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Fusion cuisine
Fusion · Ottawa, ON

The Belmont

9.1

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Sit down for dinner at The Belmont, and the first decision a table makes is whether to keep the order in snacks-and-shares territory — Belmont Doubles, Beef Tartare, Burrata, Deviled Eggs — or push through to the mains and finish on a Steak Frites or a piri-piri Chicken. The compact dinner card is built to read either way, and the kitchen has the working pantry to back the choice. The doubles carry the kitchen's posture in concentrated form — a Trinidadian street-food snack of bara folded around channa masala, with chutney, cucumber, tamarind, and a peppa sauce, house-named after the restaurant — and that named dish sits next to a Portuguese-spiced chicken and an Italian burrata on the same card without the menu losing its voice.

The snacks lineup opens the run. Warm Olives carry chili, fennel, and lemon. Chicken Liver Pâté arrives under port jelly with crispy focaccia. The doubles. From there the kitchen moves into shared plates and mains without raising the volume. Beef Tartare comes with gherkins, shallots, mustard, egg yolk, capers, and waffle chips. Burrata pairs with delicata squash, a chipotle squash puree, salsa seca, and focaccia. BC Salmon Crudo lays out crispy capers, pickled shallot, crema, dill, and lemon. Grilled Buttered Prawns finish in nduja butter with garlic and lemon. Maitake Mushrooms come glossed in black garlic molasses with sunchoke, sesame and coriander, and a rosemary beurre blanc. Pork Schnitzel takes Ontario pork into a brown butter zucchini puree with dill and lemon. Piri-piri Chicken lands with crème fraîche and chives. Steak Frites closes the run — beef striploin, vermouth jus, shoestring fries, and aioli — and the House Focaccia, with whipped brown sage butter and Maldon, gets ordered alongside almost anything else on the card.

What the dinner card describes is a kitchen working from a confident, mixed pantry rather than a survey of cuisines. The Little Gems Wedge Salad pulls in Bleu Bénédictin crumble, prosciutto bits, and miso buttermilk. The Broccolini sits on muhammara and dukkah. The Fingerling Potatoes lean on a spicy green goddess labneh. The accents that recur across the dishes — sumac, dukkah, nduja, miso, black garlic molasses, vermouth jus, brown butter, garlic sumac yogurt — read as the working ingredients of an operator who has settled into a cooking voice. The dishes work as small plates a table assembles into a meal, and the menu is short enough that ordering across most of it is the assumed move.

Brunch runs Friday through Sunday, and it carries a posture of its own. Turkish Eggs anchor the card — three poached eggs in a garlic sumac yogurt under chili oil, served with sourdough. The Full Belmont is the maximalist plate: two poached eggs, a buttermilk biscuit, baked beans, sausage, bacon, homefries, and greens; the Two Poached is the same shape without the meat. Prawn Toast stacks herbed prawn puree, smoked salmon, cilantro labneh, sesame, a poached egg, and yuzu vinaigrette. Huevos Rancheros carries birria-braised beef under aji verde with black beans, pimento grits, and scrambled eggs. The Falafel Bowl gathers fried halloumi, falafel, baba ganoush, arugula, dukkah, preserved cabbage, and a pickled egg. The Burger & Fries — six-ounce house brisket patty, honey dill, caramelized onion, old cheddar, sesame brioche, shoestring fries — runs on both menus. French Toast finishes with miso caramel, hazelnut crumble, blueberry compote, and lavender whipped cream.

The dining room seats thirty-six, with eight of those at the bar, and reservations are the way most tables arrive. The Belmont has cooked from this stretch of Bank Street in Old Ottawa South since 2014. Service, food, drink, music, laughs, and a break from the everyday is the working list — a frame that fits a residential neighbourhood that does not need a destination dining room. What it has instead is a compact corner kitchen running a sharing menu through the week and brunch on the weekend, with a card that reaches across cuisines without drifting into theme. The Belmont is what a small neighbourhood card looks like when the kitchen behind it has range.

Key Details
Address
1169 Bank Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1S 3X7
Neighborhood
Old Ottawa South / Bank Street South
Cuisines
Fusion, Turkish, Trinidadian, Small Plates, Brunch
Chef
Phil Denny
Price Range
$$ · Moderate
Hours
Monday5:00 – 9:00 PM
Tuesday5:00 – 9:00 PM
Wednesday5:00 – 9:00 PM
Thursday5:00 – 9:00 PM
Friday5:00 – 10:00 PM
Saturday9:00 AM – 2:00 PM, 5:00 – 10:00 PM
Sunday9:00 AM – 2:00 PM, 5:00 – 10:00 PM
Vibes
Cozy AtmosphereOld Ottawa South Neighbourhood SpotGood Music And Laughs
Unique Selling Points

Three things this kitchen does the rest don’t

  1. 01

    Old Ottawa South Neighbourhood Energy

    The Belmont presents itself as a local room first: small, familiar, and tied to Bank Street rather than built as a generic destination restaurant.

  2. 02

    Compact Menu With Real Range

    A short list still moves from Belmont Doubles and Beef Tartare to piri piri chicken, maitake mushrooms, Turkish Eggs, Prawn Toast, and Huevos Rancheros.

  3. 03

    Useful Planning Shape

    The 36-seat room, walk-in bar seats, reservation guidance, and Friday-to-Sunday brunch hours give diners clear ways to choose the right visit.