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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]
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.
Pouding chômeur—poor man's pudding. 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.
Pouding chomeur—white cake laying in a maple-syrup based pudding; Queue de castor—oval-shaped fried dough covered in a sweet garnish; Sucre à la crème—cubes of sugar, cream and brown sugar, similar to Scottish tablets; Tarte à la ferlouche—pie made with raisins, molasses and brown sugar; Tarte au sucre—pie made from a sugar-based ...
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
Caribou is a sweet French-Canadian alcoholic beverage composed of red wine and a spirit (usually rye whisky) (mixed 3 parts to 1), and maple syrup or sugar. [1] [2] [3]Caribou can be made at home but is now available as a premixed beverage by the Société des alcools du Québec.
Recipes vary, but traditional preparation involves covering 1–3 lbs of ground pork shoulder in milk or water in a large pot, then seasoning with onions and a mixture of spices.
In addition to its trademark beans, the restaurant serves such traditional fare as tourtières, Pâté chinois, pouding chômeur, pea soup and spruce beer. [ 3 ] The restaurant was located at 367 east, Avenue du Mont-Royal , in the city's Plateau Mont-Royal borough until August 31, 2019.