CANADA |
Beaver Tail Pastry
Beaver Tail Pastry |
Butter tarts
Butter tarts |
Nanaimo Bar
Nanaimo bar |
Pancakes with Maple Syrup
Pancakes and Canadian Maple Syrup |
Peameal bacon
Peameal bacon (cornmeal bacon) |
Peameal bacon is often served on a Kaiser roll as a sandwich. It is usually a general practice to add mayonnaise, lettuce, and tomato. Peameal bacon sandwiches are often considered to be a signature dish of Toronto, with the most famous vendors located at St. Lawrence Market.
Another common way of consumption is simply roasted and glazed with maple syrup.
Poutine
Poutine |
Tourtière
Tourtière |
There is no one correct filling, as the pie meat depends on what is available in regions. In coastal areas, fish such as salmon is commonly used, whereas pork, beef, rabbit, and game are often used inland. The tourtières of the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean area and Eastern Quebec are slow-cooked deep-dish meat pies made with potatoes and various meats (often including wild game) cut into small cubes.
Tourtière in Montreal is made with finely ground pork only (which can be hard to find as the meat is often ground too coarsely elsewhere). Water is added to the meat after browning and the addition of cinnamon and cloves is what makes it unique. Many people use ketchup as a condiment, though the tourtière is also often eaten with molasses.
Pemmican
Pemmican is a concentrated mixture of fat and protein used as a nutritious food. The specific ingredients used were usually whatever was available; the meat was often bison, moose, elk, or deer. Fruits such as cranberries and saskatoon berries were sometimes added. Cherries, currants, chokeberries and blueberries were also used, but almost exclusively in ceremonial and wedding pemmican.
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