• Home
    • E-Mail
  • Food – Beyond Coffee
  • Tutorials
  • About me
  • Systems Spring 2007 BBQ
The CoffeeCrew Portal

Summer fun food and drink – Choux Choux Eat like France in Victoria

July 16, 2008 8:49 pm / colin


830 Fort Street in Victoria B.C. Canada – on the North side of this bustling one way street – huddled in the middle of a scrum of antique stores and government offices is Choux Choux Charcuterie.

According to their website: “Choux Choux Charcuterie is Victoria’s premiere charcuterie. They specialize in house made pates, sausages, smoked and cured meats. Their products are made on premise, using only fresh, free range, un-medicated pork from Sloping Hill Farm in Qualicum Beach, Mill Bay rabbits, Cornish Game hens and chickens, free-range chicken livers, Quebec foie gras, and Cobble Hill lamb, when available.”

Food expert, Mark Engels, joined me for my first lunch here – and apart from the wall of cheeses, meats and bread that I saw in this cute little walk-in, I did not know what to expect… Okay, I did. Meat. Meat and more meat. Smoked meat. Cured meat. Cheese. More meat. Some bread. Meet. Cheese. Strange Cheese. More meat. Apparently this is a meat lovers paradise. Personally, I like to eat less of the red stuff and more of the green stuff – and I encourage everyone to do the same. Anyway.

When I saw that the lunch special was Sirloin with a swirl of steamed spinach and a lump of blue cheese… I thought to myself: “Self, what on Earth are they going to do with this?” Well – not surprisingly, our 2 identical orders arrived: 2 plates, 2 handsome slabs of beef perfectly cooked (medium rare I think) – about 1 ounce of steamed spinach and 2 or 3 ounces of melting grainy blue cheese on top of the steak. This is crazy, I thought. The French don’t eat like this… or do they?

After resisting the urge to growl and snap at anyone that came near my dish (we were, after all, sitting at a busy sidewalk as civil servants and beautiful people walked by) – and I knew they were looking at my sirloin. I growled under my breath – my upper lip curling slightly revealing perfectly sharpened incisors.

Anyway. The beef was insanely tasty and I felt pangs of guilt with each alternate bite and surges of a B12 rush with the other bites. The perfect follow-up to this feast would be curling up on the sidewalk with a good bone or chasing down a frisbee or a tennis ball.

But at $10.95, this was a fun and filling meal – heck, if they were to add frites (French fries all dressed) they could probably rival those beefy slabs from Brasserie L`ecole. Maybe just maybe.
Next visit: Cheese and bread. And that’s a promise!


Colin Newell is a Victoria resident, University employee and Pop culture savant. His food reviews on this blog make up for the endless political drivel!


Posted in: Canadiana, The Island

Comments are closed.

Post Navigation

← Previous Post
Next Post →

Our recent stuff

  • 1968 – Then and now March 2, 2017
  • (Reboot) Papardelle Pasta with Scallops and lemon brown butter sauce #2 February 17, 2013
  • Baked Oysters au Gratin February 11, 2013
  • Papardelle Pasta with Scallops and lemon brown butter sauce January 28, 2013
  • Maple Bourbon Dairy Free Waffles Re-Boot December 28, 2012
  • Talking Geisha coffee on Newstalk 1010 in Toronto November 29, 2012
  • Living in a wireless world – safe yes or no November 14, 2012
  • Arabica coffee under threat – the 80 year plan November 13, 2012
  • West Coast Living – the survival chapters – chapter 1 November 7, 2012
  • Growing it for a cause – Movember November 2, 2012

Our Past Stuff

© Copyright 2021 - The CoffeeCrew Portal
Infinity Theme by DesignCoral / WordPress