Feed on
Posts
Comments

So here’s the open question: Where can we eat on the holiday?

This is the question that vexes the traveler who isn’t planning to spend the holidays with family or friends. And the holidays are a great leveler because whether you’re new to a city or a frequent visitor, you can still be frustrated when you start to feel hunger pangs and you face the prospect of block after block of closed restaurants.

We’ve been spending the holiday in Montreal for 6 years now, and every year, we subject our long-considered list of desired restaurants to the reality of holiday hours. Most of the time we can make it all work out. We arrive about a week before Christmas and leave shortly thereafter, so we can manage our reservations around what’s open on a particular night.

xmas_rubyBut it’s not easy. Not only do most restaurants close for a few days (or longer) but others close capriciously – and here’s what I mean by that: last year, we reserved at Bronte about 3 weeks before our trip – it had been on our list for a couple years and we wanted to check it out. A week before our trip, Bronte called. They wouldn’t be able to fulfill our reservation on Open Table because they were actually closed that night. Why they’d not communicated that with Open Table? I’m not sure, but during the phone conversation they told us they’d be open on Boxing Day and they could accommodate us. So, we reserved for 12/26. On the afternoon of 12/26, Bronte called again: “We’re sorry but we won’t be open tonight.” It’s likely they looked at the number of reservations for the evening and decided it wasn’t worth bringing in the staff. Understandable, but frustrating, and Bronte is now off our list.

Christmas Eve is usually workable. A number of reputable restaurants are open because families and large parties often eat out before Midnight Mass or other celebrations. Christmas night is another matter. With the exception of hotel restaurants or Chinese restaurants, most everything is closed. Our Christmas dining record? Four Christmas night meals at Otto (W Hotel) and one dinner at Koko (Opus Hotel).

Whenever I mention Otto as the Christmas Night meal, it seems, a Chowhound or foodie will write to say something like, “I hardly think Otto is a great choice for someone interested in food.” To which I always respond with a sanitized version of, “Duh, but please suggest a better restaurant that’s open on Christmas Night.” I’ve never received a suggestion.

Chinese restaurants are a well-known option for Christmas Night because many of them are open. That’s something we’ve considered, except that our other Christmas Day tradition, dim sum for lunch, provides us with enough Chinese food for the day.

Locals can’t often provide much help with this question because most of them are at home with family and friends, recovering from a huge Christmas dinner.

But surely someone – tourist or local – has gone to a restaurant on Christmas Night in Montreal. If you’ve done so, where have you gone? What can you recommend?

photo: Christmas Day dim sum consumption at Ruby Rouge

  • Matt
    My girlfriend and I are planning to head up to Montreal from New York this Christmas (we wanted to go in December, and that's how the vacation days worked out). We'll be there the 22nd through 26th, and we were wondering just how much Christmas would shut the city down, food-wise and otherwise. Do you just mean that all the nice "destination" restaurants close? Would we still be able to find, say, cafes with sandwiches or pubs with burgers, etc., or does everything of that level close too? We were thinking it might be smart to book 24th through 26th in a place that has a small kitchenette, in case we need to end up cooking our own Christmas dinner. (Not really feeling like Chinese!)
  • Great question! Here's what I wrote to Matt via email:

    Not everything closes, but most of the non-hotel destination restaurants close, and it's surprising how many of the cafes close, too - I think more so than in the US. (Starbucks may be open on Notre Dame and Square Jacques Cartier) This includes chains, too. I wouldn't say every place closes, but over the years, finding food for lunch and dinner has been a chore.

    As for other stuff, yeah most attractions close on Christmas Day and the first half of Boxing Day. One thing we've done is take a walk up Mont Royal on Christmas Day if it's not too cold. There are lots of Montrealers out walking and sledding, it's a brisk walk that's not steep, and the belvedere that overlooks the city has a mini cafe that sells hot chocolate and stuff.

    One year we bought bread and cheese the day before and made lunch with it - Quebec has great cheese. The auberge we stay at has a good breakfast which helps too and then try to find something good for dinner.
blog comments powered by Disqus