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Whistler, Canada

Sidecut Steakhouse

CuisineSteakhouse Cuisine
Executive ChefSajish Kumar Das
LocationWhistler, Canada
Forbes

Sidecut Steakhouse at Four Seasons Resort Whistler occupies a rare position in Canada's steakhouse tier: it is the first Canadian restaurant to serve certified A5 olive-fed wagyu beef, framed by a six-course tasting menu that pulls from British Columbia's Ocean Wise-certified seafood alongside land-driven cuts. The room pairs leather and dark-wood with rough-hewn stone and a circular fireplace, earning a 4.4 Google rating across 327 reviews.

Sidecut Steakhouse restaurant in Whistler, Canada
About

A Mountain Steakhouse with a Provenance Argument

Whistler's dining scene divides broadly between aprés-ski convenience and a smaller tier of destination restaurants making a considered case for ingredient sourcing and technique. Sidecut Steakhouse, operating within the Four Seasons Resort and Residences Whistler on Blackcomb Way, belongs firmly to the latter. Its 4.4 Google rating across 327 reviews reflects a consistent reception, but the more telling signal is the sourcing program that has positioned it as a reference point for premium beef in western Canada — specifically, Sidecut is the first steakhouse in Canada to serve certified A5 olive-fed wagyu beef.

That distinction matters because the olive-fed wagyu category is narrow even by Japanese standards. The cattle are raised in Kagawa Prefecture on a diet that includes residual olive pulp from olive oil production, a practice that alters the fatty acid profile of the meat and produces marbling with a softer, more oleic character than standard A5 Kuroge Washu. The result is a cut that differs perceptibly from the wagyu served at most North American steakhouses, where A4 or A5 grade Miyazaki or Kagoshima beef is more typical. At Sidecut modern steak Whistler programming is built around that difference — placing the olive-fed product at the apex of the menu rather than treating it as one premium option among several.

What the Room Tells You Before the Menu Arrives

The physical environment at Sidecut is a calibrated response to the tension that defines mountain resort dining: how to feel simultaneously indoors and connected to the terrain outside. The interior uses dark-wood paneling and leather chairs as the steakhouse baseline, then layers in rough-hewn stone walls and a large circular fireplace as the alpine register. Floor-to-ceiling windows pull the Whistler mountain panorama into the dining room without requiring a patio. When conditions allow, that patio does open, with Italian string lights overhead and the same menu available beneath open sky.

The atmosphere reads as upscale without the deliberate formality of a city fine-dining room , a distinction that matters in a ski resort context, where guests arriving from the mountain want neither a canteen nor a room that demands they change their register entirely. Reservations are recommended, and valet parking is available at the Four Seasons. Business casual is the dress tone.

The Sourcing Logic: Wagyu Provenance and BC Seafood

Editorial case for Sidecut Whistler BC Canada rests less on the steakhouse format itself than on the sourcing architecture underneath it. Two axes run through the menu. The first is the wagyu program: A5 olive-fed beef from Kagawa, a product with documented traceability and a flavor profile that separates it from the broader A5 wagyu category in ways that go beyond grade certification. The intricate marbling and the oleic fat composition produce a texture that eats differently from standard high-grade wagyu, and the scarcity of the certified supply limits which restaurants can place it on a menu at all.

Second axis is British Columbia seafood, sourced under Ocean Wise certification , a program administered by the Vancouver Aquarium that audits suppliers against science-based sustainability standards. Ocean Wise certification is not merely a labeling exercise; it requires ongoing supplier relationships and periodic review, which means the kitchen is constrained to work with what the certification allows rather than sourcing opportunistically. The result is a menu that draws from BC's coastal abundance within a defined ethical framework. Wild salmon, Pacific mussels, and premium crustaceans appear alongside the land program, giving Sidecut a dual identity that most steakhouses avoid by staying resolutely terrestrial.

Hokkaido scallops and carabinero prawns, served with sea urchin mayonnaise, appear in the six-course Chef's Tasting Menu alongside the olive-fed wagyu, presented with black truffle potatoes and veal marrow sauce. That tasting format is where the two sourcing strands converge most explicitly, allowing the kitchen to sequence land and sea against each other rather than treating them as separate sections of a traditional steakhouse card.

Chef Sajish Kumar Das: Credential in Context

The steakhouse format here is shaped in part by executive chef Sajish Kumar Das, whose background spans fine-dining postings across the UAE, Oman, and Qatar before his arrival at the Four Seasons Whistler. His culinary schooling was in Goa, and his early exposure to seafood markets and spice preparation informs an approach to fish and crustaceans that is less typical of the steakhouse genre. Within the editorial context of Sidecut's menu, what matters is that the chef's technical range allows the restaurant to treat its Ocean Wise seafood program with the same seriousness as the wagyu tier, rather than treating fish as the supporting act in a beef-forward room.

Das hosted a Goan-inspired pop-up at the Four Seasons Whistler before his full integration into the Sidecut team, which suggests the property tests conceptual range before formalizing a menu direction. The current program reflects that range: the tasting menu moves between highly specific Japanese and Pacific ingredients within a format that never loses sight of the mountain lodge context.

Whistler's Wider Dining Tier

Positioning Sidecut within Whistler's broader restaurant scene requires acknowledging that the village supports a narrower fine-dining tier than a city of comparable culinary ambition would. Bearfoot Bistro and Rim Rock Cafe occupy adjacent positions in the premium bracket, each with distinct editorial identities, while WILD BLUE represents a newer entry into the upper tier. Within that competitive set, Sidecut's wagyu provenance story and Ocean Wise certification give it a specific angle that the others do not replicate directly.

For readers mapping the Canadian fine-dining tier more broadly, the conversation extends to Alo in Toronto, Tanière³ in Québec City, and AnnaLena in Vancouver , each operating in a different register but sharing the broader project of serious sourcing inside a Canadian context. Jérôme Ferrer's Europea in Montreal, Narval in Rimouski, The Pine in Creemore, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln, and Eigensinn Farm in Singhampton extend that picture across provinces. For reference points at the highest international tier of seafood-forward fine dining, Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City illustrate how differently ambition can be expressed in a major metropolitan context.

Planning a Visit

Sidecut operates as a dinner venue within the Four Seasons Resort and Residences Whistler at 4591 Blackcomb Way. Reservations are recommended given the resort context and the limited availability of the tasting menu format. The restaurant accommodates families with children, offers gluten-free and vegetarian options, and provides private dining for groups. Valet parking is available through the Four Seasons. For visitors assembling a broader Whistler itinerary, EP Club's full guides cover restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the village and surrounding area.

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