Vol. I  ·  Issue 01 For Alison 15 — 17 May MMXXVI

A Birthday Weekend

Montréal

May 15 – 17, 2026 · For Alison

At the confluence of the French and English traditions, Montréal has developed a unique and distinguished cultural face — a city where creativity is not a hobby, it's a way of life.
EWR  →  YUL Begin Bespoke Itinerary, with love
I.The Soul of the City

What is Montréal, really.

Montréal is the only major city in the world that is simultaneously, genuinely French and unmistakably North American — and neither is a performance. It is a city where a software engineer plays salsa on weekends, a project manager plays clarinet in a neighborhood klezmer band, and the average person has read more novels than most people in any other city on the continent.

Culture here is participatory, not spectator sport. The streets are alive in a way that has nothing to do with tourism, and everything to do with how the city believes it should be lived in. There is no waiting for permission. The terrasses open the moment the sun does. The murals appear because someone wanted them to. The arguments about which bagel is better are real, and they last for generations.

— Pillar 01

La Ville aux Cent Clochers

This is the first time I was ever in a city where you couldn't throw a brick without breaking a church window. — Mark Twain

"The City of a Hundred Belltowers." Stone Gothic churches anchor every neighborhood — not as relics, but as the spine of how the city is laid out. You orient yourself by spires.

— Pillar 02

UNESCO City of Design

Designated in 2006, alongside Berlin, Helsinki, and Nagoya. It shows. The craft here is serious — in shop windows, in restaurants, in the way a streetlamp meets a sidewalk.

— Pillar 03

The City of Festivals

Over one hundred annual festivals. The world's largest jazz festival. The world's largest comedy festival. A city that treats public life and outdoor gathering as a form of culture.

— Pillar 04

French + North American

French culinary technique with North American abundance. European stone architecture at North American scale. French insouciance with Canadian warmth. The tension between the two is what makes it electric.

— Pillar 05

The Street

Walls, alleyways, stairways covered in murals. The famous exterior spiral staircases of the Plateau. Terrasse culture — the moment the weather allows, every restaurant moves outside and the city exhales.

— Pillar 06

The Food Identity

Montréal bagels are smaller, sweeter, wood-fired — a different thing entirely from New York. Smoked meat at Schwartz's since 1928. Poutine everywhere from gourmet bistros to three-in-the-morning takeout windows. These are not tourist myths. They're daily habits.

— Pillar 07

Born Here

Cirque du Soleil. Arcade Fire. Leonard Cohen. Oscar Peterson. Céline Dion. The Montréal bagel.

A city that punches enormously above its weight.

II.The Weekend at a Glance

Three days, two flights, one city.

The logistics, kept short — so the rest of the page can be about the trip itself.

— Flights

EWR  ⇄  YUL

OutboundReturn
Route Newark → MontréalEWR → YUL Montréal → NewarkYUL → EWR
Date Friday, May 15 Sunday, May 17
Departs 12:25 PM 4:25 PM
Arrives 2:08 PM 5:59 PM
Carrier Porter Airlines
PD 2404
Air Canada
AC 8498
Confirmation SUOWKH
Porter: KDSB3U
A25MSW
Porter check-in note — Check in via the Porter Airlines website using code KDSB3U (not Alaska) within 24 hours of departure.
— Lodging

Hotel William Gray

421 Rue St-Vincent · Vieux-Montréal

Check-in
Friday, May 154:00 PM
Check-out
Sunday, May 1712:00 PM
Room
King Bed (Alcove)
Confirmation
69586SG225718
Request early check-in at time of arrival. LHotel remains an alternative option until May 12 — see Section III.
— Confirmed Reservations

The table is set.

When Restaurant Details
Fri · 6:30 PM Le Club Chasse et Pêche423 Rue Saint-Claude · Old Montréal 5 min walk from hotel · (514) 861-1112
Sat · 7:15 PM Liverpool House2501 Notre-Dame Ouest · Little Burgundy Covered back terrace · Vin Papillon after

Also: Arthurs Nosh Bar (Sat brunch) · Schwartz's + St-Viateur + La Banquise (Sat afternoon crawl) · Au Pied de Cochon or L'Express (Sun lunch)

III.Where You're Staying

Hotel William Gray. Old Montréal.

Booked and confirmed. LHotel remains an alternative until May 12 if you change your mind — both options below.

Currently booked
i.

Hotel William Gray

Chic and present. You step outside and you're already somewhere.

  • Two connected 18th-century heritage buildings on Rue Saint-Vincent, in the heart of Old Montréal
  • Contemporary interior layered over historic stone — modern without erasing the bones
  • Rooftop bar with panoramic views over Old Montréal and the St. Lawrence — one of the best outdoor spaces in the city
  • Steps from Notre-Dame Basilica; cobblestone streets at the door
Best for
location, rooftop moments, social energy
The feeling
waking up in the middle of it all
Alt · cancellable until May 12
ii.

LHotel

Like sleeping inside someone's extraordinary private collection.

  • 1870 French Revival building, originally the Montréal City and District Savings Bank
  • One of the largest private collections of contemporary and pop art in North America — Warhol, Chagall, Miró, Lichtenstein, Botero — in the lobby, hallways, and your room
  • Stone fireplaces in most rooms. High ceilings. Tall windows.
  • Just 56 rooms — genuinely intimate
  • Slightly quieter position on Rue Saint-Jacques, at the edge of Old Montréal
Best for
romance, architecture, uniqueness
The feeling
waking up inside a museum

One is about where you are in the city.
One is about where you are in time.
— Your call, Birthday Girl —

IV.That Exact Weekend

What's on, 15 – 17 May.

Montréal is generous with its timing. Here's what's happening — none of it required, all of it available.

May 15 – 17 · Plateau · Free

Festival BD
— Montréal Comic Arts Festival

Free, bilingual, on Saint-Denis Street in the Plateau. Over 60 activities — round tables, live drawing, exhibitions, workshops, comics trail. 300+ artists from near and far. Casual, walkable, very local. Not a convention center event — it spills across the neighborhood.

May 15 – 17 · Downtown

Pouzza Fest

Punk rock music festival. 175+ bands across multiple downtown venues. You don't have to attend to feel its energy — the whole city has a live music charge that weekend.

Sunday May 17 · Parc Jean-Drapeau

Piknic Électronik
— Season Opener

The very first Piknic of 2026. Outdoor electronic music on an island in the St. Lawrence. Thousands of people dancing in the afternoon sun. A perfect send-off before the 4:25 flight, if timing works.

May 16 – 17 · NDG

PorchfestNDG

Local musicians performing on neighborhood front porches across Notre-Dame-de-Grâce. Wanderable, charming, deeply local. Exactly the kind of thing Montréal does that nowhere else does.

V.What to Do

By vibe, not by list.

Trips are not numbered. They are felt. Here's the city organized by the kind of day you want to have.

— i.

On Foot
Old Montréal & the Port

  • Rue Saint-Paul, end to end.Galleries, artisan shops, terrasses. The defining stroll.
  • Notre-Dame Basilica.Book the AURA light show in advance — extraordinary.
  • Marché Bonsecours.Historic domed market on the waterfront.
  • The Old Port.Bike the waterfront path, sit at the edge of the St. Lawrence.
  • Pointe-à-Callière Museum.Built directly over the archaeological site of the city's founding. More interesting than it sounds.
— ii.

Uphill
The Plateau & Mile End

  • Taxi or Bixi up.The neighborhood shift is immediate and dramatic.
  • Rue Saint-Denis & Rue Mont-Royal.The beating heart of francophone Montréal street life.
  • Mile End.Bleed into it from the Plateau. Record shops, coffee shops, bakeries.
  • The Bagel Debate.Fairmount vs St-Viateur. Both on foot from each other. Pick a side.
  • Parc Lafontaine.Large, leafy, local. Not a tourist park. People actually use it.
  • Festival BD.The Comic Arts Festival is here this weekend — stumble through it.
— iii.

Up the
Mountain

  • Mont Royal.Walk or bike up for panoramic city views. May is peak bloom — the city is lush.
  • Beaver Lake.At the top — peaceful, scenic, beloved by locals.
  • Come down through the Plateau.For dinner. The descent is the reward.
— iv.

Sunday
Send-Off

  • Piknic Électronik.Opens its 2026 season Sunday afternoon at Parc Jean-Drapeau — an island, 20 minutes from Old Montréal.
  • Dance in the sun.Until it's time for the airport. A very Montréal farewell.
VI.Where to Eat

Restaurants are cultural acts.

In Montréal, restaurants are cultural acts. The city has more restaurants per capita than almost any city in North America, BYOB licensing means bottles are everywhere, and the culture of lingering over a meal is French in the best possible way.

Friday Night
— Le Club Chasse et Pêche

— Confirmed · 6:30 PM · 423 Rue Saint-Claude · 5 min walk from the hotel · (514) 861-1112

The setting

A dark, intimate cave on a quintessential Old Port cobblestone street. Stone walls, leather chairs, waterfowl fixtures. Since 2004. You almost miss the door — marked only by a small crest. Exactly right for the first night.

The food & wine

Game, fish, Quebec terroir. Braised piglet risotto with foie gras shavings, duck, lamb, salmon from the St. Lawrence. Canada's best sommelier 2023 (Joris Garcia) runs the wine list — 700+ labels. An Eater Essential. One of the top restaurants in North America.

Saturday · The Birthday Dinner

— Confirmed · Liverpool House · 7:15 PM · 2501 Notre-Dame Ouest · Covered back terrace

Liverpool House

Of all the restaurants in the Joe Beef family, Liverpool House is the one that most faithfully captures the group's original spirit — clever, irreverent, deeply rooted in bourgeois French cooking. Loud, generous, exceptional. Beef tartare, lobster pasta, steak frites, and a rotating roster of specials. Vin Papillon next door for natural wine after.

The seat

Covered back terrace, specifically requested. Mid-May is terrasse season in Montréal — the city is just opening up outside. An al fresco birthday dinner in a candlelit courtyard. After: Vin Papillon next door, no reservation needed, best natural wine bar in the city.

Saturday Morning
— Arthurs Nosh Bar

— Plateau · Jewish-deli brunch · Eater Essential · Call ahead

Arthurs Nosh Bar

Next-generation Jewish nosh bar on the Plateau. Modern takes on deli classics done with real skill — one of the best brunches in the city. Relaxed, local, warm. The right way to start the birthday.

Then: The Plateau Crawl

After brunch — walk to St-Viateur for a bag of bagels, Schwartz's for smoked meat (medium fat, on rye), La Banquise for poutine. Pace it: half portions, share one poutine. Liverpool House comes at 7:15 — arrive hungry.

Sunday Lunch
— Au Pied de Cochon or L'Express

— Plateau · The quintessential Québec farewell · Book APdC ahead, L'Express walk-in

Au Pied de Cochon

Martin Picard's legendary Quebec temple. An entire section of the menu is dedicated to foie gras. The foie gras poutine is one of the most famous dishes in the city — an elevated, outrageously indulgent version of Saturday's classic. Duck in a Can arrives tableside. The open kitchen is theater. Reserve ahead.

L'Express (fallback)

Classic Parisian brasserie on the Plateau. Legendary. No reservations — walk in. Steak frites, escargot, an excellent wine list. If APdC is full, L'Express is a perfect send-off. Very local, very beloved.

Casual Icons
— Non-Negotiable

— These are not tourist traps. They are the city's daily habits. Hit all four on Saturday afternoon.

Schwartz's Deli

Smoked meat since 1928. Line out the door always. Worth it. Order medium fat, on rye, with a cherry Coke. No substitutions. Half a sandwich each — La Banquise comes next.

St-Viateur Bagel

Wood-fired, hand-rolled, smaller and sweeter than New York. Open 24 hours. Buy a bag Saturday morning and another Sunday for the flight home.

La Banquise

Poutine. 30+ variations, open 24 hours. The real one. Order La Classique or the Matty (bacon, mushrooms, peppers). Share one — you have Liverpool House at 7:15. Sunday, Au Pied de Cochon does the elevated version with foie gras.

Fairmount Bagel

The rival to St-Viateur. Also excellent. Also always open. Try both. Pick a side. This is a serious debate in Montréal and you are now part of it.

Neighborhood Gems

Vin Papillon

Joe Beef's natural wine bar, next door to Liverpool House. Small plates, excellent bottles, no reservations. Arrive straight from dinner Saturday night. The natural extension of the evening.

Arthurs Nosh Bar

Jewish-deli-influenced brunch on the Plateau. One of the best brunches in the city. Saturday morning — the right start to the birthday.

Le Club Chasse et Pêche

Confirmed, Friday 6:30pm. Dark cave, Quebec game and fish, Canada's best sommelier. Five minutes from the hotel on foot. The Old Montréal experience done properly.

Garde Manger

Chuck Hughes's Old Montréal spot. Fun, lively, great seafood. Good fallback if you want another dinner out — same neighborhood as the hotel.

Must-Try Foods & Flavors

  • Smoked meat sandwich — not pastrami. A different thing entirely.
  • Montréal bagel — any time, any day.
  • Poutine — twice this weekend: La Banquise (classic, Saturday afternoon) and Au Pied de Cochon (foie gras version, Sunday). Two completely different experiences.
  • Cheese curds — fresh, squeaky. Eaten alone or in poutine.
  • Tourtière — Québécois meat pie. Look for it on menus.
  • Pouding chômeur — "poor man's pudding." Warm cake baked in maple syrup. Order it.
  • Creton — pork fat spread on toast. A Québécois breakfast staple. Try it at a diner.
  • Maple everything — butter, taffy, vinaigrette. May is the very tail end of maple season.

In Season
— Mid-May

— Watch menus. Spring in Québec is brief and specific.

Fiddleheads
Brief window. This weekend might catch them — earthy, delicious.
Ramps
Wild leeks. The big spring thing in Québec.
First Asparagus
Freshly cut, locally grown. Showing up everywhere.
Morels
Watch menus for morel specials.
Greenhouse Strawberries
Just starting. Sweet, very local.
Québec Lamb
Spring lamb is on menus.
Maple, fresh
Tail end of the season — syrup at peak.
Cheese Curds
Daily, fresh from local fromageries.
VII.What to Bring Home

A UNESCO city of design.

As a UNESCO City of Design, Montréal produces actual designers and craftspeople — not souvenir shops. The things you bring home from here should be beautiful and specific. Things that only exist because this city exists.

— Old Montréal · Essential

L'Empreinte Coopérative

A Quebec craft cooperative showcasing 21 member artisans and 70+ guest artisans. Jewelry, ceramics, fashion, tableware, home decor. Artisans are often in-store to talk about their work. The single best place for a bespoke, genuinely handmade souvenir.

— Citywide · Essential

Les Citadines

A candle shop with a Montréal neighborhood collection — seven scents, each representing an arrondissement. Mile End smells like maple syrup. Vieux-Montréal smells like wood fire. Le Plateau smells like pepper and port. The most specific souvenir in the city.

— Old Montréal

État de Choc

Award-winning chocolate using Québec ingredients: pine, maple, local botanicals. Packaging inspired by Montréal. The thing to bring home for friends.

— Local design

Quelle Histoire

Tea towels, aprons, and bags printed with local legends — the Montréal melon, pouding chômeur. Sharp graphic design, deeply Québécois. Practical and beautiful.

— Mile End

Les Mauvaises Herbes

Natural beauty products and artisanal crafts. Original tea blends, candles, make-at-home body butter kits. Very Mile End in the best way.

— Rue Saint-Paul

Indianica

Native and Inuit arts and crafts including moccasins, jewelry, and Inuit sculpture. The real thing, not a tourist version.

— The Move

Montréal's dépanneurs and grocery stores are a window into how the city eats, smells, and lives. Give yourself an hour and bring a bag.

Le Petit Dép

Mile End + Old Montréal. A curated local fine grocery: small-producer maple syrups, Tigidou jams, artisan nut butters, local chocolate spreads, craft ciders. The anti-tourist-shop tourist shop.

Jean-Talon Market

If time allows Saturday. The great Montréal farmers' market. Cheese curds, maple products, spring vegetables, local producers in their element.

IGA  /  Metro

The main Quebec grocery chains — for local grocery archaeology. Québécois cheeses (Oka, Perron, St-Guillaume), local craft beer, Sirop de liège, Biscuits Whippet, Vachon cakes, maple vinegar.

Jean Coutu

The Quebec-specific pharmacy chain. Local hair and skin brands, Québécois vitamins, candy aisle with things unavailable in the US — Caramilk, Mirage, Coffee Crisp.

vii.bBy Neighborhood
Old Montréal

L'Empreinte · Indianica · État de Choc · Boutique Bonjour, on Place Jacques-Cartier

Mile End

Le Petit Dép · Les Mauvaises Herbes · Artgang, the local art collective

Plateau

Marché Floh, vintage market · Arloca, design objects + prints · Independent booksellers on Saint-Denis

Rue Saint-Denis

Pop-up art and print vendors all weekend, courtesy of the Comic Arts Festival.

VIII.The Playlist & The Map

The music and the map.

The music and the map. Everything you need, before you land.

— The Weekend Playlist
— Every Stop, Mapped
IX.Weather & Packing

Lush, blooming, cool at night.

Mid-May Montréal is peak spring. Layers and a light jacket are doing the heavy lifting.

— What to Expect

Sunny, low humidity, terrasses fully open. The city is lush and blooming — this is peak spring. Occasional light rain possible; bring a compact umbrella.

68°
Day high
48°
Night low
15h
Daylight

Daytime: shirt-sleeves with a layer in the bag. Evenings: a blazer or jacket over everything. Nights are cool — they're part of the romance.

— What to Pack
  • Light jacket or blazer for evenings — essential
  • Layers for daytime — temperature swings between noon and midnight
  • Comfortable walking shoes that handle cobblestones — heels are a gamble in Old Montréal
  • One dinner outfit for a nice evening
  • Compact umbrella
  • Reusable tote bag — for the grocery and market haul
  • Passport — required, international border crossing
✦ ✦ ✦

Montréal doesn't try to be Paris. It doesn't try to be New York. It has spent four centuries becoming something that could only be itself — a city that argues about bagels with the seriousness of theology, that puts its art on its walls instead of in galleries, that stays out until 3am because the night is good and there's no reason to stop.

Come hungry. Come curious. Speak French when you can and don't worry when you can't.
The city is used to holding two things at once.