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Tourtière (French:, Quebec French: [tuʁt͡sjaɛ̯ʁ]) is a French Canadian meat pie dish originating from the province of Quebec, usually made with minced pork, veal or beef and potatoes. Wild game is sometimes used. [ 1 ]
The tourtière du Lac-Saint-Jean differs from a regular tourtière by having thicker crust, cubes of potatoes, meats and broth (instead of only minced meat), as well as being placed in a much larger and deeper container. Like a regular tourtière, the meat chosen is usually pork, beef or veal.
Jean-Marie Francœur, La genèse de la cuisine québécoise, Fides, 2011. (ISBN 9782762130294) Jean Soulard, 400 ans de gastronomie à Québec, Éditions Communiplex et J. Soulard, 2008. Lemasson Jean-Pierre, Le mystère insondable du pâté chinois, Amérik Média editions, October 2009.
^ Micheline Mongrain-Dontigny, La Cuisine traditionnelle de Charlevoix, La Tuque, Éditions La Bonne recette, 1996, 177 p. (ISBN 978-2-9804058-3-9). ^ Micheline Mongrain-Dontigny, La Cuisine traditionnelle de la Mauricie. Un patrimoine culinaire à découvrir, Montréal, Éditions La Bonne recette, 1998, 181 p
The pouding chômeur is a basic cake batter onto which a hot syrup, typically maple or caramel is poured before baking. The cake then rises through the liquid which settles at the bottom of the pan, mixing with the batter and creating a distinct layer at the bottom of the dish.
Pigeon pie is a savoury game pie made of pigeon meat and various other ingredients traditional to French cuisine and present in other European cuisines. [1] It has been eaten at least as early as 1670 in French cuisine.
Salmon pie, known as pâté au saumon in Quebec, is a pie or variant of tourtière filled with salmon. [1]In Ireland, the most popular form of salmon pie resembles more chicken pie, where distinct pieces of salmon are cooked in the pie, in a sauce resembling suprême sauce, in the base of which other ingredients have been cooked.
Marielle Cormier Boudreau and Melvin Gallant, La Cuisine traditionnelle en Acadie : historique des traditions et coutumes culinaires chez les Acadiens du Nouveau-Brunswick, de la Nouvelle-Écosse, de l'Île-du-Prince-Édouard et des Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Moncton, Éditions d'Acadie (réimpr. 1980, 1987) (1re éd. 1975), 181 p.