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Poutine

Poutine (pronounced, roughly, poo-teen, peuh-tin, or peuh-tsin; ) is a mixture of french fries with fresh cheddar cheese curds, covered with gravy. It originated in rural Quebec, Canada in the late 1950s and is now popular all over the country. It is a good snack in the winter if the fries and cheese are fresh and the gravy is hot enough to partly melt everything together.

A common variation, Italian poutine, substitutes spaghetti sauce for the gravy. Some restaurants boast a dozen or more poutine variants. In the eastern United States which boasts a high number of Franco-American descendants that trace their roots through Quebec it is possible to find a similar dish called cheese fries that is popular in such places as New Jersey and Maine. In the United states these cheese fries are often made with melted cheese or cheese spread; brown gravy or chili sauce is optional.

The exact origin of the name is unknown, but some believe that it comes from the English word "pudding", used in the slang sense of "a mess" or in the sense of "dessert".

Poutine is a fast-food staple in Quebec, and is sold by nearly all fast-food chains in the province, as well as by smaller diners. International chains like McDonalds, A&W and Burger King sell poutine in (and increasingly outside of) Quebec, but their product is scorned by many as being an inferior reproduction.

When ordering a fast-food trio or combo in Québec, you can almost always pay a small extra to get your french fries replaced by a poutine.

In 2000, comedian Rick Mercer of the CBC satire show This Hour Has 22 Minutes persuaded then-presidential candidate George W. Bush to congratulate his "good friend Jean Poutine" on his reelection as Prime Minister of Canada. The prime minister's name is Jean Chrétien. The segment aired as a "Talking To Americans" sketch.


In French transliteration the Russian leader is Vladimir Poutine.




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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Poutine".