GuideUpdated July 15, 2026

15 Best lunch Restaurants in Winnipeg

The best 15 restaurants for lunch in Winnipeg — curated by TastyPals editors.

The best lunch restaurants in Winnipeg are The Forks Market, Les Saj Restaurant | Middle Eastern, Pho Hoang Sargent, and more. Start with The Forks Market if you want the strongest overall first pick.

By Marcus Chen15 ranked picksPublished July 15, 2026Updated July 15, 2026
15 Best lunch Restaurants in Winnipeg
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Top picks at a glance

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.

15 ranked picks

The Forks MarketThe Forks Market is not a restaurant — and that distinction matters enormously. It's a food hall built inside two 1908 railway stables where horses once hauled freight for the Grand Trunk Pacific and Great Northern lines, and that history is structural rather than decorative. The vaulted ceilings and old-growth timber remind you that this building has always been about movement and people converging at Winnipeg's most storied river confluence. Opened in 1989 as the first building to debut at The Forks, the Market gets right what most food halls get catastrophically wrong: the architecture carries the atmosphere, so the vendors can focus on the food. The anchor worth orienting your visit around is Aroma Bistro, a personally driven stall whose menu centers on a tight roster of dishes that have developed a real following. The Peanut Chili Wontons are reportedly the chef-owner's own stated favorite — which is the clearest signal a cook can send about where to start. The La La Chicken and La La Chips round out the picture, known for punchy, technique-forward cooking that diners consistently cite as a cut above what you'd expect from a market counter. The Chili Wonton rounds out Aroma Bistro's wonton program and is worth factoring into your order. Beyond this stall, the main floor draws vendors working Sri Lankan, Filipino, and other traditions that reflect Winnipeg's genuinely diverse population — the floor rewards a slow lap before you commit. For practical purposes: The Common, the central bar at the heart of the Market, runs 20 rotating local and imported taps alongside 20 wine taps, and turns a quick lunch into a proper afternoon. A six-storey lookout tower on the upper floor offers a river confluence view that contextualizes the whole site. Come mid-week, and get to Aroma Bistro early — the Peanut Chili Wontons have a reputation for selling out. View restaurant →
Les Saj Restaurant | Middle EasternLes Saj isn't trying to be anyone's upscale Lebanese night out, and from everything I've been able to track down about this place, that's precisely the move that makes it work. It's a price-level-one operation — Winnipeg's most budget-friendly tier — that has apparently decided low overhead and real integrity don't have to be strangers. The room is built for the kind of eating that Winnipeg's Lebanese diaspora has always known: generous, unfussy, and embarrassingly filling for what you spend. Walk in expecting tablecloths and you've already missed the point. The menu centers on Lebanese standards executed without shortcuts. The Traditional Arabic Shawarma is the anchor, and diners consistently point to it as the reason they come back — reportedly the kind of build that respects the spicing rather than burying it. Falafel Balls draw comparable loyalty, known for being made in-house rather than sourced frozen, which matters more than it sounds at this price point. The Mixed Platter for Two is the obvious entry point if you're bringing someone who can't decide, and the Grape Leaves round out the mezze side of things with the kind of care that usually costs considerably more. The Lamb Kebab Platter is what the regulars reportedly order when they're not splitting anything — a single-focus plate that lets the meat carry the meal. Practically speaking: this is a lunch-and-early-dinner kind of place, better suited to eating well on a weekday than to staging a long Saturday night. Go in with a clear idea of what you want — the menu doesn't need much deliberation — and bring cash as a backup. Order the Mixed Platter if you're undecided, and work your way to the shawarma on the next visit. View restaurant →
Pho Hoang SargentPho Hoang on Sargent Ave has been running the same playbook since 2010, and Winnipeg's Vietnamese-food conversation keeps circling back to it. This is not a place chasing a downtown crowd or a trending aesthetic — it sits on a working stretch of Sargent, and the room has been tended to with genuine intention: a wall-length peacock mural, hand-hung paper lanterns, an interior that communicates pride in the dining environment, not just the menu. The no-MSG policy and commitment to real sourcing reads less like marketing language and more like the operating philosophy behind a kitchen that has held a loyal neighbourhood following for well over a decade. That combination — repeatedly voted best Vietnamese in Winnipeg, yet stubbornly local in atmosphere — is harder to sustain than it looks. The menu centers on Vietnamese classics built around broth and technique. The Pho Bo, a rare steak and brisket pho, is the anchor: diners consistently point to the broth as the reason to return, describing a depth that suggests long, careful cooking with star anise and charred aromatics rather than shortcuts. The two-protein combination is understood to offer contrasting textures in a single bowl — the brisket fully yielded, the rare steak with more resistance — which is part of why the Beef Noodle Pho format here is considered a benchmark by regulars. The Sweet Potato Shrimp Crepe is reportedly the dish that catches first-timers off guard; its reputation rests on a kitchen skill that is easy to describe and hard to execute: a genuinely crispy exterior that reportedly holds its structure as you work through the dish, giving way to a soft interior. Practical notes worth knowing: the kitchen runs to 10 pm on Fridays and Saturdays, making it one of the few spots in the city for a proper late sit-down meal. The price point is among the lowest for a room of this quality in Winnipeg. Order the Pho Bo and the Sweet Potato Shrimp Crepe together — regulars treat the pairing as the standard introduction to what this kitchen does well. View restaurant →

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The Burger PlaceLet me be straight about what The Burger Place is, because the category matters: a no-frills, family-owned drive-in that has reportedly been running in downtown Winnipeg for nearly two decades on a value proposition so honest it borders on radical. This is not a smash-burger concept with a beverage director and a curated playlist. It's the kind of place where the memorabilia on the walls has actually been there long enough to earn the name, where the family behind the counter built the menu themselves, and where regulars return not out of inertia but out of documented loyalty across years of reviews. The price level — as low as it gets — is not a red flag. Based on what consistent reviewers keep saying, it's a promise the kitchen makes good on. The burger lineup is old-school and unambiguous. The menu centers on the Fatboy burger and the Double Deluxe Burger with Cheese, both reportedly dressed in the same house style — chili, mustard, onions, pickle, the works — which signals a kitchen with a philosophy rather than a customization culture. There's no upsell architecture here. The Chili Cheese Fries are widely cited as the move: diners consistently describe them as generous, with the house chili doing double duty as both topping and endorsement of the kitchen's from-scratch approach. The Mushroom Burger holds its own as a quieter option in a lineup that doesn't need it to. Poutine rounds out the sides menu with straightforward comfort and no irony attached. The homemade claim runs through everything on offer — and based on the sustained regularity of that praise across long-term reviewers, it reads less like marketing language and more like operating principle. Practical intel: the Fatboy with Chili Cheese Fries is the combination that diners keep coming back to specifically, so that's where to start. Portions are reported to run on the generous side, so arrive with actual appetite. Outdoor seating is available when the weather cooperates. They take reservations — worth using if you're bringing a group on a busy night. View restaurant →
Super Boy’sSuper Boys at The Forks is the kind of place that has been doing one thing since 1985 and has no plans to explain itself to you. Same family, reportedly the same owner behind the counter on any given shift, cash or debit only, closed Sunday and Monday, and shuttered entirely when the family travels to Greece. If that schedule doesn't work for you, the burger will wait. The operation has zero interest in performing hospitality — it's built around the food doing the convincing, and by all accounts, the food is convincing. The menu centers on the Super Boy: a half-pound all-beef patty dressed with cheese, lettuce, tomato, mayo, pickles, mustard, onions, and a house chili sauce that diners consistently identify as the throughline of the whole menu. That same chili sauce migrates to the Chili Fries, where hand-cut fries reportedly go straight from the fryer into the sauce — the kind of timing that matters. The Double Super Boy exists for the same reason doubling down always exists: some days call for it. And then there's the Banana Milkshake, which regulars treat as essentially non-negotiable rather than an afterthought. That's not a small thing. When a room full of repeat customers agrees on a milkshake, you listen. Practical reality: this is a counter spot with minimal seating, so plan for takeout and structure your afternoon accordingly. Bring cash or debit, confirm the hours before you go, and factor in that the schedule shifts around the family's travel. The move, based on everything regulars and longtime observers point to, is the Super Boy with Chili Fries and the Banana Milkshake. That's the order. Don't overthink it. View restaurant →
Junction 59 RoadhouseJunction 59 Roadhouse is doing something genuinely specific in Transcona, and it deserves to be taken seriously on its own terms. The concept — American roadhouse, Mexican cucina, and Winnipeg diner collapsed into one kitchen on Regent Avenue West — sounds like a pitch meeting gone sideways, but the execution reportedly holds it together. The room commits to the premise: grain elevator murals, polished hubcaps on the walls, vintage pickup tailgates from Ford and Chevrolet rigs. This isn't nostalgic decoration as an afterthought; it's a deliberate argument that Transcona's working-class highway-town identity is worth celebrating rather than renovating away. At price level one, Junction 59 is staking its claim as the neighbourhood's comfort food anchor, not a destination that asks you to dress up or pre-apologize for your appetite. The menu's through-line is house-made everything at a price point where most kitchens don't bother. The Country Fried Chicken — hand-battered in buttermilk, plated with country gravy, mashed potatoes, seasonal veg, and cornbread — is the kind of dish that anchors the roadhouse side of the concept, and reviewers consistently flag it as one of the kitchen's best arguments. The Junction Fatboy, a 7oz charbroiled Angus beef patty loaded with cheddar, house sauce, tomato, onion, pickle, shredded lettuce, and chili, is the burger that diners keep coming back to mention by name. On the Mexican cucina side, shrimp tacos draw consistent praise, and the kitchen's house-made hot sauce — built from blackberry, chipotle, scotch bonnet, rum, dates, and vinegar — is the kind of condiment that signals someone in the kitchen actually thought about flavor architecture. The Beast of Bourbon Pecan Pie, made with Jack Daniel's and served with ice cream, is the dessert worth leaving room for. The move here is to go deep into the roadhouse column rather than hedge across all three concepts — the Country Fried Chicken and the Fatboy together paint the clearest picture of what this kitchen does best. The house hot sauce is worth asking for on anything it'll legally touch. Junction 59 takes reservations through OpenTable, and given that Transcona doesn't have a deep bench of spots doing this kind of cooking at this price, weekends are not the time to gamble on a walk-in. View restaurant →
Peacock - Kitchen & DrinksPeacock Kitchen & Drinks on Grant Avenue is the kind of restaurant that makes you recalibrate what a neighbourhood room can aspire to. Chef Edward Lam — who ran this same space as Yujiro before relaunching under the Peacock name alongside partner Esther Lo — has built something genuinely unusual: a Japanese-anchored kitchen that borrows freely from European technique without losing its footing. Landing at #68 on Canada's 100 Best in the restaurant's first year is not a marketing claim; it's a data point that explains why Grant Avenue regulars are booking weeks out. The price level stays accessible, which matters when the ambition in the kitchen plainly doesn't. What distinguishes Lam's menu is the specificity of its combinations. The kitchen centers on Japanese fundamentals — nigiri, karaage, agedashi tofu, pork gyoza, shrimp tempura — but the menu's documented range extends into territory most Japanese restaurants in this city don't touch: charcoal-grilled seabass arrives with a garlic black-bean marinara that reads Italian in technique and Japanese in its base flavors, and a poached halibut dish is built around English peas and beurre blanc, the kind of classical French preparation that signals real brigade discipline. Diners consistently point to the mochi flatbread with tuna as a signature worth planning around — it's the dish that captures the Peacock logic most cleanly, rooting something familiar (mochi) in a format that shouldn't work on paper but apparently does in practice. Peacock is closed Monday and Tuesday, and the Friday-Saturday window runs late, which gives it a genuine late-dinner identity that few Winnipeg spots at this price point can claim. Wednesday through Sunday service starts at 5pm, and the Canada's 100 Best recognition means the room will fill early on weekends — book ahead, and if the karaage and the mochi flatbread with tuna are both on the night's menu, order them before you weigh anything else. View restaurant →
Copper ChimneyCopper Chimney has been operating since 2014, growing from a single St. Marys Rd location into a multi-location presence across Winnipeg — which is a legitimately interesting trajectory in a city where Indian restaurants tend to either dominate a neighbourhood or quietly disappear. The Transcona location carries the same identity as its siblings: a room that mixes modern design sensibility with traditional Indian décor touches, a staff that reviewers consistently describe as welcoming, and a menu that does something not enough places bother with — bridging classic subcontinental cooking and Hakka-Chinese fusion on the same ticket. That dual approach isn't just a gimmick. It genuinely expands what a table can do together. The dishes Copper Chimney is known for read like a greatest-hits of both traditions. The Butter Chicken has built a reliable reputation across the locations. The Paneer Tikka Masala is consistently cited as a kitchen anchor. The Hakka Noodles exist on an entirely different flavour register and reportedly pull a separate crowd of cravings — which is exactly the point of running both programs at once. The Deluxe Biryani — a layered combination of shrimp, chicken, lamb, and vegetables in the house spice blend — is the dish that diners most frequently name as the reason for returning, and it reads like the menu's clearest statement of intent. Price level stays low enough that ordering across multiple dishes makes obvious sense rather than feeling like a negotiation. The kitchen accommodates vegan and gluten-free needs well, making this an easier group call than most comparable spots. Come with people, order the Deluxe Biryani as a non-negotiable, and let the table work across both the Indian and Hakka sides of the menu. View restaurant →

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