Share

From pop-up restaurants to secret eateries, guests are driving an increase in unique dining experiences. Follow their lead and bring a taste intrigue to your operation.

There’s a restaurant in Toronto that is accessible only through a hidden door in a comic book store. An eatery in MontrĆ©al that seats diners around an indoor wave pool. A country market in Coombs that serves food beneath a grass roof grazed by a herd of goats.

In an increasingly competitive landscape, these operators have devised creative ways to stand out. They’ve gone beyond food and service to offer a unique dining experience. And they’re not alone.

ā€œIt’s something of a trend,ā€ confirms Denis Bourbeau, a Quebec-based Director of Marketing and Procurement for Gordon Food Service. ā€œMuch of it is being driven by younger generations, who have a sense of adventure about dining and seek experiences that they can share with friends and through social media.ā€

ā€œThey’re explorers,ā€ adds Ontario-based Gordon Food Service Corporate Chef David Evans. ā€œFor them, it’s about discovering something different.ā€

But the appeal isn’t just restricted to millennials, says Murray Penner, a Gordon Food Service Director of Marketing and Procurement in Delta, British Columbia. ā€œBoomers have the time, money and appetite to indulge in what can be pretty elaborate experiences.ā€

Indeed, when it comes to creating these out-of-the-ordinary concepts, the sky’s the limit—just ask the company that goes around Canada serving dinners at a 22-person table hoisted by crane into the open air, 46 metres above the ground.

Here are a few tips for serving up a unique dining experience.

7 ways restaurants can offer a unique dining experience

Leverage your location

An unusual or unexpected site can create a sense of excitement. It doesn’t have to be as extreme as sky-high dining—Penner points to an Italian eatery located in a turn-of-the-century heritage home in downtown Vancouver, and Evans singles out a Toronto barbecue joint surrounded by factories and a car-wrecking yard. The fact that these spaces take some effort to find only adds to the allure.

Don’t have the luxury of a cool location? You can make any site more fashionable by adding an outdoor patio. ā€œWe have an obsession with outdoor dining here on the West Coast,ā€ Penner says. ā€œUse heaters to keep your space open in the winter.ā€

If al fresco dining isn’t feasible, consider taking your brand on the road via a food truck or pop-up restaurant.

Focus on fun

Exclusivity, secrecy, humour, nostalgia, even sensory deprivation—like serving meals in a pitch-black restaurant—are all worthy hooks to hang your concept on.

Evans speaks fondly of a Toronto pop-up concept that requires would-be patrons to write a letter requesting an invite to one of their dinners, all held in different locations. Bourbeau hails a chef and two friends who cooked and served meals in a small place that felt like their home. It’s all about having fun with the serious business of foodservice.

Penner acknowledges that fun can be scary to operators. ā€œIt takes courage to create something unique,ā€ he says. ā€œThink of it as giving your guests an entertaining story to tell about your restaurant.ā€

Get social

Guests will tell these stories on Facebook and other social platforms. So that’s where you need to be engaging with them. ā€œYou have to generate word of mouth to get people in the door,ā€ Bourbeau says. ā€œSocial media is the best way to do that.ā€

Keep the online conversation going by providing plenty of ā€œInstagrammableā€ opportunities—like the Pac-Man light installation on the ceiling of the aforementioned comic book-themed restaurant or the spectacular views from a rooftop patio.

Put food first

An effective social media program will get people into your restaurant—but it’s the food that will bring them back again and again. ā€œIn the final analysis, it’s all about the food,ā€ Evans says. You can go wild with location, dĆ©cor, ambiance and menu, ā€œBut you still have to deliver on the basics. Otherwise, you risk being a gimmick.ā€

ā€œUniqueā€ is a great asset for a restaurant to have—but quality, consistency and attention to detail will always separate an enduring success from a flash in the pan.

Secret restaurants

From pop-up eateries to private dining clubs to underground supper spots, secrecy is all the rage in foodservice these days. These venues are often a means for chefs and restaurants to explore dishes outside their usual repertoire, or to test the waters for new concepts

Evans says the cutting-edge fare typically served at secret restaurants appeals to hardcore foodies. ā€œAnd discovering the secret makes them feel special.ā€

Recent Blog Posts

Food for thought.

GFS BC Pay Transparency Report

Gordon Food Service – British Columbia – 2024Calendar Year Pay Transparency Report Employer: Gordon Food Service Canada Ltd. British Columbia Address: 1700 Cliveden Avenue Delta,

125+ Years of Serving

Explore Our Family of Private Brands

Our 2026 Spring Show Schedule is Here!

Ordering Made Easy

Where Purpose, People & the Planet Come First

Spring 2026 Show Schdule Announced

125+ Years of Partnerships at the Table & Beyond

Search Our Site…