Tag: poutine
The Swedish Chef makes Poutine in Montreal
Right, stop the internet. The Swedish Chef just won it. No need for anything else. Good night folks.
Success! well, kind of.
I have found a cheese producer that would sell me cheese curd. Yay. Unfortunately, it’s in Somerset (about 150 miles away) and the cost of having it shipped would be more than the value of the cheese. All is not lost though, as apparently there are some pubs in East Anglia that order cheese from them and I *might* be able to piggy back on their order.
I’m not giving up that easily :)
Current Mood: Amused
Poutine, how I miss thee.
Poutine. Just the word conjures up bafflement on this side of the pond. But oh, how I miss you, salty cheesy goodness.
I can get very good chips, and decent enough gravy. It’s the cheese curd that is missing.
From wikipedia:
Cheese curds are little-known in locations without cheese factories, because they should ideally be eaten within hours of manufacture. Their flavor is mild with about the same firmness as cheese, but has a springy or rubbery texture. Fresh curds squeak against the teeth when bitten into, a defining characteristic, due to air trapped inside of its porous body. Cheese curds are sometimes referred to as “Squeaky cheese”.
Yes, squeaky cheese is near on impossible to find here, and I have started a crusade to find me some! I’ve contacted and emailed local and traditional cheese producers to see if I can get some fresh curds shipped from their factory. So far, no luck. But I’m still chasing some leads.
Watch this space!
Current Mood: Mischievous
Poutine, how I miss you so…
Poutine no longer just a cheesy junk food treat
A foie gras poutine served at a festival in the central Quebec town Drummondville confirms the dish’s place in the world of haute cuisine.
One of the purported birthplaces of Quebec’s best-known dish – the french fry, cheese curd and gravy melange – held its first poutine festival last weekend. Mario Patry was the professional chef in charge of the Festival de la poutine de Drummondville. “That’s mine, that’s my creation,” he said of the foie gras poutine being sold.
“People want to eat better and better. And they’re connoisseurs.”
The town of 67,000, about an hour from Montreal, is where restaurateur Jean-Paul Roy of Le Roy Jucep restaurant claims to have invented the dish in 1964. The Quebec towns Warwick and Victoriaville also lay claim to being poutine’s birthplace. Members of Les Trois Accords, a popular Quebec rock group, organized the festival.
Band manager Charles Ouellet said members of the Drummondville-based group had been talking about organizing the festival for years.
“Poutine is very important to Drummondville,” he said.
“You associate Drummondville with poutine, not Rimouski.”
“I don’t know why (poutine has) become high class,” Ouellet said.
“People were shy to eat it – it’s working class. So maybe they tried to dress it up.”
“All poutines are great. Though certainly I have a hard time paying $18 for a poutine.”
The poutine that may have brought the meal into the upper-crust of the food community actually goes for $23. Au Pied de Cochon, a Montreal restaurant with an international reputation and a cult following, first topped poutine with 100 grams of duck foie gras back in 2002. “There is a strong argument to be made that the recent rise in interest in poutine can be traced to the time Au Pied de Cochon started offering its poutine au foie gras,” said Bob Rutledge in an email interview.
Rutledge is a professor of astrophysics at McGill University and runs the website montrealpoutine.com.
“What makes that poutine special isn’t that they throw a slab of foie gras on top. In fact, they incorporate foie gras into…the sauce they use and it is tremendous. The foie gras added on top is almost secondary,” he said.
It’s a long way from the meal’s working-class roots, although restaurateurs have been offering variations on the dish for decades. Le Roy Jucep has 16 different kinds on its menu. A popular poutine spot in Montreal, La Banquise, has 25. And there are variations, even with the classic poutine. Restaurants in the Drummondville region traditionally add a tomato puree to their sauce, increasing its sweetness. In Montreal, poutine is the commonly made with a dark-brown, chicken-based gravy. Now, haute cuisine versions of the poutine are setting the standards for how it should taste and are upping the bar, said Rutledge.
Sherbrooke resident Mathieu Pelletier, who attended the festival, agreed. “I think next year they should push the refined side of poutine,” he said after trying Patry’s foie gras version. “It’s rethinking the classics.”
Poutine is one of many low-brow foods given a high-minded treatment, putting it in the company of lobster, okra, and pizza as foods that have been gussied up for the upper classes, said Rutledge.
“The result of these efforts is that more ‘normal’ poutine places step up their games.”
Still, the classic poutine is a perennial favourite.
Of the 1,500 poutines sold at the festival on Friday alone, most were the traditional version.
“The classic will always have a place,” Patry said. “It will always be the ultimate poutine”
Poutine is one of those things that I really, really miss from Quebec. We have great chips here, good enough gravy, but you can’t get squeaky cheese curd. St-Albert cheddar rocks and there is no substitute for the real thing. Mozzarella just doesn’t cut it. If anybody can recommend a good, melty, stringy cheese to make a good poutine, I’m all ears!
A little taste of home
I had poutine tonight, or the closest British equivalent. We had chip-shop chips (which I have to say are better then their Canadian bretheren), with an assload of Bisto gravy and some grated cheese. That was the only letdown – I can't find fresh milk cheese curds hereabouts :( It was nummylicious! Thanks petkatyyazzick!