
Olive & Gourmando has anchored the Vieux-Montréal café scene on Rue St-Paul Ouest for years, earning consecutive recognition on Opinionated About Dining's North America Cheap Eats list through 2023, 2024, and 2025. The format is daytime café rather than evening dining room, which places it in a different competitive bracket from the city's tasting-menu circuit, and explains much of its enduring draw.
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- Address
- 351 Rue St-Paul Ouest, Montréal, QC H2Y 2A7, Canada
- Phone
- +1 514-350-1083
- Website
- oliveetgourmando.com

Rue St-Paul in the Morning
Old Montreal's Rue St-Paul Ouest operates on a different rhythm from the city's dinner-driven neighbourhoods. By mid-morning, the cobblestone stretch between the old port and Place d'Armes fills with a mix of locals threading past tourist foot traffic, and the cafés that line it become something closer to neighbourhood anchors than tourist stops. Olive & Gourmando, at number 351, sits squarely in that tradition: a daytime address in a part of the city that tends to attract evening attention. That positioning is part of what makes it worth understanding on its own terms. Olive & Gourmando is a French Bakery Café in Montréal at 351 Rue St-Paul Ouest, with a casual dress code and a walk-in-friendly format.
The café format in North America has quietly split into two tiers over the past decade. One track runs toward minimalist third-wave espresso bars where the coffee is the product and food is incidental. The other holds onto the full-service daytime model: bread baked in-house, composed plates that require real kitchen work, a room that functions as a social space rather than a takeaway queue. Olive & Gourmando operates in the second tradition, and in Vieux-Montréal, that distinction matters more than it might elsewhere in the city.
Where It Sits in the Broader Montreal Picture
Montreal's dining reputation is built largely on its evening output. The tasting-menu circuit at places like Jérôme Ferrer - Europea, the natural-wine-forward cooking at Mastard, and the refined modern French sensibility at Sabayon and Alma Montreal occupy most of the critical conversation. Daytime cooking rarely gets the same sustained attention, which is why Opinionated About Dining's repeated inclusion of Olive & Gourmando in its North America Cheap Eats rankings, Recommended in 2023, ranked 177th in 2024, and climbing to 182nd in 2025, carries some weight. OAD's Cheap Eats list is a peer-reviewed, critic-and-diner-sourced ranking, and repeated placement signals consistent execution rather than a single strong year.
That context places Olive & Gourmando alongside the daytime institutions of the city rather than its evening flagships. The comparison set is closer to the long-running breakfast-and-lunch spots that anchor neighbourhoods like the Plateau or Mile End than to the white-tablecloth rooms further up the price ladder. At a 4.4 average across nearly 3,900 Google reviews, the volume of consistent positive feedback suggests that performance holds across the full range of the day, not just in peak conditions.
The Editorial Angle: What a Café Drinks List Actually Signals
In the context of Vieux-Montréal's café offer, the signals worth reading are whether a venue treats its beverage program as a considered element of the experience or as a functional add-on to food.
The two venues are not in competition; they represent different hours of the same city's food culture.
Planning a Visit
Olive & Gourmando operates as a daytime café at 351 Rue St-Paul Ouest in Vieux-Montréal, the old port quarter that sits at the southern edge of the city centre.
For a broader orientation to eating and drinking in the city, our full Montreal restaurants guide covers the range from neighbourhood bistros to high-end tasting counters. The Montreal hotels guide and experiences guide are useful for building a multi-day itinerary around the old port area.
Café Culture Across Canada and Beyond
The daytime café model that Olive & Gourmando represents has close equivalents across Canadian cities and in European markets where the format is more deeply embedded. In Toronto, the serious end of the daytime dining spectrum sits adjacent to evening addresses like Alo. In Vancouver, the café-adjacent casual dining tradition runs parallel to evening rooms like AnnaLena. Further afield, the European café-as-serious-daytime-destination model is well represented by addresses like Annelies in Berlin and Apotek 57 in Copenhagen, both of which operate in the same tradition of treating the daytime format with the same rigor applied to evening dining rooms.
Within Quebec, the contrast between Olive & Gourmando's accessible daytime format and the high-end tasting-menu ambition of addresses like Tanière³ in Québec City illustrates the province's range. For those interested in the more rural and producer-focused end of Canadian dining, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln, The Pine in Creemore, and Narval in Rimouski represent a different but complementary strand of serious Canadian food culture. The Montreal wineries guide covers the Quebec wine scene for those looking to extend beyond the plate.
Reputation Context
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olive & Gourmando | French Bakery Café | $$ | Vieux Montréal | |
| Lloyd | French-Seafood with Oceania Fusion | $$ | , | Centre-Ville |
| Salle Climatisée | Modern French Bistro | $$ | Michelin Plate | District de Saint-Édouard |
| Les Mômes | French-Canadian Bistro | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Cremazie |
| Le Bordelais | Traditional French Steakhouse | $$ | , | Riviere des Prairies |
| Bonaparte | Classic French Bistro | $$$ | , | Vieux Montréal |
At a Glance
- Cozy
- Trendy
- Lively
- Brunch
- Casual Hangout
- Open Kitchen
- Street Scene
Cozy and friendly with wood accents, chalkboard menu, lively atmosphere, and open kitchen views creating a welcoming family-home feel.













