Category Archives: Tunisian

Vancouver World Tour: Africa

African cuisine is a diverse as the countryside; iron-rich injera and Indian-influenced dishes on the East coast to couscous and tagines in the North, South African cured biltong and okra and yams in the West. Vancouver doesn’t have all that many African restaurants – the preponderance of which are Ethiopian/East African – but I tried to cover them all. Unfortunately, after months of trying to get to Lagos Corner Nigerian, they were closed. I’m going to keep trying and I’ll add it in when I finally get there, but blog-wise I want to move on to the next region: the Middle East.

See below for African reviews or if you have a favourite Middle Eastern restaurant in Vancouver, please tell me about it.

Africa:

South African: African Breese Imports

Ethiopia: Fassil

Tunisian: Carthage Cafe

East African: Simba’s Grill

Nigerian: Lagos Corner Nigerian Restaurant, 7546 Edmonds Street

 

Please also see Harambe and Red Sea Cafe. I’ve tried several dishes at Nyala but found the food and service to be not worth reporting on.

Carthage Cafe

carthago mussels
Around Vancouver in 52 Restaurants > Africa > Tunisia.

In amongst the East Van Ethiopian lurks a lone Tunisian restaurant – Carthage Cafe. The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion tells us that “North African dining resembles Ethiopian in that bread is the only utensil” but North Africa has been involved in Mediterranean trade since Carthage was a busy port and the cuisine has been borrowed from many cultures.

merguez, chicken, lamb and couscous

At lunch Matt honed in on the combo dish of house-made merguez sausage, lamb, and chicken with couscous and vegetables and I ordered the ‘Carthago’ mussels – Mediterranean mussels grown locally in Horseshoe Bay – spiced with cumin and harissa and served with delicious, hand-cut fries.

I had been to Carthage Cafe a while ago, back before they had a liquor license, so I wasn’t surprised to find some changes when I went back to check it out for Ethnic Eats. A trendy bistro feel – dark walls and Paris-themed art – made it feel like we were going to have to come again for an evening visit.

carthage cafe

And when the food came we amended the plan to include several more people, or perhaps a St. Bernard. The portions were huge! Fat mussels in their dark shells created an elaborately stacked structure dripping with chili oil and flanked by a plate of French fries and a finger bowl. On Matt’s end, there was a heaping platter of meat – a lamb leg, a chicken leg and a mess of sausages – on top of savoury, saucy couscous and some roasted vegetables. This was after we had incautiously filled up on soft French bread and butter.

We were so full we had crackers and cheese for dinner, but it was satisfying. Matt didn’t use a knife for his entire meal, all of it tender and the meat just falling off the bone while I languidly dipped fries in the gravy boat of homemade harissa long after I thought I couldn’t have another bite.

There are a couple of dishes I’d like to check out (not to mention the wine list) so I’ll be back soon, but in the meantime I am going to ponder the French bistro-Tunisian restaurant-African eatery continuum some more.

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Carthage Cafe
1851 Commercial Drive, Vancouver

Around Vancouver in 52 Restaurants

Photo Credit: ecstaticist.

So I’ve dedicded to start a new project for dining in 2010. The tagline of this site is “Sampling the World’s Cuisine Without Leaving Vancouver” and so instead of of traipsing around Vancouver’s culinary delights in the random way I have been for the last (almost) 2 years, I am going to present my finds country by country.

I still have a bit of a backlog of reviews, so I may post those interspersed with the project and if I feel really keen, I may even post some recipes.

First stop on the grand tour: North America. Got any favorites you’d like to recommend?