When they write the history of popular food in the
Twenny-Tens (if there’s anyone with enough arterial fortitude to survive it and
write it), I imagine this moment, glistening with bacon fat and given gravitas
by the six-pound cheeseburger, will likely go down—way, way, down—as The Age of
Wretched Excess, and looking back through the haze of time and spattered fry
grease, future food historians will recognize the imposing figure of Monsieur
Poutine as one of our era’s most august ambassadors.
This French-Canadien concoction of french fries topped with
gravy and smothered in cheese curds has somehow escaped the ghetto of
post-hockey game Québécois bar food to become a poster child for the
too-much-is-never-enough philosophy (if you will) of our food truck-obsessed
culture (if you stacked up all the pulled pork sandwiches topped with runny
mayo-slicked cole slaw served in America’s food trucks in a day, I imagine they’d
reach to the moon and back a couple of times, though they prob ably wouldn’t stack very well, on account of all
the grease…). Martin Picard, of the fat-flecked
Montreal abattoir-cum-gastro-temple
Au Pied de Cochon, is likely responsible for bringing poutine into the foodie
world, with his beyond decadent foie gras-topped version.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that. As my friend Tom said recently after a
home-based poutine foray went deliciously awry:
Poutine, always a good idea, always a bad idea. Thing is, for me, poutine had always been
just an idea. Prior to constructing my
own version as a Bide-A-While bachelor dinner the other night, I had never
tasted the stuff. Imagine that. The idea just never held that much appeal to
me—all I could imagine of the typical version was starchy, previously frozen
french fries, poorly cooked, topped with indifferent gravy and obliterated by
too-salty cheese. Now, I’m a guy who
grows sweaty-palmed and anxious when I pull my last piece of home-smoked bacon from
the freezer, who always has a little pot of pork fat beside the stove—you know,
for emergencies—but that image was too much even for me.
Well, I guess it wasn’t so much the grease factor that put
me off, but rather the uninspired monolithicness (just made that word up) of
it. After two bites, what would there be
to taste? Still, perhaps because of my
Canadian heritage, or because I used to spend a night or two in bars after
hockey games, the idea of poutine has always intrigued me, and I’ve cooked many
a mental dish of it in the past few years.
This week, I finally put it on the plate.
I’m sure some chapters of the Confrèrie de Poutine would run
me out of town on a rail for it, but I wanted vegetables. Specifically, I wanted highly flavored
vegetables, both tart and savory. So homemade sauerkraut, rinsed and squeezed, formed a crisp and tangy bed for my poutine. Celery root, one of the most umami-packed forms
of produce, has been part of every poutine I’ve imagined, so a fine dice of
that went into my gravy.
The base of my gravy:
bacon. Duh. And the potatoes were not deep-fried
shoestrings, but rather wedges of wonderful, coal-roasted homegrown fingerlings
browned well in that bacon fat. This is sounding
pretty good, isn’t it? Adding more depth
to the gravy were leek, garlic, and sambal.
To add a little wholesome heft—this was my dinner, after all—I
fried an egg in the remaining bacon fat, and along with it I cooked a couple
slices of under-ripe Green Zebra tomatoes, along with some thinly sliced
jalapeno and shallots—nothing monolithic about the flavors of this dish.
La cuisine minceur?
Mais mon. But neither was this a
regrettable gut-bomb, and I cleaned my plate—well, gratin dish—happily. I’ll make this again, but not for a
while. Some winter night when a wolfish
wind howls down the valley and the stars overhead are so insanely clear and
profligate in their splendor that it stirs something deep in my Canadian soul,
I’ll look around the kitchen to see what we have, and remembering Tom’s dictum
I’ll think, Poutine, that sounds like a good idea….
Ma Poutine
Serves one:
1 ½ ounces excellent slab bacon cut in 1/3-inch dice
3 tablespoons chopped white of leek
2 tablespoons finely diced celery root
2 cloves garlic, crushed and coarsely chopped
1 ½ teaspoons sambal
2 teaspoons flour
2/3 cup chicken stock (or another type of stock—mine was
actually chicken-duck stock)
2 medium fingerling potatoes, pre-roasted, quartered the
long way
1 ½ ounces white cheese curds sliced
A bit of butter
1 egg
2 slices green tomatoes
Thinly sliced jalapenos and shallots, optional
2/3 to ¾ cup excellent sauerkraut, rinsed in a couple
changes of water, squeezed to remove excess liquid
Salt and pepper
Heat oven to 425.
In a medium skillet slowly cook the bacon until it is
lightly browned and has rendered most of its fat. Remove and reserve the bacon. Pour off and reserve half the fat. Brown the potatoes evenly in the fat that remains
in the pan. Spread the sauerkraut in the
bottom of a gratin dish and place the potatoes on top of it.
Return the bacon to the skillet along with the reserved
fat. Add the leek and celery root and
cook over medium until the leek is wilted.
Add the garlic and sambal and cook for a minute or two. Sprinkle the flour into the skillet and stir
and scrape with a wooden spatula for about a minute. Add the stock a little at a time, stirring
and scraping to deglaze the pan and dissolve the flour. Add salt and pepper to taste.
Sprinkle half the cheese curds over the potatoes and
kraut. Top with gravy. Wash the skillet and heat it with a bit of
butter. Fry the egg sunny-side-up,
along with the tomatoes, jalapeno, and shallot.
Place the egg and tomatoes on top of the gratin, and sprinkle on the
other half of the curds. Place in the
preheated oven until the cheese is melted.
Remove, top with the jalapeno, shallot and any fat remaining in the
pan. Open a beer, eh? Dig in.
Despite my own Quebecoise heritage (I eschew accents in posts) and my Wisconsinite devotion to cheese, I've never been drawn to poutine. This is something I'd happily dive into (perhaps minus the sauerkraut).
ReplyDeleteNancy, you could easily substitute very thinly sliced fresh cabbage, salted ahead, rinsed, in place of the kraut. I thought of adding that to the recipe, slipped my mind. However, homemade kraut is often a revelation even to diehard kraut haters!
ReplyDeleteA demain~ Brett
Oh, sweet mercy. I've never had poutine that didn't make me want to cry or fight the cook. No more. There's homemade kraut in the pantry, and I believe I just found my dinner plans!
ReplyDeleteYes homemade anything (pretty much) will taste better than something you buy premade. `•¸•´
ReplyDeleteOh man.. that's great!
ReplyDeleteI'm Aussie, and I just discovered Poutine via Quebec Fries... why did I not know this food before? But food made at home is far superior!
My own version that I'm stuffing in whilst I type, is Fries Cheese, homemade hot/acid salsa, homemade chilli beans, topped by the last of the autumn sauerkraut we made.
Akin to the half 'n' half, favoured in the UK, but made Poutine, by the addition of cheese, and the LAYERING, that creates the magic.
MMMMMMMMM...