Poutine: Difference between revisions

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imported>Hayford Peirce
(changed a "was" to "is")
imported>Hayford Peirce
(yes, "fragments" is definitely the wrong word, as it means broken bits and pieces, not regular slices or stubs, or whatever)
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[[Image:Poutine.jpg|right|thumb|350px|{{#ifexist:Template:Poutine.jpg/credit|{{Poutine.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}A dish of poutine.]]
[[Image:Poutine.jpg|right|thumb|350px|{{#ifexist:Template:Poutine.jpg/credit|{{Poutine.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}A dish of poutine.]]
'''Poutine''' is a way of serving deep-fried potato fragments, popular in the [[Quebec|Province of Quebec]], [[Canada]].<ref name=NationalPost20071112>
'''Poutine''' is a way of serving deep-fried potato, popular in the [[Quebec|Province of Quebec]], [[Canada]].<ref name=NationalPost20071112>
{{cite news
{{cite news
| url=http://communities.canada.com/nationalpost/blogs/posted/archive/2007/11/12/poutine-quebec-s-signature-dish-turns-50.aspx
| url=http://communities.canada.com/nationalpost/blogs/posted/archive/2007/11/12/poutine-quebec-s-signature-dish-turns-50.aspx

Revision as of 14:22, 19 November 2007

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(CC) Photo: Peter Dutton
A dish of poutine.

Poutine is a way of serving deep-fried potato, popular in the Province of Quebec, Canada.[1][2][3] [4][5]

After frying the slices of deep-fried potatoes are mixed with fresh cheese curds, and then have hot gravy poured over them.

The National Post, in a retrospective, quotes Fernand Lachance, the self-described "father of poutine", as to how the dish got its name.[1] According to Lachance a customer asked him to mix the fried potatoes and cheese curds in a bag. Lachance says he replied:

Ça va te faire une maudite poutine" ("It's gonna make a hell of a mess"

According to Charles-Alexandre Theoret, the author of Maudite poutine!, the cheese curds are the key ingredient, and should be fresh enough to squeak, when bitten.[2]

The gravy is a later addition. Traditionally gravy based on chicken stock was used.

Role in popular culture

Poutine is not popular, or widely available, in the rest of Canada. Theoret is a political scientist, and his book uses poutine as a metaphor to discuss Quebec's role in Canada.

During the American Presidential campaign in the year 2000 Canadian comedian/journalist Rick Mercer asked candidate George W. Bush what he thought of the recent endorsement of his candidacy by Canadian "Prime Minister Jean Poutine".[5] Bush, who had been criticized for a lack of familiarity with the World outside the USA, was apparently unable to remember that the Canadian Prime Minister was named Chretien, not Poutine. The Montreal Gazette linked the rise in the popularity in the dish in the rest of Canada to Bush's unpopularity in Canada, and the ridicule to which this incident exposed him.

References