
What we’re about
Explore food and trails in the diverse neighbourhoods of the Greater Toronto Area.
Foodie hikes are at a moderate pace of 4 to 6 km/h. They are neither walking tours nor strenuous workouts. We encourage you to research the route beforehand because we won't give much commentary. You should be prepared for unpaved trails, hills, and any weather. Dangerous weather like lightning and low visibility will cancel hikes.
Typically, hikes end at a restaurant. But we'll also pick up takeout and groceries along the way.
Timed hikes
Hikes run like trains. We depart on time and hit scheduled stops. If late or lost, you can refer to the map to find us at these timed checkpoints. You can join or leave at any point according to your schedule and level of fitness.
If you're going below 4 km/h or the minimum stated speed, you might be left behind because we have to keep a schedule. This ensures
- we arrive at food places before they close or get too busy
- we show up on time for restaurant reservations
- others that join in the middle won't wait long at scheduled checkpoints
- we end on time and respect those who need to leave punctually
The list of places on the route are those that we'll pass by. We'll not stop at all of them. If we stop, it won't be more than 5 to 10 minutes. You're free to break from the group and use the map to catch up when you're done. The only time we can sit down to eat is after the hike.
While the hike is ongoing, organizers might not respond to messages. They will be busy leading the group and ordering food. Also, Meetup notifications can be delayed by a few hours!
Omakase
For some hikes, we offer omakase. This is an optional program where participants chip in some money and the organizer will use the collected funds to buy food for sampling. What food to buy, and where and when to share, is entirely up to the organizer. Omakase literally means "I leave it to you".
At some point in the hike, usually during the first leg, the organizer will ask who's interested and collect money. Payment by cash or e-transfer. Please mention dietary restrictions before signing up. We may not be able to accommodate and will advise if you should join. Latecomers are not eligible to sign up if we've already ordered food.
No refunds after orders are placed, even if you left early, got lost, or missed samples for whatever reason. The money would have been already spent on food. We do not make a profit. Leftover funds go to Meetup.com fees.
Situations where we will give a full or partial refund:
- the organizer didn't honour your dietary restrictions and you mentioned it before signing up
- you didn't get your fair share of food because there was not enough to go around
Limited cutlery provided. Bring your own cutlery and containers to save the environment.
Featured businesses do not compensate us. We recommend them because we think they are good or interesting.
Waitlist and attendance policy
If you're on the waitlist for hikes, you can show up and hope that there's space. It's usually OK because of no-shows at free events.
However, if the event is over capacity, the priority is: those on the confirmed list, then the waitlist according to order of sign up. The rest will be asked to leave. We will strictly enforce the number of participants because of safety concerns.
For restaurant events, only those on the confirmed list can attend.
Hikes with a long waitlist have an enforced attendance policy. Organizers will check who did not show up. It's selfish to deprive others of the chance to join. It's also inconsiderate to change RSVP at the last minute, because those moved from the waitlist may not have time to react. Of course, there can be legitimate reasons but repeated no-shows will be banned from the group. The event description will mention if we are enforcing attendance.
Pets policy
Pets are welcome but they may not be allowed into some buildings and businesses.
For certain hikes, there may be narrow and steep trails which may not be suitable for your pet. Only you will understand your pet's capabilities. Check the route in advance.
Finally, respect those who may be uncomfortable or allergic to certain animals by keeping them at a distance, unless they're ok with it.
Photo policy
Photos are welcome but if you are taking pictures of other humans, please ask their permission if you intend to post them anywhere.
No smoking and vaping
Smoking and vaping are prohibited in all hikes. If you must smoke, do it during stops and stay at least 6 meters away from other participants.
All the trails we've done
Featured event

Queen West ice cream trail + blind tasting (6 km)
Attendance policy is enforced for this hike because it's a popular one. See below for details.
Embrace Canadian winter by having ice cream! Deep winter is the best time for it. There are no line-ups and ice cream doesn't melt. And in Toronto, it's not so cold that ice cream becomes super-frozen.
West Queen West has the highest concentration of ice cream joints in the city, so that's where our hike will be. We'll see street art in hip neighbourhoods and pass by attractions such as a chocolate factory and Dufferin Mall (!).
At the middle and end of the hike, there is an optional tasting of signature ice cream flavours from various shops en route. For those who want something savoury, The Village by the Grange is a popular student hangout for cheap eats. The best of the lot is Manpuku, offering a large range of Japanese dishes.
Highlights
- Ruru Baked (depart 2pm; come earlier if you want to get something)
- Dufferin Mall
- Cadbury factory
- Honey's Ice Cream / Death in Venice (depart 2:42pm)
- Bang Bang Ice Cream
- Outside Trinity Community Centre (depart 3:25pm)
- Nadège
- Sanko Trading Co.
- Holy Shakes / Aux Merveilleux de Fred
- Mizzica Gelateria / Kome Yogurt
- OCAD (arrive 4:15pm)
- Manpuku Modern Japanese Eatery
Neighbourhoods
Bloordale Village > Dufferin Grove > Brockton Village > Trinity-Bellwoods > West Queen West > Fashion District
Map
https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/edit?mid=1vii5YcymZ70QH0JX4kxzIoyIHUsj_tU&usp=sharing
How it works
Hike starts punctually. Late or can't join at the beginning? Meet us at scheduled checkpoints.
We'll browse many food places but won't linger long. See the route in advance, organize takeout, then pickup along the way.
Two rounds of ice cream blind tasting. Outside Trinity Community Centre and outside OCAD. You can do the hike for free and skip the tasting.
- Will contain dairy. We will try but cannot guarantee that we can accommodate other dietary restrictions.
- Blind tasting means that you won't know which store or what flavour the ice cream is until the end.
- Rate the ice cream and guess their main ingredients online
- Tasting portions: at least 1 teaspoon of each flavour.
- $10. Covers both rounds of tasting. Includes at least 6 ice creameries and surprise desserts.
- Payment by cash or e-transfer to globaltorontoeats@gmail.com
- Sign up for the tasting when we reach Death In Venice. If you're joining us after, e-transfer before 2:42pm to guarantee food.
Cutlery and containers are not provided. Please bring your own for sharing and bringing back leftovers.
See our About section for more info.
Attendance policy
Please check in with an organizer when you attend. 24 hours before the hike, we'll check who is on the confirmed list. Those that don't show up will be flagged. Repeat offenders may be banned. Please change your RSVP if you can no longer attend.
If you made it off the waitlist less than 24 hours before the event, you won't be considered a no-show.
Upcoming events
5

Dundas Street East, Mississauga. All of it. (10.2 km)
Cloverdale Mall, 250 The East Mall, Toronto, ON, CADundas Street East is a major food street in Mississauga and one of the best in the GTA. If you haven't been there before, good news: this hike will cover everything.
Starting from Dundas Street West (Toronto), we'll head west as the street becomes Dundas Street East (Mississauga). Restaurants morph from Eastern European to Middle Eastern to East Asian and end in South Asian at the midline of Mississauga. Excellent ethnic supermarkets line the street. This is also an opportunity to check out one of seven Chinatowns in the GTA, Mississauga Chinese Centre.
If you're still hungry at the end, you're in luck. The best Indonesian restaurant in the GTA has just moved into the area. You won't find these anywhere else: nasi ayam penyet (chicken steak flattened with a mallet), lontong sayur (vegetable coconut curry with rice cakes), batagor (fish dumplings), and more. It's a food court stall; recommended to pre-order to avoid long waits and disappointment.
Highlights
- Cloverdale Mall (depart 1:30pm)
- Fat Fork
- Hyperama Lekker Meat Shop
- Starsky (depart 2:15pm)
- Orbit Restaurant / Croatia Restaurant
- Orda Uyghur Kebab
- Bread & Salt Afghan Cuisine
- Zagloba / Champion Döner
- Pho Dau Bo / Banh Mi Ba Le / Adonis
- Mississauga Chinese Centre / Al Premium Food Mart (depart 3:50pm)
- PAT supermarket
- Szechuan Noodle Bowl
- Tokyo Cheesecake Cafe
- Bara's Hut Roti and Doubles
- My Empanada / Mo Thai / Alnejmah Fine Foods
- Cooksville sign
- Myungdong Noodle Shabu Shabu / Samara Kitchen (arrive 5:05pm)
Neighbourhoods
Etobicoke City Centre > Applewood > Dixie > Mississauga Valleys > Cooksville
Map
https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1BwImVbRKgt2go3MBFc9trfObCb0jsSo&usp=sharing
The end point is near Cooksville GO train station. MiWay bus 1 returns to the start point.
How it works
Hike starts punctually. Late or can't do the whole route? Meet us at scheduled checkpoints.
We'll browse many food places but won't linger long. Grab ready-made food, or see the route in advance, organize takeout, then pickup along the way.
Not sure what to try? Join our omakase for $5, which gives a tiny sample from different restaurants. Payment on the day of event by cash or e-transfer to globaltorontoeats@gmail.com. No refunds after orders are placed. Details of sampled food will be uploaded after the hike.
Limited cutlery provided. Highly recommended to bring cutlery and containers for omakase and bringing back leftovers.
See our About section for more info.53 attendees
Retail therapy west: Yorkdale to Amesbury (5.5 km)
RH Courtyard Restaurant at RH Toronto, 3401 Dufferin St, Toronto, ON, CAThis hike prepares you for a shopping workout by taking in the major retail centres on Toronto's west side: glitzy Yorkdale Mall, scruffy Orfus Road, and food-industrial Amesbury.
As usual, the hike will be food-focused. If we do quick shopping stops, it'll be at kitchenware outlet stores, gourmet supermarkets, cheese boutiques and the like. There are also regular restaurants along the route to pick up food.
The hike ends at one of the few restaurants in Toronto that's dedicated to Northern Vietnamese cuisine. (Most do Southern Vietnamese or a bit of everything)
Highlights
- RH Courtyard Restaurant (depart 6:30pm)
- Mainsha Restaurant
- Uncle Tetsu's Japanese Cheesecake
- Outlet stores on Orfus Road
- Urla Fine Foods (depart 7pm)
- Lawrence Pumping Station / Climate change murals
- Speducci Mercatto
- Montecarlo Laundromat
- Cafe Las Americas
- Pho Son (arrive 7:55pm)
Neighbourhoods
Yorkdale > Amesbury
Map
https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/edit?mid=162xmuK7G1cQb70Ympa60BIm-B0qUN1U&usp=sharing
How it works
Hike starts punctually. Late or can't do the whole route? Meet us at scheduled checkpoints.
We'll browse many food places but won't linger long. Grab ready-made food, or see the route in advance, organize takeout, then pickup along the way.
Not sure what to try? Join our omakase for $5, which gives a tiny sample from different restaurants. Payment on the day of event by cash or e-transfer to globaltorontoeats@gmail.com. No refunds after orders are placed. Details of sampled food will be uploaded after the hike.
Limited cutlery provided. Highly recommended to bring cutlery and containers for omakase and bringing back leftovers.
See our homepage for more info.31 attendees
Food hubs of Agincourt North (10.8 km)
Centennial Recreation Centre, 1967 Ellesmere Rd, Scarborough, ON, CAAgincourt is filled with good food scattered around major intersections. This time, we'll go to those in the northeast industrial areas. It's predominantly Sri Lankan, Indian, and Pakistani.
Along the way, we'll pass by two cultural hubs and a bizarre dinosaur display at Woodside Square. The hike caps off with a popular winter affair in China: hot pot. Alternatively, we can go for eel casserole rice or Taiwanese bentos.
Highlights
- Centennial Recreation Centre (depart 11:00am)
- Gwalia Sweets / Quality Bread Bakery
- Deccan House
- Madurai Pandiyas
- Chinese Cultural Centre Of Greater Toronto
- Burrows Hall Community Centre (depart 12:30pm)
- Islamic Foundation of Toronto
- Babu / Silver Spoon / Mona's Roti (depart 1:20pm)
- Woodside Square dinosaurs
- Haidilao Hot Pot (arrive 2:25pm)
Neighbourhoods
Woburn > White Haven > Nugget > Agincourt North
Map
https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1syytpiUPaDF38ukbM_yv8tbstSLP5w8&usp=sharing
How it works
Hike starts punctually. Late or can't do the whole route? Meet us at scheduled checkpoints.
We'll browse many food places but won't linger long. Grab ready-made food, or see the route in advance, organize takeout, then pickup along the way.
Not sure what to try? Join our omakase for $5, which gives a tiny sample from different restaurants. Payment on the day of event by cash or e-transfer to globaltorontoeats@gmail.com. No refunds after orders are placed. Details of sampled food will be uploaded after the hike.
Limited cutlery provided. Highly recommended to bring cutlery and containers for omakase and bringing back leftovers.
See our About section for more info.37 attendees
Highway 27 industrial eats (11.1 km)
Dr Flea's Flea Market, 8 Westmore Dr, Etobicoke, ON, CACelebrate the opening of the Finch LRT by travelling to the end of it. Join us at Clairville where 4 cities meet: Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, and Vaughan. The area is mostly industrial, but that's where some good food places lurk, drawn by cheap rents. The cuisine here is predominantly Indian. See the most ornate Hindu temple in Toronto and check out its museum.
The nature portion of the hike goes through the gardens and forests of Humber Arboretum (weather permitting). We'll hike through it before sunset. Then, it's on to the neighbourhood defined by Woodbine Racetrack, not to be confused with the Woodbine-Beaches neighbourhood where it was formerly located. It's notable for a mall with an indoor amusement park.
The finishing point is at a casual Somali restaurant, which makes an accessible introduction to the cuisine for the uninitiated. Arrive earlier to check out the flea market because we won't be touring it.
Highlights
- Dr Flea's Flea Market (entrance N, depart 1:30pm)
- Mr. Khaman / Chaiiwala Of London
- Elsa's Bakery
- Samosa And Sweet Factory
- BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir
- BAPS Shayona (depart 3:15pm)
- Gwalia Sweets / La Ciel / Food World Supermarket
- Humber College Learning Resource Commons (depart 4:15pm)
- Barrett Centre For Technology Innovation
- Humber Arboretum
- Fantasy Fair
- Xawaash (arrive 5:30pm)
Neighbourhoods
Clairville > Humber College > Woodbine Racetrack
Map
https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/edit?mid=1dzBpI8sOd557U_jAfOw7kiaxQkQpXQU&usp=sharing
If trails are snowy or icy, we will skip Humber Arboretum and go along Highway 27 from Humber College Blvd to Woodbine Mall.
The Finch LRT stops close to the start and end of the hike, but a bus transfer is needed: bus 73 from Albion and bus 927 from Humber College.
How it works
Hike starts punctually. Late or can't do the whole route? Meet us at scheduled checkpoints.
We'll browse many food places but won't linger long. Grab ready-made food, or see the route in advance, organize takeout, then pickup along the way.
Not sure what to try? Join our omakase for $5, which gives a tiny sample from different restaurants. Payment on the day of event by cash or e-transfer to globaltorontoeats@gmail.com. No refunds after orders are placed. Details of sampled food will be uploaded after the hike.
Limited cutlery provided. Highly recommended to bring cutlery and containers for omakase and bringing back leftovers.
See our homepage for more info.27 attendees
Past events
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