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Poutine (Quebec French: [puˈt͡sɪn] ⓘ) is a dish of french fries and cheese curds topped with a brown gravy. It emerged in Quebec in the late 1950s in the Centre-du-Québec region, though its exact origins are uncertain, and there are several competing claims regarding its invention. For many years, it was used by some to mock Quebec ...
Poutine (Quebec French: [puˈt͡sɪn] ⓘ) is a dish of french fries and cheese curds topped with a brown gravy. It emerged in Quebec in the late 1950s in the Centre-du-Québec region, though its exact origins are uncertain, and there are several competing claims regarding its invention. For many years, it was used by some to mock Quebec society.
Poutine with squeaky cheese. Cheese curds are a main ingredient in poutine, which originated in the 1950s in rural Quebec, Canada. It consists of french fries topped with fresh cheese curds, covered with brown gravy and sometimes additional ingredients. [2]
La Poutine Week is an annual food festival which celebrates poutine, a Québécois dish of french fries, cheddar cheese curds and brown gravy, which is popular throughout Canada and has spread internationally. It is the world's largest poutine festival, with over 700 restaurants serving poutines to more than 350,000 customers.
A Mexican-American dish typically consisting of french fries topped with carne asada, guacamole, sour cream, cheese, and sometimes salsa [13] [14] Carne de porco à alentejana: Portugal: stew Traditional dish consisting of pork and clams served with potatoes [15] Chorrillana: Chile: compilation
Poutine râpée—boiled potato dumpling with a pork filling. Poutine à trou—baked apple dumplings. Poutine au bleuet [14] —French fries with cheese, gravy, and blueberries. Ragoût—a thick kind of soup. Rappie pie/Râpure—grated potatoes and chicken or salted pork. Soupe aux pois—Canadian pea soup. Tarte au sucre acadienne—acadian ...
French fries are the main ingredient in the Québécois dish known as poutine, a dish consisting of fried potatoes covered with cheese curds and brown gravy. Poutine has a growing number of variations, but it is generally considered to have been developed in rural Québec sometime in the 1950s, although precisely where in the province it first ...
After receiving threats from confused customers, La Maison de La Poutine, a restaurant chain in France, wants to make clear that its name has nothing to do with Vladimir Putin.