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For me, savoury or sweet, Canadian food draws upon a mixture of indigenous and introduced foods. And I think this makes sense, given our national history. Settlers and immigrants came here to start new lives, but at the same time wanted to maintain their own cultural identities. Wave after wave came, bringing their own seed and livestock, building upon this land's foods. Some introduced flavours have been here for centuries, while others for only a few years.
With every group of settlers--whether they arrived in the 17th century or the 21st, adaptation was was important. Apart from the weather (-30C in winter and +40C in summer) and eventual cultural, social and political changes, they also needed to find ways of eating that reminded them of distant family and friends with ingredients that were available here.
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Sigh...you'd think I'd do better than that, wouldn't you? I mean, Canadian sweets are plentiful--butter tarts, Nanaimo bars, sugar pie, fruit pies, anything appley, ice cream (I can go on and on)--to immediately leap to two obvious ingredients was a little...anticlimactic.
But not.
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How perfect a food theory is that? And how à propos to apply it to Canadian cuisine--I mean it's what we've been doing for years, is it not?
My entry for Mmm...Canada: The Sugar High Edition is my spiced blueberry-maple syrup.
It's a simple twist on two very Canadian ingredients (Elmira purveyed the syrup and the blueberries were harvested last summer from Sudbury, Ontario). Add to that the ubiquitous, familiar and exotic cinnamon and black pepper, and we've got a meeting of East and West, indigenous and imported and sweet and spicy...
Yeah, I think this sweet says Canada to me...
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Spiced blueberry-maple syrup
Maple syrup
Blueberries (fresh or frozen)
Cinnamon
Black pepper (optional)
Add all to a sauce pan and bring to a boil while stirring. Lower the flame and let as much of the liquid boil off, leaving as thick a syrup as you wish. Refrigerate any leftovers.
Pour it over buttery pancakes (as shown), over ice cream, fruit fritters...whatever you want.
Check back to Jennifer's site for SHF 44's round up on Canada Day (1 July 2008).
cheers!
jasmine
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8 comments:
My Canadian husband will love this -- he has such a sweet tooth! I'm always amazed at how pepper (and sometimes salt) in sweet things seem to bring all of the ingredients into balance.
Oh, my... This is the only thing that could make my gray, rainy and cold day better!
Jasmine, it looks delish! And the first thing that comes to my mind when I think of "Canada" is "maple syrup" :)
What a great idea to pour this sauce on ice cream! I might even put the ice cream right on top of those beautiful pancakes. Mmmm...
I prefer savory over sweet myself, but this sounds great. It just so happens my dad makes his own maple syrup and he shares some with me. I can imagine how delicious this would taste.
Oh my goodness.....this makes me want to run into the kitchen and make some pancakes! I have all the ingredients for that syrup. I'll have to try this on the weekend.
Hey Jasmine!
What a lovely post! I had no idea that Canada produces 85 percent of the world's maple syrup. Savoury dishes are usually my first choice, but I do get the occasional sweet tooth and this recipe sounds fabulous.
Thanks for sharing!
Wonderful recipe. I'm drooling on my computer.
Stop by Confessions of an Apron Queen for a piece of Maple Walnut Fudge: http://anapronaday.blogspot.com/2008/06/maple-walnut-fudge-old-fashioned-way.html
Hello all
glad you like it :)
j
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