i am a super bad hostess for ditching my husband and a friend of his from high school but they are talking records and i'm bored!
tonight i made poutine, and i don't know why i've never made it before. i had it for the first time a few years ago in montreal, and it's so quick and easy.
1 lb package steak fries (i used generic, but i am making this again tomorrow for a football game, and i am going to make homemade fries) 2 packets mccormick brown gravy (most recipes call for beef gravy, but i chose to use this instead) 1/4- 1/2 lb (depepnding how much you like cheese) cheese curds or mozzarella (buffalo would be amazing), cut in cubes
prepare the fries to your preference (i baked mine for 25 mins) and follow instructions for gravy. put cubes at bottom of bowl and then put fries and pour gravy all over them. soooo good.
there is a variation of this with marinara instead of gravy, and i'd be curious to try that as well.
if it was marinara, i would make homemade. and actually if i wasn't feeling so lazy/had all the ingredients, i would have preferred to make homemade gravy, too.
this might be a really silly quetion but how do you pronounce "poutine"? i look at that word and just think poohtine and that don't sound so yummy, even if the recipie does. thanks!
__________________
"But I want you to remember, I intend this breast satirically." Susan from Coupling
this might be a really silly quetion but how do you pronounce "poutine"? i look at that word and just think poohtine and that don't sound so yummy, even if the recipie does. thanks!
haha I was wondering the same thing!! maybe its like pout-ine?
one more question- do you melt the cheese or does it melt with the heat from the gravy/marinara? Also how do you make homemade marinara?
i cut cold cheese into cubes and let the gravy/fries combo melt it. i did leave the cheese out (only the amount i was going to use) during cooking so it could warm up a little. i imagine it would be similar with cheese curds, but i was unable to find cheese curds readily at the store. (alternatively, i imagine you could buy paneer from an indian grocer ready made)
as far as homemade marinara, i would just make a favorite spaghetti sauce. but i imagine if feeling lazy, you could always use ragu or something!
my favorite is from a williams-sonoma cookbook:
2 tbs olive oil 1 large yellow onion 1/4 cup dry red wine 1 tbs balsamic vinegar 1 tbs tomato paste 1/4 tsp dried oregano 4 cups peeled, seeded and finely chopped plum tomatoes [or 28 oz can] salt and pepper 1 tsp saffron threads
in a large frying pan over med heat, warm the olive oil. add the onion and saute, stirring for 10 minutes. stir in the red wine, vinegar, tomato paste, oregano, tomatoes and salt and pepper to taste. reduce the heat to low and simmer, uncovered, until the sauce begins to thicken, about 20 mins. add the saffron and simmer 5 more minutes. remove the sauce from heat and let cool slightly. using a blender or food processor, puree sauce until smoothe. transfer to a saucepan to keep warm.
In ontario we say poo-teen in quebec it's poo- tehn with a really soft n.
Yeah, I live in Alberta and did an exchange with some Quebec students and we had it when we went there and they say it how you said kisa, with a really soft n. I thought I was told that it is a french word and the dish originated in Quebec but I might be wrong. As for poutine in general, we have it everywhere in Canada (at least in BC/Alberta), like at school cafeterias and what-not. I just have two things to say: it's waaaaaay better with cheese curds (IMO), and the whole marinara sauce thing sounds different, but I would definitely try it with gravy first because it is soooo good. Also, I saw Shania Twain make poutine with Martha Stewart on TV, and she made it with mushroom gravy which sounds good too. MMM!!!
-- Edited by Miss Callie at 03:22, 2006-01-05
__________________
"In matters of grave importance, style, not sincerity, is the vital thing"
i don't know how to explain them..the only way i know how to make cheese curds is curding milk. (like in paneer) but i don't know if that is just for indian dishes. you boil whole milk, then as it is boiling, add a bit of lemon juice (maybe a tbsp? for every 4 cups of whole milk?). wait for the milk to curd and then strain it through cheesecloth or muslin. you can drain it for an hour or so and form it into a block and cut into pieces.
i think there is a way to make cheese curds from cottage cheese as well, but i can't find it right now.
ETA: i've had both cheese curds and mozzarella with this and i have no preference, they were both good. i don't think plain cheese curds really have a flavor....
ps sunshinegirl: someone has to keep heart specialists in business!