A Journey Through Canada`s Culinary History
Transcription
A Journey Through Canada`s Culinary History
From Pemmican To Poutine A Journey Through Canada’s Culinary History Canadian Cuisine??? • Does Canada even have a Cuisine? • Is it the Roasted Arctic Animals and boiled Backyard Critters ? • Or is the same as the American Cuisine? YES !!!! YES • Canada does have a Rich and Diverse Food Culture, that has spanned, the whole of its History. • The uniqueness of Canadian Cuisine is that, it is primarily based on Ingredients, as opposed to flavours – the ingredients that is native to different regions of Canada, and the ones that is acquired from various early settlers. But, where did it all start? • Was it John Cabot or Jacques Cartier? • Was it the Vikings? • Archaeologists have discovered Viking houses in Labrador as early as 1000 CE • As early as 1199 Europeans have been coming to Canada to hunt whales and cod. • In 1605 the first French settled in Nova Scotia and proclaimed the area as New France (L’Acadie) – Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick and Eastern Quebec. How did the French Canadian Cuisine get its existence? • In 1534 Jacques Cartier came through Labrador to PEI and then turned into the Gulf of St Lawrence towards Quebec City. • The French settlers could not bring with them the delicate, rich flavours due to the harsh weather. • The traditional French cooking methods & utensils had to be adapted to the local ingredients and lifestyle. French Canadian Cuisine • Not only the weather and the land, religion had a huge role to play in development of this Cuisine. • French Settlers were generally Catholic, and the church calendar included 165 “no-meat” days. • Hence seafood played a very important role in the diet. • This accounts for, why very few French Settlers ventured far from the Eastern Coast The Import • Major imports from France and Europe included Salt pork, Game meats, butter, cheese. • As settlements became well established, people diversified into farming crops, raise cattles and pigs. • Potato and Turnip crop flourished and became a strong part of Quebec cuisine. Some Traditional Acadian Ingredients • Cheeses • Game meats • Potato & Turnips • Berries – Partridgeberry, BakeApple (Cloudberry), Squashberry, Blueberry • Seafood – Cod, Flippers, lobsters, mussels Modern Acadian Ingredient • • • • Duck Fiddlehead Maple Eel Some Traditional Acadian Menu Items: • • • • • • • • Rappie Pie Fricot Grunt Figgy Duff Toutons Oreilles de crisse (Salt Pork Crisps) Soupe aux pois jaunes (Yellow pea soup) Pate Chinois Rappie Pie • Exclusive to Acadian communities of southwest Nova Scotia • Its name comes from patates râpées, which is French for “grated potatoes” • some of the Acadians who spent their exile in Boston met Germans who taught them their nation’s recipes for using grated potato in meat dishes. • These Acadians returned to Nova Scotia where the rocky soil and harsher climate of the lands left to them turned out to be good for growing root vegetables like potatoes and turnips. • This and other dishes developed in this time period make good use of potatoes as filler, to satisfy stomachs while conserving meat. Fricot • The word fricot originated in France in the 1700s meaning a feast; by the 1800s it had come to mean specifically “meat stew” and later it became a general term for prepared food. • The Acadians largely lived off the land and preferred to keep their recipes simple; a few local ingredients cooked together in one pot • A fricot uses potatoes, onions, and whatever meat was available by season – rabbit, Hens, pork, clams, beef • A strong part of Acadian food culture that the phrase used to call the family to dinner is often “Au fricot!” GRUNT • Primarily local Blueberries were used for this. • The name “grunt” comes from the sound the berries make while they are being cooked down. • Blueberry grunt is thought to have come about when British settlers tried to adapt their favourite puddings to the local produce and primitive cooking utensils that were available to them in the new world • This dish became so well liked that it was often used as a breakfast, or even a main dish; it wasn’t until the nineteenth century that it became primarily served as a dessert. FIGGY DUFF • originated in sixteenth century Newfoundland • It does not contain figs, but raisins, which were traditionally called “figs” in many parts of the province • “Duff” is the northern British pronunciation of the word “dough” • The dessert was likely derived from the British dish Spotted Dick that would have been brought to the New World by English and Irish settlers. Touton • Is most popular in Newfoundland and Labrador area • Fried bread dough – traditionally eaten with molasses • Some deep fries the touton and other pan fry them. Touton - History • Newfoundlanders : The left over bread dough, from the bread that mom made • My Version : When the French Settlers came to Newfoundland, they brought with them some French ``commoners`` food – Beignets. And Newfoundlanders took the Beignets and added their touch with Molasses and called it Touton Oreilles de Crisse (Salt Pork Crisps) • Is made by frying strips of salt pork until they curl to resemble ears, which they call “Christ’s ears”. • Oreilles de Crisse are part of the traditional foods served smothered in maple syrup at a cabane a sucre, or sugar shack, during the maple syrup season Soupe Aux Pois Jaunes (Yellow Pea Soup) • Peas became a primary crop in New France after a large-scale failure of the wheat crops in the early 1800s. • Canadian peas became highly prized in Europe for being exceptionally tasty. • Soupe aux poix jaunes has long been fixed in the minds of Canadians as a traditional Quebec dish. • The salt pork is sometimes removed from the soup after cooking and served on the side in thin slices. Pate Chinois • Pâté chinois is another dish whose origin is wrapped in mystery • British railway overseers taught the workers how to make a version of English cottage pie using cans of creamed corn. • The Chinese labourers liked it so much that they continued to prepare it after the railway was finished and they had moved on to textile mill cities, where they taught the dish to their French Canadian co-workers. A Few More Acadian Menu Items • • • • • Poutine Tourtiere Tarte Au Sucre (Sugar Pie) Oatcakes Seafood chowder TOURTIERE • Originated in Quebec in the early days of New France • Was originally prepared using wild doves, called tourterelles in French • Tourtières have been used in kitchens in France since medieval times. They were made of porcelain, glass, or clay and were used to make tourtes (pies), tarts, or flan • The meat was usually spiced using the medieval French meat spices of cinnamon, cloves, and allspice and the pie also included onions and potatoes for thickening Tarte Au Sucre (Sugar Pie) • Developed as a way to prepare a dessert pie late in the winter season after supplies of the usual pie fillings such as fruit had been used up • Tarte au sucre can be traced back to a white sugar pie found in old cookbooks from Normandy and Poitou, areas that saw a lot of emigration to New France • Tarte au sucre a la Gaspésienne is sugar pie that includes evaporated milk and rolled oats; an influence of the Scottish immigrants in the Gaspé region who grew oats on their homesteads Oatcakes • In 1775 the ship Elizabeth, bound for Prince Edward Island, found herself caught in a November storm. All lives were saved and able to make it to shore by lifeboats but it took three days for the storm to clear and the winds to die down. When the men were able to return to the ship to retrieve provisions, all they found for food was a few sides of bacon, some pickled herring, a puncheon of rum, and a cask of oatmeal that had washed ashore. The waves had knocked the top off the cask letting in salt water and sand, but they ate it anyway. The women made oatcakes and roasted them over the fire, using what was left. Seafood Chowder • Chowders were a mainstay of settler cultures who had to find creative ways to make hearty meals out of what they could grow, hunt, or forage • Liberal use of shellfish indigenous to the region. Mussels, scallops, shrimp, oysters, clams, crabs, even lobster along with local fish like white fish or cod were often readily available The Cheese • Start of Cheese making in Canada dates back to early 1610, when cattle was first introduced in Quebec by Samuel de Champlain. • French settlers made ripened cheeses according to recipes they had bought with them, and as early as 1630, Acadians supplied cheese for the returning French fleet. Heritage of Cheese making • Double-stranded – Woven from French and English Heritage. • French influence – soft, ripened cheeses • British – Cheddar • Cheese continued to be made in small home-made batches and even exported by 19th century. • In 1864, Harvey Farrington set up the first large scale cheese factory in Norwich, Ontario – The Pioneer. • By 1867 there were 200 Cheese factories in Ontario alone. Cheese Facts • Quebec is nick named “cheese heaven” • ¾ of Canada’s Cheeses are produced in Quebec • 60% of all fine cheeses are produced in Quebec • Quebec is the home of over 100 cheese makers • Quebec is best known for its specialty cheeses • Quebec boasts one of the top per capita cheese consumption volume in the country – 8kgs/year/person. Specialty Cheese - Example • Alfred Le Fermier : Organic Raw Cow Milk cheese. Pressed, cooked paste cheese with a washed rind. Nutty and floral flavour tones. Pairs well with medium to full bodied reds. Specialty Cheese - Example • Hercule De Charlevoix: Firm cheese – aged 6 to 18 months Dark Yellow interior Texture – Hard to Granular With Age – texture improves, and flavour develops without bitterness First Canadian Alpine style cheese that is comparable to “noble cheeses” Nutty, Sweet, fruity aroma Pairs well with Sherry and Fortified Wines Specialty Cheese - Example • Baluchon: Semi-Firm washed rind, that is based on Oka Aged for at least 60 days Unique cheese, accented by the terroir and the diet fed to the herd of cows which provide the fragrant raw milk Golden cheese with tiny holes and creamy texture Creamy, sweet and barny aroma Mellow, earthy and fruity, and is complemented by a rougher, earthy, slightly bitter rind Pairs with a light, fruity red like a Pinot Noir or a light ale. Specialty Cheese - Example • Le Ciel de Charlevoix: Raw Milk Cheese produced in Baie-Saint-Paul Minimum 60 days aged Award winning Blue Cheese Relatively mild.. Great starter cheese Rind is brown and earthy Aroma – Deep, tart and complex Flavours are a perfect mixture of salty, sweet and earthy Pair with a sweet liqueur or a sweet wine Poutine • Origin: 1957, Fernand LaChance of Warwick, Quebec • Restaurant : Lutin Qui Rit • Poutine means “a mess” or more specifically “an unappealing mixture of things or food” • The “sauce” was added to keep everything warm and to lightly melt the cheese • Quebecers, proud of haute cuisine are irked that this low brow junk food is their most well known dish Traditional Poutine • The key for this dish is a fresh cheese curd… should squeak, when you bite into them. • Earliest Poutine were made with a tomato-based sauce • LaChance’s poutine used his house sauce of brown sugar, ketchup and Worcestershire Sauce • Another claimed “inventor” of Poutine, Roy le Jecup used a sweet & sour tomato based sauce Today’s Poutine • Poutine a part of Haute Cuisine • Cheese curds are more or less constant, but have seen Chefs using Brie, Bleu, Jalapeno Havarti being used • Gravy is where most Chef play with, have seen a variety of options Elk Ragout, Butter Chicken, Beef Bourgignon, Sweet & Sour, Mole, Fricot, Chili, seafood chowder etc.. • Regular French Fries has been replaced by sweet potato fries, Curly Fries, Lattice cut fries etc.. From Pemmican To Poutine www.chefsuman.ca A Journey Through Canada’s Culinary History