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Cooking Canadian

Made in Quebec

A Culinary Journey

by (author) Julian Armstrong

Publisher
HarperCollins Canada
Initial publish date
Oct 2014
Category
Canadian, General
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781443425339
    Publish Date
    Oct 2014
    List Price
    $19.99
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781443425315
    Publish Date
    Oct 2014
    List Price
    $39.99

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Description

Canada’s culinary treasure revealed in recipes, stories and photographs

Canada has a culinary treasure in Quebec, one that is not perhaps as celebrated as it could be, at least outside of that distinct and gloriously food-obsessed region. Julian Armstrong, longtime food writer for The Montreal Gazette, has spent her career eating, cooking, thinking and writing about Quebecois food. Quebec, A Cookbook is the result of those years of delicious effort.

Quebec has a cuisine firmly based on French foundations, but blended and enriched over the years by the cooking styles of a variety of immigrant groups, initially British and American, more recently Italian, Greek, Middle Eastern and Asian. More than in any other province or region in Canada, people in Quebec are passionate and knowledgeable about their food. The restaurant scene is robust, not just in Montreal and Quebec City—you can go to just about any small town in La belle province and have a splendid meal. Farmers, purveyors, chefs, casual and dedicated home cooks all are poised in every season to produce or procure the perfect, seasonal ingredient; not for them the out-of-season asparagus from Chile. Quebec is where you can truly experience what food tasted like before the industrial food complex. Here unpasteurized milk and cheese is commonplace; indeed there is a herd of cattle descended from cows brought from France by Samuel de Champlain producing dairy just for this purpose. Imagine that in Ontario!

Of course, Quebec is big news in the global foodie world these days, with Martin Picard (Au Pied de Cochon), Dave Macmillan and Fred Morin (The Art of Living According to Joe Beef), and even our own Chuck Hughes showing off the joys of dining in this great province. But there is much more still to discover about Quebec, from restaurateurs certainly, but also from farmers, foragers, artisanal cheese and bread makers, home cooks, and so many more. These people, their stories and recipes, will make up the bulk of Quebec: a Cookbook. It is high time for a comprehensive celebration of Quebecois cuisine.

About the author

JULIAN ARMSTRONG is a writer whose specialty is Quebec: Quebec chefs, Quebec food and drink producers, and the latest developments on the Quebec culinary scene. She is the author of Taste of Quebec (Macmillan 1990, updated by John Wiley, 2001). Armstrong writes a weekly column in The Montreal Gazette and contributes to the production of a weekly summer-fall column called In Season that is based on Quebec products. She is extraordinarily well connected to the food world of Quebec.

Julian Armstrong's profile page

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