This was published 2 years ago
What is poutine? Where to find Canada's best loaded fries delicacy
By Ben Groundwater
THE DISH
Poutine, Canada
PLATE UP
If you're on a diet it's probably best to look away now, because poutine is a beast of a dish that is guaranteed to both warm your cockles and clog your arteries. At its most basic, this much-loved French-Canadian staple is hot chips – aka French fries – smothered in fresh cheese curds and drowned in gravy. Think of your basic pub-grub chips and gravy, and add gooey, melty curds (pieces of clotted, curdled milk). The idea is to have a range of textures and flavours here, keeping the chips crisp and crackly, the curds gooey but solid, and the gravy hot and generous. Absolutely delicious, and the sort of thing you wouldn't want to eat more than once a year.
FIRST SERVE
That poutine originated in Quebec, in eastern Canada, as a roadside snack, is not up for debate. It's been a staple in French-Canada since the 1950s, and its popularity has only recently spread throughout the country. What is a source of disagreement, however, is who exactly invented poutine. Three restaurants – Le Lutin Qui Rit in Warwick; Le Roy Jucep in Drummondville; and La Petite Vache in Princeville – all claim to have come up with the idea of teaming fries, curds and gravy, though there's no clear winner. The name is thought to have originated from the English word pudding, which had already become "poutine" in Quebec, and was slang for a mess.
ORDER THERE
I'm breaking no new ground by recommending La Banquise (labanquise.com), a divey all-night diner in Montreal known for its traditional Quebecois cuisine, including more than 30 versions of poutine, topped with everything from smoked meat to merguez sausage to mince and onions.
ORDER HERE
In Sydney, head to Bar Luca (barluca.com.au) in the city for poutine with maple aioli. In Melbourne, meanwhile, order poutine with bacon bone gravy at Brunswick dude-food hub The B-East (theb-east.com).
ONE MORE THING
Multiple Canadian chefs have now elevated poutine into gourmet territory. At Au Pied de Cochon in Montreal (aupieddecochon.ca), the poutine with foie gras gravy, topped with a slab of foie gras, is credited with helping send this dish national.
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