| Michel Boucher |
From today's National Post:
canola oil
ginger ale
instant mashed potatoes
Marquis wheat
McIntosh apples (and not macintosh as in the computer)
pablum
poutine
processed cheese
yukon gold potatoes
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| aem |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> From today's National Post:
>
> canola oil
> ginger ale
> instant mashed potatoes
> Marquis wheat
> McIntosh apples (and not macintosh as in the computer)
> pablum
> poutine
> processed cheese
> yukon gold potatoes
>
You can have the canola oil, the instant spuds, the pablum, the
cheese-type food, and especially that foul poutine stuff.
According to this link ginger ale was already being imported to the US
from Ireland in the 1850's. The US version by Vernor came along a few
years later. When was the Canadian version "invented"?
I do like Yukon golds for their versatility. -aem
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| ~patches~ |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> From today's National Post:
>
> canola oil
> ginger ale
> instant mashed potatoes
> Marquis wheat
> McIntosh apples (and not macintosh as in the computer)
> pablum
> poutine
> processed cheese
> yukon gold potatoes
>
Hey they forgot peameal bacon ;(
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| George |
aem wrote:
> Michel Boucher wrote:
>
>>From today's National Post:
>>
>>canola oil
>>ginger ale
>>[snip]
>
>
> Sorry, forgot the link:
> http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dins/history/gingerale.shtml
>
I am going to try making that syrup. All of the commercial "ginger ale"
I can find seems to be 50% (or more) HFCS.
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| Mark Thorson |
George wrote:
>
> I am going to try making that syrup. All of the commercial "ginger ale"
> I can find seems to be 50% (or more) HFCS.
You know why that is, don't you?
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| Michel Boucher |
"aem" <aem_again@yahoo.com> wrote in
news:1131832754.152270.186840@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:
> You can have the canola oil, the instant spuds, the pablum, the
> cheese-type food, and especially that foul poutine stuff.
How, pray tell is poutine foul? Have you ever eaten a good one?
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| Michel Boucher |
"aem" <aem_again@yahoo.com> wrote in news:1131832811.299919.315480
@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:
> Michel Boucher wrote:
>> From today's National Post:
>>
>> canola oil
>> ginger ale
>>[snip]
>
> Sorry, forgot the link:
> http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dins/history/gingerale.shtml
Sorry, that should have been pale dry ginger ale which was patented as
Canada Dry. There is a reason for calling it Canada Dry :-)
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| Michel Boucher |
~patches~ <noones_home@thisaddress.com> wrote in
news:11ncsv65v018k2c@corp.supernews.com:
> Michel Boucher wrote:
>
>> From today's National Post:
>>
>> canola oil
>> ginger ale
>> instant mashed potatoes
>> Marquis wheat
>> McIntosh apples (and not macintosh as in the computer)
>> pablum
>> poutine
>> processed cheese
>> yukon gold potatoes
>>
> Hey they forgot peameal bacon ;(
That's just a preparation for pork, it is neither a dish nor a
process.
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| Sheldon |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> "aem" wrote in
>
> > You can have the canola oil, the instant spuds, the pablum, the
> > cheese-type food, and especially that foul poutine stuff.
>
> How, pray tell is poutine foul?
Have you ever looked at it?
> Have you ever eaten a good one?
Have you ever looked at it?
Sheldon
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| Sheldon |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> ~patches~ <noones_home@thisaddress.com> wrote in
> news:11ncsv65v018k2c@corp.supernews.com:
>
> > Michel Boucher wrote:
> >
> >> From today's National Post:
> >>
> >> canola oil
> >> ginger ale
> >> instant mashed potatoes
> >> Marquis wheat
> >> McIntosh apples (and not macintosh as in the computer)
> >> pablum
> >> poutine
> >> processed cheese
> >> yukon gold potatoes
> >>
> > Hey they forgot peameal bacon ;(
>
> That's just a preparation for pork, it is neither a dish nor a
> process.
Of course it's a process... all bacon is processed... do you think meat
is just sliced off the pig already cured/pickled... maybe from your
drunken butt. Actually there is no cut of pork called bacon...
American style bacon is *processed* "side pork"... Canadian style bacon
is *processed* "pork loin".
That said Canadian style bacon is actually a British process.
Sheldon
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| janospetrik@hotmail.com |
<From today's National Post:
canola oil
ginger ale
instant mashed potatoes
Marquis wheat
McIntosh apples (and not macintosh as in the computer)
pablum
poutine
processed cheese
yukon gold potatoes>
Canola oil
Ginger ale (when made with Cane sugar, NOT HFCS).
McIntosh apples
Yukon Gold potatoes...
Are 4 things I would not like to live without.
Thanks, Canada
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| Michel Boucher |
"janospetrik@hotmail.com" <janospetrik@hotmail.com> wrote in
news:1131842448.474957.288850@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:
> Ginger ale (when made with Cane sugar, NOT HFCS).
In Canada, we use true cane sugar from Cuba. Yumyum :-)
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| ~patches~ |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> "janospetrik@hotmail.com" <janospetrik@hotmail.com> wrote in
> news:1131842448.474957.288850@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:
>
>
>>Ginger ale (when made with Cane sugar, NOT HFCS).
>
>
> In Canada, we use true cane sugar from Cuba. Yumyum :-)
>
DD just got back from a week in Cuba. They are home this weekend. Last
night we watched a DVD of one of the tours they were on. She said that
rice in some form was served at every meal. She also said that any
traditional Cuban food was done very nicely but other types of food were
done poorly to the point of almost being inedible. One roast had been
cooked to the point of shoe leather. She managed to get a few recipes
and pics of some of the foods so once she gets things organized, she'll
send them to me so I can share them with the newsgroup.
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| Wayne Boatwright |
On Sun 13 Nov 2005 07:19:09a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it ~patches~?
> Michel Boucher wrote:
>
>> "janospetrik@hotmail.com" <janospetrik@hotmail.com> wrote in
>> news:1131842448.474957.288850@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:
>>
>>
>>>Ginger ale (when made with Cane sugar, NOT HFCS).
>>
>>
>> In Canada, we use true cane sugar from Cuba. Yumyum :-)
>>
>
> DD just got back from a week in Cuba. They are home this weekend. Last
> night we watched a DVD of one of the tours they were on. She said that
> rice in some form was served at every meal. She also said that any
> traditional Cuban food was done very nicely but other types of food were
> done poorly to the point of almost being inedible. One roast had been
> cooked to the point of shoe leather. She managed to get a few recipes
> and pics of some of the foods so once she gets things organized, she'll
> send them to me so I can share them with the newsgroup.
>
Sounds interesting. My grandparents used to vacation in pre-Castro Cuba
and really loved it, and the food.
--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
_____________________________________________
A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken!
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| sarah bennett |
Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking
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Sheldon wrote:
> Michel Boucher wrote:
>
>>"aem" wrote in
>>
>>
>>>You can have the canola oil, the instant spuds, the pablum, the
>>>cheese-type food, and especially that foul poutine stuff.
>>
>>How, pray tell is poutine foul?
>
>
> Have you ever looked at it?
>
>
>>Have you ever eaten a good one?
>
>
> Have you ever looked at it?
>
> Sheldon
>
there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one
of them :)
--
saerah
"Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a
disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice."
-Baruch Spinoza
"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly
what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear
and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There
is another theory which states that this has already happened."
-Douglas Adams
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| Gabby |
"sarah bennett" <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com...
> there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one of
> them :)
Nothing that makes french fries soggy is good. ;o)
Gabby
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| Michel Boucher |
~patches~ <noones_home@thisaddress.com> wrote in
news:11neikvg11uprcf@corp.supernews.com:
> Michel Boucher wrote:
>
>> "janospetrik@hotmail.com" <janospetrik@hotmail.com> wrote in
>> news:1131842448.474957.288850@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:
>>
>>>Ginger ale (when made with Cane sugar, NOT HFCS).
>>
>> In Canada, we use true cane sugar from Cuba. Yumyum :-)
>
> DD just got back from a week in Cuba. They are home this weekend.
> Last night we watched a DVD of one of the tours they were on.
> She said that rice in some form was served at every meal. She
> also said that any traditional Cuban food was done very nicely but
> other types of food were done poorly to the point of almost being
> inedible. One roast had been cooked to the point of shoe leather.
> She managed to get a few recipes and pics of some of the foods so
> once she gets things organized, she'll send them to me so I can
> share them with the newsgroup.
When my sister went to Cuba a few years ago, I got her to bring me
back a used book of Cuban cuisine. Obviously, it's in spanish and
it's a cheap popular edition: Recetas útiles de cocina, by Guadalupe
Ramirez, Editorial Oriente, 1991. It was more for the interest than
the actual attempt to cook Cuban food. I have heard from others that
the food served to tourists was poorly prepared, but that if you took
a room with a family, you stood a better chance of eating well.
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| Dan Abel |
In article <NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com>,
sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one
> of them :)
Never tried it.
One of my favorite foods as a child, which I haven't had for a while is
cottage cheese with baked potatoes.
Put some potatoes in the oven. Dump cottage cheese in a bowl and add
chopped onions. I like any kind, green, yellow, white or red, whatever
you like. Mix well. The cottage cheese mixture will come to room
temperature while the potatoes cook. When the potatoes are done, put
one on a plate, cut the top and add cottage cheese mixture. I usually
add a spice mixture to the top. Currently we use Penzey's Salad
Elegant, but we used something similar before.
--
Dan Abel
dabel@sonic.net
Petaluma, California, USA
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| sf |
On Sun, 13 Nov 2005 20:34:49 -0800, Dan Abel wrote:
> In article <NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com>,
> sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>
>
> > there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one
> > of them :)
>
> Never tried it.
>
I've never looked for a recipe or an image of poutine before
this....but I googled it tonight. LOL It looks like the French
Quebec equivalent of cheese fries.
It's french fries, cottage cheese (they call it cheddar cheese curds)
and brown chicken gravy.... they laugh at our fast food. <snork>
--
Practice safe eating. Always use condiments.
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| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Sun, 13 Nov 2005 22:15:36 -0800, sf <see_reply_address@nospam.com>
wrote:
>I've never looked for a recipe or an image of poutine before
>this....but I googled it tonight. LOL It looks like the French
>Quebec equivalent of cheese fries.
>
>It's french fries, cottage cheese (they call it cheddar cheese curds)
>and brown chicken gravy.... they laugh at our fast food. <snork>
Ahhhh ... you're not from dairy country.
Cheddar cheese curds are nuggets of fresh cheddar cheese, big enough
to pick up and eat as finger food. Around here, they come in
mozzarella and cheddar. Possibly others that I haven't noticed. And
various flavored versions of the above.
Ya learn something new every day,
Carol
--
Wash away the gray to respond.
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| Michel Boucher |
sf <see_reply_address@nospam.com> wrote in
news:24agn1l0rcee65d2kt41okkobnp25k2qvk@4ax.com:
> It's french fries, cottage cheese (they call it cheddar cheese
> curds) and brown chicken gravy....
The freshness of the cheese is very important, It has to be made
that day for the poutine to be good otherwise it's like eating an
oreo cookie and calling it a chocolate cake (not even close). The
cheese is fresh cheddar cheese in curds (fromage en grains), not
cottage cheese (which is why it's called cheddar cheese curds in
English) and brown sauce, not chicken gravy. It can also be served
with a sauce bolognaise (poutine italienne) or with chicken and a
chicken gravy. Where did you find this fount of misinformation?
> they laugh at our fast food.
> <snork> --
Who said we laugh at your food? Prepared foods (like soups used as
sauces, yes, because...well...just because) but not fresh foods, like
poutine. Read this instead:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poutine
Ignore the bit about New Brunswick. I'm going to submit a
correction. Their poutine, although made with potato, has no other
commonality with Québec poutine. And just as an aside, there is no
such thing as French Quebec, there is only Québec and it is a
province of Canada.
--
"Compassion is the chief law of human existence."
Dostoevski, The Idiot
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| ~patches~ |
sf wrote:
> On Sun, 13 Nov 2005 20:34:49 -0800, Dan Abel wrote:
>
>
>> In article <NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com>,
>> sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>> > there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one
>> > of them :)
>>
>> Never tried it.
>>
>
> I've never looked for a recipe or an image of poutine before
> this....but I googled it tonight. LOL It looks like the French
> Quebec equivalent of cheese fries.
>
> It's french fries, cottage cheese (they call it cheddar cheese curds)
Cheddar cheese curds are much larger and saltier than cottage cheese
curds and have none of the creamy liquid of cottage cheese. They are
rather crumbly. You can buy cheddar cheese curds in the cheese section
in some stores. DMIL used to include them on her cheese trays.
> and brown chicken gravy.... they laugh at our fast food. <snork>
Personally I laught at all fast food ;)
> --
>
> Practice safe eating. Always use condiments.
|
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| Kate Connally |
Gabby wrote:
>
> "sarah bennett" <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
> news:NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com...
> > there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one of
> > them :)
>
> Nothing that makes french fries soggy is good. ;o)
Well, if you eat it fast enough the fries don't
get soggy, especially if they're crispy enough to
begin with. :-)
Kate
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| Bob Terwilliger |
sarah replied to Sheldon:
>>>How, pray tell is poutine foul?
>>
>>
>> Have you ever looked at it?
>>
>>
>>>Have you ever eaten a good one?
>>
>>
>> Have you ever looked at it?
>>
>> Sheldon
>>
>
> there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one of
> them :)
Sheldon eats head cheese. He's hardly in a position to pass judgment on the
appearance of food.
Bob
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| A.C. |
Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> Ahhhh ... you're not from dairy country.
>
> Cheddar cheese curds are nuggets of fresh cheddar cheese, big enough
> to pick up and eat as finger food. Around here, they come in
> mozzarella and cheddar. Possibly others that I haven't noticed. And
> various flavored versions of the above.
mmmmmm squeaky cheese :P
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| Brian Huntley |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> Ignore the bit about New Brunswick. I'm going to submit a
> correction. Their poutine, although made with potato, has no other
> commonality with Qu=E9bec poutine.
Perhaps not, but it's been around longer than 1957.
In Acadian parts of NB (ie the east coast of the province) you can buy
poutine rapee in large cans in grocery stores. You might find it at a
farmer's market, too, if you want to start your day with a heart
attack, but if you're in the market in Dieppe, go to the Thai food
stand instead - you won't be disappointed.
|
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| ~patches~ |
sf wrote:
> On Sun, 13 Nov 2005 20:34:49 -0800, Dan Abel wrote:
>
>
>> In article <NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com>,
>> sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>> > there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one
>> > of them :)
>>
>> Never tried it.
>>
>
> I've never looked for a recipe or an image of poutine before
> this....but I googled it tonight. LOL It looks like the French
> Quebec equivalent of cheese fries.
>
> It's french fries, cottage cheese (they call it cheddar cheese curds)
Cheddar cheese curds are much larger and saltier than cottage cheese
curds and have none of the creamy liquid of cottage cheese. They are
rather crumbly. You can buy cheddar cheese curds in the cheese section
in some stores. DMIL used to include them on her cheese trays.
> and brown chicken gravy.... they laugh at our fast food. <snork>
Personally I laught at all fast food ;)
> --
>
> Practice safe eating. Always use condiments.
|
|
|
| Kate Connally |
Gabby wrote:
>
> "sarah bennett" <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
> news:NfKdf.7089$8W.459@newssvr30.news.prodigy.com...
> > there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one of
> > them :)
>
> Nothing that makes french fries soggy is good. ;o)
Well, if you eat it fast enough the fries don't
get soggy, especially if they're crispy enough to
begin with. :-)
Kate
|
|
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| Bob Terwilliger |
sarah replied to Sheldon:
>>>How, pray tell is poutine foul?
>>
>>
>> Have you ever looked at it?
>>
>>
>>>Have you ever eaten a good one?
>>
>>
>> Have you ever looked at it?
>>
>> Sheldon
>>
>
> there are many foul looking things that taste very good. poutine is one of
> them :)
Sheldon eats head cheese. He's hardly in a position to pass judgment on the
appearance of food.
Bob
|
|
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| A.C. |
Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> Ahhhh ... you're not from dairy country.
>
> Cheddar cheese curds are nuggets of fresh cheddar cheese, big enough
> to pick up and eat as finger food. Around here, they come in
> mozzarella and cheddar. Possibly others that I haven't noticed. And
> various flavored versions of the above.
mmmmmm squeaky cheese :P
|
|
|
| Brian Huntley |
Michel Boucher wrote:
> Ignore the bit about New Brunswick. I'm going to submit a
> correction. Their poutine, although made with potato, has no other
> commonality with Qu=E9bec poutine.
Perhaps not, but it's been around longer than 1957.
In Acadian parts of NB (ie the east coast of the province) you can buy
poutine rapee in large cans in grocery stores. You might find it at a
farmer's market, too, if you want to start your day with a heart
attack, but if you're in the market in Dieppe, go to the Thai food
stand instead - you won't be disappointed.
|
|
|
|