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A Canadian sandwich with 5,343 calories

November 07, 2010 By: bozobouffe Category: Uncategorized

Bacon, poutine and French toast – what’s more Québécois than that? Hot dogs and maple syrup?

Four Montrealers have created a gargantuan sandwich, the Angry French Canadian, which combines all of those things, plus eggs, on a wonderfully greasy baguette that weighs in at 5,343 calories.

Read more: Epic sandwich is distinctly Québécois

Tim Hortons lineups force town to change

November 04, 2010 By: bozobouffe Category: Uncategorized

Starting on Monday, Pierrefonds-Roxboro will re-route traffic near a local Tim Horton’s to prevent traffic tie-ups.

Borough mayor, Monique Worth, says the drive-thru at the corner of Antoine Faucon street and St-Charles Boulevard is so popular that people are having trouble getting to work during the morning rush hour.

Read more: A Drive-thru Tim’s clogs traffic in Pierrefonds

Quebecers barred from top poutine contest

April 16, 2010 By: bozobouffe Category: Uncategorized

MONTREAL – One of Quebec’s cultural symbols has been called everything from disgusting, to heart-attack inducing, to delectable.

But can the increasingly popular Quebecois dish known as poutine -that messy mix of french fries, sauce and cheese curds -now be considered a gooey source of Canada-wide pride?

Read more here: World poutine-eating contest to be held in Toronto. Yes, that’s right. T.O.

It’s all in the curds: Quebecois mainstay poutine making culinary inroads in US

January 13, 2010 By: bozobouffe Category: Uncategorized

By Sheryl Ubelacker, The Canadian Press

Unless it’s maple syrup, it’s unlikely many Americans could identify an example of truly Canadian cuisine. But it seems one national dish, a belly-busting concoction born in La Belle province, is creating a buzz south of the border.

Poutine – a mixture of French fries, cheese curds and hot gravy – is making it onto menus alongside typical American fare like cheeseburgers and chili dogs.

Thierry Pepin, an actor and model who moved to New York from his native Quebec six years ago, opened a restaurant last summer dedicated to the hearty dish. T-Poutine (the T is for Thierry) is located in the Lower East Side, close to bars and the club scene, and offers 12 different variations of the item on its menu.

“It’s great, but it’s not easy,” says Pepin of the reaction to the calorie-laden creation, often described as a “heart attack on a plate.”

“A lot of Americans haven’t heard about it, are skeptical about it. But the ones that come to the restaurant open-minded, they want to try it. For the most part, they all love it.”

The rib-sticking dish is believed to have originated in rural Quebec in the 1950s, and several communities lay claim as its birthplace. One such tale involves Fernand Lachance of Warwick, Que., who was asked by a customer to add cheese curds to an order of fries and deemed it “une maudite poutine (roughly translated as “an unholy mess”). The addition of gravy came later.

Pepin says many of his customers are New Yorkers who attended McGill University in Montreal and got hooked on poutine. Canadians living in the Big Apple are also regulars, he says.

Now, it seems, poutine is going mainstream. T-Poutine and Pepin were recently featured on ABC News, which took a lighthearted look – replete with Mounties and lots of frozen tundra – at the invasion of this most Canadian of foods into the heart of its southern neighbour.

Poutine is also a big hit in south Florida, where the Grenier family has been serving the dressed-up french fries at their Dairy Belle ice cream parlour/fast-food outlet in Dania Beach for the last decade.

(more…)

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