Start With A Boat
Choose Benny, Original, Fajita, or Pulled Pork when you want the diner's clearest house specialty rather than a standard two-egg plate.
The boat is the thing to order, and it is the dish that explains the kitchen. Ole Country Diner builds it from a base of home fries and cheese, then runs that one idea through a whole lineup: the Benny Boat under hollandaise, the Fajita Boat, the Mexican Boat, the Pulled Pork Boat, plus bean-and-bacon and vegetarian versions for the table that wants the format without the meat. It is a diner specialty you do not find on every breakfast menu in Sarnia, and it tells you what this kitchen is actually about — taking the comfort end of breakfast and giving it a house signature rather than another two-egg plate.
The rest of the menu fills in around that idea with the practical range a busy diner needs. Breakfast poutine layers home fries with two cheeses, bacon, and hollandaise, and there is a bruschetta version for anyone who wants it lighter. Eggs Benedict comes straight or turned into a Ruben or a spinach-and-feta variation. Pancakes, French toast, steak and eggs, and a farmers grill cover the familiar ground; a vegan skillet and a vegetarian boat keep the plant-based table in the same booth as everyone else. Lunch leans on sandwiches — a BLT, peameal and cheddar on a kaiser, pulled pork, a breakfast club — and the sides come down to fresh-cut fries and the same home fries that anchor half the menu.
What ties it together is breadth without confusion. The kitchen cooks across Mexican, Canadian, and Mediterranean notes and still reads as one coherent diner, because every plate routes back through the same handful of ideas: eggs, home fries, cheese, a griddle, and a few good sandwiches. That is the quiet skill of a working breakfast house — keeping a long menu legible so a mixed group can sit down and each find their plate without the kitchen losing its grip on what it does well. It is also what makes the diner an easy default for the table that cannot agree. A boat and a plate of pancakes, a benedict and a club sandwich, the vegan skillet beside the steak and eggs — the menu is built so families, seniors, and weekday regulars can all order off the same page and leave satisfied.
Ole Country Diner is locally owned, run by Terri and Kyle Kavanaugh, and has cooked breakfast on Sarnia's London Road since 2009. The boats and the breakfast poutine did not arrive in a planning meeting; by the diner's own account they came out of the kitchen, the staff working out that home fries, two cheeses, bacon, and hollandaise made a better plate than the sum of those parts. That is the kind of invention that only happens where the cooks have been making the same breakfast long enough to start improving on it, and it is the reason the house specialties feel earned rather than borrowed off a trend.
The hours tell the rest of the story: eight to three, every day of the week, breakfast served the whole time. That is a deliberate shape, not a limitation. It makes the diner the answer for an early start, a slow weekend brunch, or a mid-afternoon plate when nowhere else is still serving eggs, and the full menu travels for takeout when the booth is not the point — sandwiches, poutines, and breakfast plates all packed to go. The home fries that started as a side ended up holding the whole place together — boat, poutine, and breakfast plate all building from the same griddle, which is about as honest as a diner gets.
The official story ties the diner's identity to home-fries-and-cheese boats with toppings, including Benny, Fajita, and Pulled Pork favourites.
Breakfast Poutine, benedicts, pancakes, French toast, skillets, sandwiches, and sides give the menu the practical range expected from a busy local diner.
The About page frames Ole Country Diner as a locally owned family business with a long-running London Road presence and community ties.
Share the nuances of your visit to Ole Country Diner in Sarnia — the standout dishes, the room, the service.
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