Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
Roncesvalles' Polish benchmark. Go for the comfort.

Cafe Polonez is Toronto's longest-standing Polish address on Roncesvalles Avenue, and the weekend brunch is the reason to visit. Expect pierogies, smoked meats, and rye-table comfort at accessible prices with none of the booking friction you'll face at the city's tasting-menu circuit. A practical choice for food-curious visitors who want cultural depth over fine-dining theatre.
If you want Polish comfort food in Toronto, Cafe Polonez on Roncesvalles Avenue is the reference point — not because it lacks competition, but because the neighbourhood itself has been the city's Polish cultural centre for decades, and this spot sits at the heart of it. For weekend brunch specifically, it delivers something the downtown dining scene rarely does: a meal that feels genuinely rooted in a place rather than assembled for a trend.
Roncesvalles Avenue has long anchored Toronto's Polish community, and Cafe Polonez is one of the addresses that gives that identity substance. The kitchen works within a tradition where the morning table means pierogies, beet soup, smoked meats, and rye bread — dishes that carry the kind of institutional weight you won't find at a brunch spot optimising for Instagram. If you're arriving from downtown, the neighbourhood itself is worth the trip: quieter, residential, and a different rhythm from the King West or Queen West circuits.
Booking here is easy by Toronto standards. Unlike Alo or Aburi Hana , where you're planning weeks or months out , Cafe Polonez operates at a more accessible pace. Weekend brunch is the peak window, so arriving early or calling ahead by a few days is sensible, but this is not a venue where the reservation itself is the obstacle. That ease of access is part of the value proposition for a food-curious visitor who wants to eat well without logistical friction.
The explorer visiting Toronto with an appetite for the city's ethnic dining depth will find Cafe Polonez more rewarding than another tasting menu stop. It sits in a different category from the $$$$ end of the Toronto dining spectrum occupied by Don Alfonso 1890 or Sushi Masaki Saito , the value here is cultural and culinary authenticity at accessible prices, not technical fine-dining precision. If your Toronto trip has room for one neighbourhood meal that goes beyond the obvious, this is a sound candidate. For the full picture of where to eat in the city, see our full Toronto restaurants guide.
For those building a broader Canada itinerary, it's worth comparing the neighbourhood dining experience here against what you'll find at Tanière³ in Quebec City or AnnaLena in Vancouver , both strong examples of rooted, place-specific cooking at different price points. Toronto's own bar and hotel scene rounds out the picture: our Toronto bars guide and our Toronto hotels guide are good starting points for the rest of your stay.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cafe Polonez | Easy | — | |
| Alo | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Aburi Hana | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Edulis | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Toronto for this tier.
Pricing varies at Cafe Polonez; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Cafe Polonez is located in Toronto, at 195 Roncesvalles Ave, Toronto, ON M6R 2L5, Canada.
You can reach Cafe Polonez via check the venue's official channels.
Reservations are generally recommended for Cafe Polonez; verify via check the venue's official channels.
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