Erie Street East is Windsor's Via Italia, the stretch the city files under red sauce and espresso. Take Five Bistro opened there as a steakhouse, and that choice still sets it apart from its neighbours. The founding idea was a Chicago-and-New-York chophouse — Canadian beef aged twenty-eight days, a fully licensed bar, a dining room in dark wood and low light — dropped onto a block better known for pasta than for porterhouse. Windsor, as it turned out, had appetite for both.
The steak list is where the kitchen makes its argument. The Ribeye is the straight read on the room, beef-forward and seared to a deep crust; the White Cheddar & Bacon Filet Mignon is the richer move, a centre-cut filet layered with sharp cheddar and bacon. Tenderloin Neptune bridges the steak and seafood sides for the table that cannot choose. Around the beef sits a spread of classics that keeps the place from reading as steak and nothing else — Mini Beef Wellingtons in flaky pastry, escargot, Cajun calamari, a Chicken Oscar, French onion, the house Take Five Steak Soup. Seafood holds its own corner, with Lake Erie pickerel pulled from the water down the road, crusted salmon, and a surf and turf for the full occasion.
Menu Tags
What to order
Tiers reflect how diners actually talk about each dish — Diamond is the rarest. Tap a dish to cast your vote.
The restaurant ties classic steak cuts and chophouse starters to Ontario meat, produce, and local supplier relationships.
02
Chef-Owned Special Occasion Room
Named chef-owners Cody Northgrave and Paul Sauve give the intimate room a clear hospitality and kitchen identity.
03
Prix Fixe With Real Menu Anchors
The Sunday-through-Thursday prix fixe connects value to recognizable dishes rather than a separate discount-only offer.
Restaurantica Analysis
How the score breaks down
9.0
Uniqueness
9/10
Bang For Buck
8/10
Food Quality
9.5/10
Local Reputation
9.5/10
Popularity Factor
9/10
The Playbook
How to eat at Take Five Bistro
1
Anchor the Table With Ribeye
Use the Ribeye when the table needs a straight read on the steakhouse. It keeps the order classic, gives the kitchen's beef program the center of the plate, and leaves room for a shared starter or dessert without making the meal feel overworked.
2
Make White Cheddar & Bacon Filet Mignon the Rich Move
Choose White Cheddar & Bacon Filet Mignon when the table wants the steak order to feel more indulgent than a baseline filet. It fits the room's special-occasion lane and pairs naturally with a restrained first course instead of stacking richness everywhere.
3
Start With Mini Beef Wellingtons Before Steaks
Mini Beef Wellingtons are the cleanest way to open with the restaurant's steakhouse identity before the main cuts arrive. They make more sense than a generic share plate when the goal is to keep the whole meal pointed at the chophouse side of the menu.
4
Turn Sunday Prix Fixe Into a Full Chophouse Pass
From Sunday through Thursday, the three-course prix fixe is the value move for diners who still want a complete dinner. Build it around Lake Erie Pickerel or Beef Bourguignon, then finish with Peppered Strawberry Flambe when dessert matters.
5
Bridge Steak and Seafood With Tenderloin Neptune
Tenderloin Neptune is the order for someone split between the steakhouse and seafood sides of the menu. It keeps the table anchored in beef while adding a more celebratory seafood accent, which works especially well for date nights and birthdays.
Key Strengths
What this room does best
8.0
Special Occasion
Take Five works best when the meal needs to feel deliberate: polished steak cuts, classic starters, desserts, and a cozy dining room give anniversaries, birthdays, and quiet celebrations enough structure without turning the night stiff.
8.0
Date Night Magnet
The room leans intimate rather than loud, and the menu gives couples an easy path from Mini Beef Wellingtons or escargot into steak, seafood, and dessert. It suits diners who want a planned night out over a quick bite.
7.5
Signature Chef Restaurants
Chef co-owners Cody Northgrave and Paul Sauve give the restaurant a clear identity: steakhouse classics, Ontario sourcing, and a compact menu that reads like a kitchen with named ownership behind it.
7.5
Locally Sourced & Sustainable
The restaurant positions Ontario meat and produce as part of the dining experience, tying its steakhouse identity to local suppliers and the broader Windsor food community without making the menu feel preachy.
7.0
Business Dining
Reservations, a licensed bar, and a classic steakhouse menu make this a practical choice for client dinners or small team meals where the group needs reliable entrees, shared starters, and a polished room.
Community Reviews
What diners are saying
No reviews yet
Be the first to weigh in
Share the nuances of your visit to Take Five Bistro in Windsor — the standout dishes, the room, the service.