Big Chill, Toasty Town in Friendly, French Quebec City

Big Chill, Toasty Town in Friendly, French Quebec City

Strolling down a narrow alley, you find inviting shops - patisseries, epiceries and boulangeries. Are you in Dijon, Alsace or maybe even Paris? Mais non. You’re in a city far more accessible but replete with all the charm of La Belle France.  This, friends, is Quebec!

Quebec City is predominantly French-speaking which gives it a distinctive foreign feel.  It seems at once old-world and yet very much today.  One can understand why Conde Nast Traveler calls it one of the 5 best cities in Canada.

Quebec winter

Wonderful to visit any time of the year, Quebec is at its most seductive when the city is covered with snow, its warm lights beckoning from shops, restaurants and holiday decorations.  The Quebecois will tell you that perhaps the jolliest time to visit is when the city becomes one vast outdoor playground and hosts its annual Winter Carnival.  It’s when the city comes alive with sub-zero merry-making, including zip lines, night parades, concerts, snow sculptures, sleigh or dogsled rides and skating.

The Quebec Winter Carnival began when the inhabitants of New France, now Quebec, had a rowdy tradition of getting together just before Lent to eat, drink and make merry.  Today, this event is the biggest winter carnival in the world and is celebrated annually; the dates for 2023 are Friday, February 3-Sunday, February 12. This bash gets a million visitors each year from all over the world. Families are everywhere with wee kids pulled along on sleds. Many Carnival-goers wear a traditional sash and the kids will definitely want one of the long red plastic trumpets that sound out constantly through the snowy streets. So, rather than fighting the crowds at a sweltering Louisiana Mardi Gras, be cool! Embrace and celebrate this frosty event just like our neighbors up north. Most every Carnival event is outdoors so be sure to dress appropriately. Usually, to enter the festival site, you have to purchase an effigy ($15-25, depending on when you buy), which is a cute  (but very mandatory) trinket that you wear as proof that you paid the admission fee.

Quebec Winter Carnival

Activities for Chasing  the Chill Away

Besides Carnival, there’s lots more to see and do in Quebec. Visit Vieux-Quebec (Old Town) high on the cliffs which overlook the St. Lawrence River and is designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.  Behind its stone walls there are world-class museums, historic sites and great shopping.  Nearby, be sure to see the Notre Dame de Quebec cathedral with its bell tower dating back to 1647.  You can ride a funicular down to lower town and Place Royale, the oldest part of Quebec City and the site where Champlain built the first permanent settlement in New France.  For a special treat, take a horse-drawn buggy through quaint streets to the Plains of Abraham, a vast, flat, snow-covered area and watch cross-country skiing and snowshoeing.

Dining

Winter in Quebec is cold, to be sure, but its dining scene is downright sizzling. Established in  1978, Jacques Fortier and  Jean Luc Boulay of Restaurant Le Saint-Armour have devoted themselves to gathering a passionate and thoughtful team in the kitchen as well as in the dining room, to turn out memorable, sumptuous meals. Most inviting, the award-winning Panache restaurant resides in a restored 19th-century maritime warehouse, a sophisticated blend of old and new. From the start, Au Vieux Duluth’s founders decided to offer unique dishes and generous portions of top quality food at affordable prices.  The restaurant very quickly gained recognition not only for its dishes, but for its décor, ambiance and exceptional customer satisfaction.

Fairmont Le Château Frontenac wine and cheese barFairmont Le Château Frontenac wine and cheese bar

Hotels

No visit to Quebec is complete without checking out – and hopefully checking into – the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, the grand castle-hotel in the heart of Old Quebec .  There are 618 beautifully furnished rooms, a health club and an indoor pool.  Also, the Frontenac just happens to be the most photographed hotel in the world.  For a droll, once-in-a-lifetime experience, consider The Hotel de Glace located just outside Quebec City. This crystalline snow bastion with cathedral ceilings is made entirely of…what else?  Tons and tons of snow and ice.  Once ensconced under a fur blanket, you’ll spend the night in a magical atmosphere resembling  Narnia Ice Queen’s palace and praying you won’t need a middle-of-the-night bathroom visit.  You say you prefer something a bit cozier?  There’s the intimate Auberge Saint-Antoine  that Travel and Leisure has ranked one of America’s top small city hotels.  The property links four 18th-century buildings with 300-year-old massive wooden beams and stone walls.  But, not to worry. Along with the ancient comes all the modern and chic accoutrements needed to satisfy our high-tech lifestyles .

Alors, whether you choose the most photographed digs or tiny, charming, and authentic, know that, in this most special town, your greeting is going to be warm, welcoming – and well worth the visit!

If You Go:

Quebec City Tourism