As the Year of the Fire Horse kicks off on Feb. 17, Toronto’s Spadina and Dundas neighbourhood is the place to be. While the city evolves, these Chinatown OGs remain the heartbeat of the neighbourhood. Whether you are celebrating Lunar New Year or Tết, these five institutions offer the perfect blend of tradition, nostalgia and seriously good food.

House of Gourmet (The Hog)

Located at 484 Dundas St. W., this Spadina-area staple has been holding court for more than three decades. Known affectionately by regulars as “the Hog,” it offers the ultimate “choose-your-own-adventure” dining experience with an expansive menu split across multiple booklets. The massive, bustling dining room is designed to swallow you whole — making it perfect for large family reunions — and it remains one of the last true late-night sanctuaries in the neighbourhood, staying open into the early hours of the morning. It is a true “grand dame” of Chinatown that perfectly preserves the roots and traditions of the area for the next generation.

Swatow Restaurant

Dishing out soul-warming Cantonese fare for more than four decades at 309 Spadina Ave., Swatow is a rite of passage for any Torontonian. If you haven’t sat at their crowded tables while the kitchen hums at high speed, you haven’t truly experienced Chinatown. The vibe is defined by high-energy, lightning-fast service and no-nonsense decor, serving up massive portions that don’t mess around. Their shrimp wonton soup and General Tso’s chicken are legendary, representing a generational hand-off of flavour where parents who ate here as students now bring their own kids.

Phở Hung

For those celebrating Tết (Vietnamese Lunar New Year), Phở Hưng located at 350 Spadina Ave., has been a family-run destination since 1985. It is a cornerstone of the Vietnamese community in the downtown core, offering a clean, bright and reliable atmosphere. The draw here is the consistency; their expertly balanced pho and crispy spring rolls taste the same on your 50th visit as they did on your first. It remains the ideal spot to honour Vietnamese traditions with authentic flavours.

Rol San

Rol San

You can’t talk about Toronto Chinatown without mentioning Rol San at 388 Spadina Ave., which recently moved its 30-year legacy into a new updated room just a few doors down from its original space. Always packed and bustling, it’s famous for the neon fish in the window that signals a “safe haven” for hungry locals and remains the gold standard for all-day dim sum — even for Turning Red director Domee Shi. Non-negotiable orders include their deep-fried squid tentacles and shrimp har gow.  The walls might be new but the soul of the restaurant remains the same.

Mother’s Dumplings

Founded in 2005 by Zhen Feng at 421 Spadina Ave., this spot began as a tiny eight-table basement nook and grew into a Michelin-recognized tour de force.  It focuses on the hearty, soul-warming flavours of Northeastern China, serving up recipes passed down from Zhen’s own mother in a welcoming space where you can watch the kitchen team hand-rolling dough through the window. Since dumplings represent “wealth” (resembling ancient silver ingots) for the Lunar New Year, there is no better place to enjoy a heaping plate of boiled pork and dill or pan-fried lamb dumplings.

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