enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pouding chômeur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pouding_chômeur

    Pouding chômeur ("unemployed man's pudding", often translated idiomatically as "poor man's pudding") is a dessert that was created during the early years of the Great Depression [1] in Quebec, Canada. It typically involves a bread pudding covered in a mixture with a syrup, usually maple syrup and cream. [2]

  3. Chomeur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chomeur

    Chômeur is French for unemployed person. It may also refer to: Chômeur, a grammatical term to describe an element of a sentence that has been "demoted" Pouding chômeur, a dessert from Quebec; Tichumaren or Tishoumaren, a style of music in Northern Africa

  4. Poor Man's Pudding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poor_Man's_Pudding

    The film stars Chloé Sainte-Marie as Yo-Yo and Louis-Philippe Davignon-Daigneault as Alphonse, a New Age cult priestess in Montreal and her faith healer nephew. [2] Events are set in motion when Alphonse's father Aristide (François Léveillé) threatens to commit suicide by jumping off the Jacques Cartier Bridge, leading to an ad hoc neighbourhood referendum on whether or not he should jump.

  5. Grands-pères - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grands-pères

    Grand-pères, grand-pères au sirop d'érable or grand-pères dans le sirop d'érable is a traditional pastry in Québécois and Acadian cuisine. The term pépère is also used to describe this dish in some regions of Quebec like Beauce. [1] This pastry is commonly served during "le temps des sucres" in sugar shacks.

  6. Cuisine of Quebec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine_of_Quebec

    ^ Martin Fournier, Jardins et potagers en Nouvelle-France. Joie de vivre et patrimoine culinaire, Sillery, Septentrion, 2004, 242 p. (ISBN 978-2-89448-385-5). ^ Michel Lambert, Histoire de la cuisine familiale du Québec, vol. 1 : Ses origines autochtones et européennes, Québec, Les Éditions GID, 2007, 504 p

  7. Maman Brigitte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maman_Brigitte

    Maman Brigitte (English: Mother Brigitte) sometimes also written as Manman Brigitte and also known by Gran Brigitte, Grann Brigitte, Manman, Manman Brigit, and Maman Brijit is a death loa (or lwa) and the consort of Baron Samedi in Haitian Vodou. She drinks rum infused with hot peppers and is symbolized by a black rooster. [1]

  8. Chômeur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chômeur

    The chômeur, in the context of grammar, is an element of a sentence that has been syntactically "demoted" from the nucleus to the periphery of a clause. The term comes from the French word for "unemployed". In a passive sentence, the agent is a chômeur, having been "demoted" from the central or nuclear function of subject.

  9. Papa, Mama, the Maid and I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papa,_Mama,_the_Maid_and_I

    Papa, Mama, the Maid and I (French: Papa, maman, la bonne et moi) is a French comedy film from 1954, directed by Jean-Paul Le Chanois, written by Marcel Aymé, starring Robert Lamoureux and Louis de Funès. [1]