Ottawa

New Rideau Canal vendors offering food to go with a fresh twist

Skaters have more choices for snacks this winter on on the Rideau Canal Skateway, including dim sum, candied fruit skewers and potato spirals.

3 new food stands this winter along with skateway classics

New vendors serving up snacks on the Rideau Canal Skateway

2 days ago
Duration 2:11
BeaverTails are the perennial favourite among skaters on the canal. But owners of new stalls that opened up shop this year say there's room for everyone on the world's largest skating rink.

If your stomach starts to rumble while you're on the Rideau Canal Skateway, the traditional solution is a sugary, delicious BeaverTail — who hasn't bribed a reluctant skater with the promise of a Killaloe Sunrise? 

But what if you're in the mood for something different?

This year, skaters have three new vendors in the mix: Dumpling Soup and Super Crunch Tanghulu at the northern end of the skateway near the Rideau Centre, and Spring Chips at the Concord access point south of the big bend at the University of Ottawa.

Dumpling Soup offers dim sum favourites such as pork buns, potstickers and bite-size soup dumplings.

Super Crunch Tanghulu sells tanghulu: bamboo skewers of fruit in a hard sugar glaze. Think candy apples but with grapes, strawberries or orange segments.

Spring Chips's big seller is a fried, skewered potato spiral.

A person's arm holding out a deep-fried spiralled potato on a stick.
This is a spiralled deep-fried potato on a stick from Spring Chips. (Maxim Allain/CBC)

The process of earning a spot on the canal wasn't a piece of cake.

Gary Wu described a rigorous application process, with his proposal to the National Capital Commission running more than 10 pages. 

Wu is the president of Super Smash Juice Inc., which owns both Dumpling Soup and Super Crunch Tanghulu.

He had planned to use a food truck and trailer, then decided it didn't match the vibe of the canal.

"It's such a beautiful setting," said Wu in an interview with CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning. "I stumbled on these [wooden] sheds which were used at the Christmas market at Lansdowne … and [it] turns out they actually rent them off-season."

Entrepreneur wearing a fur hat and a red apron stands in front of two wooden shacks, He's holding two of the new snacks offered on the Rideau Canal.
Gary Wu is the owner of Super Crunch Tanghulu and Dumpling Soup, two of the skateway's three new snack shacks. (Maxim Allain/CBC)

Room for variety on the world's largest skating rink

Wu thinks chilled visitors will reach for the warmth of dumplings.

"[It's] perfect for a winter festival," he said. "You can pop a few and then you can go back to skating."

A few early hiccups with power supply have been sorted out and both locations are now operational.

And what about going up against the perennial favourite? 

"There's nothing wrong with getting BeaverTails and candied fruit, right? They're nothing wrong with getting all three because we're all side by side," said Wu. "A big family could try different stuff together."

WATCH | A lesson in tanghulu:

Make your own tanghulu

4 years ago
Duration 2:42
Yi Jiang teaches her kids about the northern Chinese winter candy you can only make when it's cold outside, in this video by freelancer Fangliang Xu.

Other returning vendors are Dunrobin Distilleries, Guylaine Café, and Snack O'Shack.

All vendors are open at noon on weekdays and 10 a.m. on weekends. They close at 8 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 10 p.m. on Sunday.

With files from CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning