Showing posts with label cheese cake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheese cake. Show all posts

Lobster Burger Bar (Toronto)



Unless you’re specifically hunting for a place near Roy Thomson Hall, you’d probably walk right past Lobster Burger Bar and its marine-blue sign. The concept alone is a little confusing - is it fancy (lobster), casual (burger), or a drinks-first kind of spot? If it weren’t for stumbling across their Winterlicious menu and how good it sounded, I likely wouldn’t have gone in.

At $55, the Winterlicious dinner was a steal, with plenty of choice across both starters and mains. I landed on the lobster cakes and was pleasantly surprised when a trio arrived atop a bed of sweet corn succotash. Fluffier than classic crab cakes but still packed with seafood, they were hot, crunchy, and disappeared far faster than expected.

Then came the seafood boil… I was floored by the size. A massive bowl overflowing with prawns, mussels, crab legs, corn, potatoes, and sausage hit the table. The seafood itself isn’t top tier (frozen crab legs and small mussels), but there was more than enough of it, and for a Winterlicious special, it absolutely delivered. Even better, nothing was overcooked, which can be difficult when you’re serving so many diners.

Flavour-wise, it leaned more satay than Creole, and it was definitely on the salty side, especially for a dish that arrives without bread. The sausage made everything a bit too oily and were so salty that it was inedible and could’ve been left out. That said, the potatoes soaked up the seasoning beautifully and were soft, comforting, and satisfying.

Dessert was a dense, creamy cheesecake. The graham crust was thicker and harder than I’d like, but once broken up and eaten with the cake, it added a buttery, nutty crunch that worked. I appreciated that the topping stayed neutral with berries, letting the cheesecake itself shine.

What Lobster Burger Bar gets right is balance. The space isn’t stuffy or overly formal, rather there’s a casual elegance that makes it feel approachable. The staff were a big part of that. Victoria and Jay introduced themselves naturally and checked in just enough to make us feel well taken care of without hovering.

Even the drinks were pleasantly affordable. My vodka martini rang in at $15 instead of the $10 “certain hours” price listed on the menu, but it was strong enough that I didn’t feel like nitpicking. Their special cocktail, Sexy & Free, a nod to & Juliet currently playing in Toronto, was only $8 and stayed that way on the bill. Peachy, light, and dangerously easy to drink.

The concept may be a bit all over the place, but the food mostly delivers and the staff seal the deal. Lobster Burger Bar isn’t trying to be fine dining… it’s a comfortable, seafood-forward spot that knows how to treat its guests.

Overall mark - 8 out of 10
Is Winterlicious worth it (based on my meal selection)?
Winterlicious - $55
Regular menu - $70 - lobster cake ($15), seafood boil ($45) and dessert ($10)
Savings - $15 or 21%
How To Find Them
 Location: Toronto, Canada
 Address: 214 King St West

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Gastro World's Grading System

  • Anything under 5 - I really disliked and will never go back
  • 6 - decent restaurant but I likely won't return
  • 7 - decent restaurant and I will likely return
  • 8 - great restaurant that I'd be happy to recommend
  • 9 - fantastic restaurant that I would love to visit regularly and highly recommend
  • 10 - absolute perfection!


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