ
2116-2 Avenue, Whitehorse
Monday to Saturday 11 am-9 pm, Sunday 4 pm-9 pm
Klondike Rib & Salmon - Seasonal on Urbanspoon

A popular lunchtime hangout is Yukon Meat & Sausage, known locally as The Deli. Here, you can custom order large, affordable sandwiches or pick up distinctive supplies, such as caribou smokies, for your road-trip adventures (203 Hanson Street).

Alaska Highway

Heading west of Whitehorse, the Alaska Highway (#1) is a quiet paved road in fine shape, thanks to continued Canadian and American government investment in its upkeep within the Yukon. It provides access to adventures in the St. Elias Mountains and, further northwest, to Alaska and its major communities of Anchorage and Fairbanks.

The spectacular new Da Ku Cultural Centre in Haines Junction houses the Kluane National Park Visitor Centre

The spectacular new Da Ku Cultural Centre in Haines Junction houses the Kluane National Park Visitor Centre

Ninety minutes from Whitehorse is Haines Junction, where the Kluane National Park Visitor Centre is lodged in the palatial new Da Ku Cultural Centre. Across the highway, is where locals and tourists alike flock. In this otherwise vast, unpopulated landscape, it’s surprising to find anything more than weak, stale coffee and packaged treats. As if to compensate for this scarcity, Village Bakery does it all, from morning espressos, cinnamon buns and cheese buns/breads to hearty dinner lasagnas, pizza slices, vegetarian tortes and big scoops of ice cream. On summer Friday evenings, there’s a salmon barbecue buffet, with live music.

The Yukon Village Bakery in Haines Junction does it all... at least while it's still in business

The Yukon Village Bakery in Haines Junction does it all… at least while it’s still in business

Yukon Village Bakery
Corner of Logan and Kluane Streets, Haines Junction
Daily 7 am-9 pm May to September

Instant Backcountry Meals: Heresy or Simple Efficiency?

Boil, stir and serve: Instant backcountry dinner

Boil, stir and serve: Instant backcountry dinner

Over many years of backpacking and other mountain adventures, I’ve participated in a lot of group dinners where you take turns preparing supper. And these meals can get quite elaborate, to the point where you feel obliged to live up to the delicious organic chicken penne with homemade ragu sauce the person made the night before. Which means spending a lot of time preparing and dehydrating the meal at home, then rehydrating it in camp, stirring endlessly to keep things from burning to bottom of the stainless steel pot and timing everything to be hot at once.

There's no beating this homemade chile. But it's a lot of work, with two stoves going in camp

There’s no beating this homemade chile. But it’s a lot of work, with two stoves going in camp

But as I get older and wiser (lazier?), I’m increasingly tempted to go quick and easy. And if that means not living up to the competition, so be it.

So, you can spend your winters preparing and dehydrating meals for the summer’s backpacks and canoe trips or the spring’s ski traverses. Or you can let someone else do the work for you.

The secret is going instant, i.e. pouring boiling water over various ingredients, maybe simmering a bit and letting sit for a few minutes. Voila! Dinner in five minutes.

I know “instant” is heresy in some backcountry circles, perhaps stemming from the days of cup-of-soups and quick ramens laced with artificial ingredients and MSG. But now, with a wee bit of searching and ingenuity, you can concoct quick meals that are both healthy and quite tasty. And it’s a lot cheaper than buying packaged backcountry meals.

The other day, for example, I prepared a quick black bean dish based mainly on ingredients from my local health food store. I took a cup each of instant black beans and instant, organic brown rice flakes, added a handful of freeze-dried peas and a teaspoon of red chile powder for zip. In camp, I poured all this into about three cups of boiling water in a non-stick aluminum pot, stirred in a package of coconut milk power, let sit for a few minutes and served with grated parmesan cheese. The result was a flavourful meal for two hungry hikers, three with smaller appetites.

By contrast, here's my instant black bean supper ingredients, ready to be boiled and served

By contrast, here’s my instant black bean supper ingredients, ready to be boiled and served

Sure, the consistency kind of resembled porridge. But the good thing about working up a hearty appetite in the great outdoors is everything tastes a little better than at home. And if it saves me many hours of labour, I say sign me up.

And the hungry customer isn't complaining... at least not to my face

And this hungry customer isn’t complaining… at least not to my face

Backpacking Reward: Hearty Burgers in Lake Louise, Alberta

There's nothing like a week-long backpack into southern Jasper National Park to work up an appetite

There’s nothing like a week-long backpack into southern Jasper National Park to work up an appetite

It’s the end of a week-long backpack in southern Jasper National Park, and the one thing that keeps our feet plodding down the last muddy trail to the car, and civilization, is the mental mantra ham-bur-ger, ham-bur-ger. So it is with stiff legs and famished appetites that we stumble into the Outpost Pub in the darkened bowels of the Post Hotel in Lake Louise, on our way back to Banff. It’s swanky upstairs with a 25,000-bottle wine cellar, but down here—despite the linen napkins and fine European service—they don’t seem to mind my muddy trousers or heavy stubble. And we don’t mind the Lake Louise premium of $15 and up for a burger, especially when it’s six ounces of dense sirloin and a mountain of thin-cut fries, washed down with a pint of Big Rock Traditional. The preliminary basket of chewy, sourdough buns is excellent and somewhat better than the house-made burger bun. But when you’re this hungry, any quibbles are nigh insignificant. For about 10 minutes, the only sound from our table of six is chewing. Or is it inhaling?

Yes, that's a massive sirloin burger behind the mountain of fries at the Outpost Pub in Lake Louise

Yes, that’s a massive sirloin burger behind the mountain of fries at the Outpost Pub in Lake Louise

Outpost Pub in The Post Hotel
200 Pipestone Road, Lake Louise
Monday to Friday 4:30 pm-midnight, weekends noon to midnight
Outpost Pub on Urbanspoon

Sorry, We’re Closed. We Just Didn’t Bother to Tell Anyone

Sorry, we're not open, and you couldn't find this out till you arrived at our front door

Sorry, we’re not open, and you couldn’t find this out till you arrived at our front door

On a recent Thursday in August, I struck out on three central Alberta restaurants. It wasn’t a series of bad experiences. I just couldn’t get in the locked front doors.

It started with a considerable drive to a north Edmonton breakfast café. But the anticipated pancakes were not to be, since a sign on the door said they were closed for August holidays.

No big deal. I just went to plan B in downtown Edmonton, where after plugging $2 into a meter, I was greeted with a “closed for a four-day break” sign. Rather famished on the drive back to Calgary, I stopped at a Red Deer-area diner. Strike three.

Now, I have no problem with restaurants taking some time off. It’s a tough business, and owners and staff deserve a break, especially in summer when the weather’s nice and kids are on school vacation. Plus, the places I haunt are independently owned and thus free to maintain the schedules they want.

My issue is communicating these closures with prospective customers. To be fair, the first place I ventured to had a notice on its website, in red letters, that it would be closed for a specified period. My bad for not checking.

The other two spots, though, had nothing other than the “closed” sign on the door. One had no web presence whatsoever, the other a Facebook page that hadn’t been updated in months (believe me, both practices are surprisingly common throughout North America). Maybe the regulars were informed of these closures. But anyone, who like me, had heard of these places through Yelp or Urbanspoon and perhaps driven a fair distance to dine there, was s**t out of luck. And let me tell you, there’s nothing worse than a hungry diner scorned.

Now, it’s up to restaurant owners to decide if they want to spend the time and money to take advantage of the considerable advertising power that a website offers. But a Facebook or Twitter account is free and can be set up, and updated, in minutes. So to me, it’s a terrible discourtesy to both regular and potential customers to not take the few minutes—less time, indeed, than to cook a couple of eggs—to let them know you’re not going to be open. Because once burned, I’m not likely to give these places a second chance.

Your thoughts?

Raising the Bar in Brooks, Alberta

Dinosaur Provincial Park, near Brooks, Alberta, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site

Dinosaur Provincial Park, near Brooks, Alberta, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site

From a tourist perspective, Brooks is best known for its location on the Trans-Canada Highway, between Calgary and Medicine Hat, and for its proximity to Dinosaur Provincial Park, a World Heritage Site famed for its dinosaur beds and badlands. In recent years, Brooks has grown from a southeast Alberta farm town into a small city (population 14,000), with a considerable workforce from sub-Saharan Africa at a large meatpacking plant. The city’s cuisine has also expanded to include reputable Thai and sushi restaurants.

It's hard to see the Brooks Hotel front behind this monster sandwich

It’s hard to see the Brooks Hotel front behind this monster sandwich

But I’m in the mood for the old-time hotel bar scene that Alberta’s small towns are famous for. And the Brooks Hotel (“Established since 1909”) doesn’t disappoint. The wood paneling’s dark, the lighting dim, with the only glow coming from a row of automated gambling machines. Early-afternoon patrons are nursing bottles of Bud, Miller and Kokanee and digging into mountainous sandwiches. Which is what I’m here for. The waitress rattles off half a dozen varieties, and I pick a loaded roast beef, stuffed between two ridiculously thick slices of fresh, soft French bread. It’s $6 for a pound of food, $1.25 more if I add soup. While I’m waiting for my takeout, she asks if I want a glass of ice water or soda: “Slice of lime or lemon with that?” Unpretentious, friendly, incredible value and the kind of roast beef sandwich your mother used to make. What’s not to like?

Where's the roast beef? Buried inside these massive slabs of French bread at the Brooks Hotel

Where’s the roast beef? Buried inside these massive slabs of French bread at the Brooks Hotel

Brooks Hotel
111 1 Street West, Brooks
Daily 10 am-2 am, except 1:30 am Sunday