Last three... Went to The Pear Tree in Burnaby on the weekend, and was sadly disappointed. Were my expectations too high? You be the judge: The food and service deserve high marks for technical merit. No bonehead failures like an undercooked chicken or some such. My wife's starter was a pea-shoot salad with pear slivers. It was nice, though you couldn't taste any pear flavour, so why bother? My "lobster cappuccino" was a dish where they foamed a lobster bisque. Interesting, novel, but not great. I had the lamb main course, which was topped with some tasty scallops, and had an interesting jus underneath. But the lamb itself was . . .fine. I had tastier lamb at the Greek Festival on Boundary Road this year. And the pea-shoot salad returned as a side dish with my order. My wife's chicken was perfectly pleasant, though I thought it was good rather than interesting. But the presentation was just weird: four or five slices of chicken breast buried under a tan-coloured sauce, with not even a random sprig to break up the plate. Okay, there was some gnocchi off to one side. Did you know that gnocchi is rougly tan-coloured too? Seriously, it reminded me, looks-wise, of some sort of cafeteria mystery special. It was so weird I briefly wondered if it was some sort of culinary jest, in the style of the lobster cappuccino, only this time referencing bad cafeteria food. Again, it tasted pretty good. It just looked odd. So nothing really bad, but given the entree price of $20-30, and that pea-shoot salad costing something like $10 as a starter, I expected, well, the best food in Burnaby. I dropped nearly $100 on a meal, no alcohol, and it just wasn't impressive. I would have been much happier spending twice as much at Tojo's, or half as much at any number of nice places around town with good food. Pear Tree is widely acclaimed: what did I miss? The room is nicely styled.... Oh, and the other two "last threes" were Pajo's in Port Moody, which is always tasty for fish and chips (rumor for you: they're planning to open a year-round location in Port Coquitlam), and the Lougheed Wonton House, which has moved from its closed location on North Road by Lougheed Mall to St. John's Street in Port Moody, where Yan's used to be. Oh, and we had the Peking duck, which was pretty good. That last one is a major upgrade, since Yan's was a bit of a cruddy greasy-spoon Chinese restaurant, while Lougheed Wonton is a very good greasy-spoon Chinese restaurant. So good for me, not so good for everyone over by Lougheed Mall .