Where to eat in Mile End
Montreal’s signature meals blend border-hopping haute-gastronomic precision with the unfussy feel of a wine-fueled dinner-party—and some of Mile End’s best meals help define the genre. Wood paneling and bare pine floors at Île Flottante help strike a low-key tone, belying the complexity of its experimental, vegetable-forward tasting menus. Scrupulously sourced Atlantic seafood and local meats made Quebecois brasserie Molenne an instant favorite after its 2025 opening—a meal there might begin with wild Lac-Saint-Pierre sturgeon caviar, hitting its stride over pastured lamb with shiso, nettles, and fava beans.
Just down the block is eight-seat Sushi Nishinokaze, which garnered the neighborhood’s first and only Michelin star in May. Following the Edomae tradition of using marinated and cured ingredients, its chef, Vincent Gee, serves 21-course omakase in a gallery-like space filled with a rotating collection of antique and modern ceramics.
Yet in a neighborhood where classics still reign, any culinary tour of Mile End includes St-Viateur Bagels and Fairmount Bagel, the city’s two most famous bakeries. Each turns out Montreal-style bagels—slightly sweet, chewy, and best eaten fresh from wood-fired ovens. Each has a legion of loyal fans; deciding which one you prefer is a rite of passage.
Soda fountain and Jewish deli Wilensky’s Light Lunch feels unchanged since its 1932 opening, and the former Leonard Cohen hangout remains a pilgrimage place for cherry cola and grilled salami-and-bologna sandwiches. Decked in Italian soccer flags, Café Olimpico has seen generations of Italian Quebecois lingering over doppio espresso and doughnut-like bomboloni spilling creamy fillings.
Some fresh arrivals are riffing on neighborhood heritage, like Renzo Sandwich, which opened last year with retro Italian café design. Diners on its mustard-yellow banquettes order mortadella-artichoke sandwiches, natural wines, and signature boozy slushies. Inspired by dive bars but with an enviable list of natural wines, Le Plongeoir swiftly became an industry hangout after its 2023 opening—the kind of place where locals wrap the night with 2 a.m. pool and bottles of cabernet franc.

