Puff Samosa

Flakey samsas and intricate Uzbek manti

Uzbekistan is a poster child for Central Asian cuisine. It has all the representative dishes like plov (rice cooked with meat stock and the occasional dried fruit), laghman (thick, handmade noodles), and several varieties of kebab. If there is a Central Asian restaurant somewhere outside Central Asia, chances are high that it is branded as an Uzbek one.

There are a handful of decent Uzbek restaurants in Toronto. Uzbek cuisine is popular amongst Russians and hence they are usually located near Russian enclaves in North York or Vaughan. But not Puff Samosa. They chose to set up shop in decidedly non-Russian Scarborough. And an industrial park at that. Not that I am complaining. Scarborough sorely lacks Central Asian restaurants.

Puff Samosa is best described as a samsa specialist that also runs an industrial choyxona (чойхона; teahouse). It has none of the charms of a traditional choyxona and all the brutal architecture of a pre-fabricated commercial block. I visited when COVID indoor dining restrictions were in effect, so I didn’t get a chance to linger for tea. But the food alone is still worth the trip.

Exterior of Puff Samosa
Puff Samosa

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Bamiyan Kabob

The one to beat for Afghan cuisine in Toronto

Bamiyan Kabob is one of those rare places that uphold tradition, cater to the masses, and punch well above their weight for culinary skill. Pretty impressive for a casual Afghan fast-food restaurant. Although new competitors like Kabob Guys and Bread & Salt are nipping at its heels, it still manages to have the best price-quality ratio in Toronto.

There are branches around the region but I can only vouch for the original location at Thorncliffe Park. I haven’t been to any of the others.

Exterior of Bamiyan Kabob
Bamiyan Kabob

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