GuideUpdated July 15, 2026

3 Best Places for Linguine Bolognese in Montreal

Where to find the best linguine bolognese in Montreal — each restaurant rated 4.0★ or higher. Top-rated at 9.6★. Spanning sandwiches kitchens. Curated by TastyPals.

The best places for linguine bolognese in Montreal are BOSSA Prêt à manger, BOSSA Sandwicheria Prêt à manger. Start with BOSSA Prêt à manger if you want the strongest overall first pick.

By Sophie Laurent2 ranked picksPublished July 15, 2026Updated July 15, 2026
3 Best Places for Linguine Bolognese in Montreal
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Top picks at a glance

Editorial details
Published: July 15, 2026
Last updated: July 15, 2026

On this page

  1. 1. BOSSA Prêt à mangerView →
  2. 2. BOSSA Sandwicheria Prêt à mangerView →

How the restaurants compare

How we chose

We looked for restaurants that feel like a strong fit for the guide topic, not just the most obvious names in the city. The shortlist favors rooms with clear mood, dependable pacing, and enough distinction to help someone decide faster. Read our full methodology →

Room tone

Lighting, pace, and general energy all need to support the reason someone clicked this guide.

Food fit

We favored restaurants that feel best suited for the moment, not just restaurants with broad reputation.

Useful range

The final list tries to give readers enough variation in neighborhood, price, and style to compare real options.

2 ranked picks

BOSSA Prêt à mangerVerdun keeps making the case for itself as Montreal's most interesting eating neighborhood, and BOSSA Prêt à Manger is one of the reasons that argument is hard to dismiss. It's a sandwich-and-Italian-American counter operating at price level one with the kind of focused menu that suggests the people behind it have strong opinions about how this food should be done — not a lot of hedging, not a lot of crowd-pleasing filler. The whole setup reads like low-overhead confidence: a place that knows its regulars and isn't particularly stressed about anyone else. The lunch crowd and after-work contingent who want something genuinely good without the production are exactly who BOSSA seems built for. The menu centers on a tight lineup that rewards attention. The Philly Hoagie is reportedly built with a real understanding of structural proportion — bread that holds, a filling ratio that doesn't abandon you halfway through. The Diavolo is known for heat that reads as intentional rather than decorative, and the Vodka Parm has developed a following for leaning into the creamy, acidic richness of that Italian-American tradition without apology, which at this price point is genuinely hard to argue with. The Sicilian Arancini are consistently flagged by regulars as the sleeper play on the menu — the kind of item that, once people discover it, becomes the reason they came back. Practical read: this is a counter operation, which means timing matters and popular items reportedly move fast, particularly the Arancini. The play, based on what diners keep saying, is to lead with those and anchor the rest of the order around either the Diavolo or the Vodka Parm depending on your mood. Go at lunch and go with an actual appetite. View restaurant →
BOSSA Sandwicheria Prêt à mangerBossa Sandwicheria has developed a following in Montreal serious enough to support multiple city locations and a stall at Time Out Market — a trajectory that tends to separate operations running on novelty from those running on something more durable. The consensus that has built around this place points firmly toward the latter. It positions itself as an Italian sandwicheria in the deli-and-prepared-foods tradition: part lunch counter, part neighbourhood provisioner, with a grocery component that extends its usefulness well beyond the midday rush. The Diavolo is consistently cited as the sandwich that defines the menu — a layered construction of aioli, salami, calabrese, capicollo, fontina, and provolone, finished with banana peppers and a house giardiniera that diners frequently single out as the element that pulls the whole thing together. For those who want something with less heat and aggression, the Porchetta is reported as the considered alternative. The Chicken Parmigiana rounds out the core sandwich options for those leaning toward something more familiar in its comfort. Beyond sandwiches, the menu extends to fresh pasta and Italian grocery provisions, and the Cannoli is the standard finish — appropriate given that Bossa presents itself as a full Italian deli experience rather than a narrow lunch concept. Portions are described as generous, and the price point is genuinely accessible, which makes the value case straightforward. The honest trade-off, reported widely, is the line at peak hours and the occasional richness that comes with sandwiches built at this register. Practically speaking, this is a weekday lunch or a takeaway stop rather than a destination dinner. Arriving off-peak is the consistently recommended approach. Order the Diavolo, add a Cannoli, and consider the grocery shelves on the way out. View restaurant →

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