TasteTrip

Reign of terroir
By Maria Francesca LoDico
Savour the flavours of nouvelle
Quebec cuisine, served up by
homegrown, formally trained
chefs raised on the simple fare
of grand-mère's kitchen
I WAS ANTICIPATING duck confit, tourtière
and even poutine in my search for
authentic French-Canadian cuisine in
Québec — I never expected shepherd's
pie. With a mischievous grin, François
Blais, the acclaimed executive chef at
Restaurant Panache, presents me with
hachis Parmentier: succulent braised duck
layered with fresh corn, leeks, potato purée
and a golden goat cheese crust. The dish
exudes the pure and distinctive flavours of
le terroir, the sense of place and personality
with which the region's soil, climate,
tradition and history imbue its products.
Overlooking the St. Lawrence River in
Vieux-Québec, Panache is housed in an
1822 maritime warehouse beautifully
restored as part of the Auberge Saint-Antoine. Criss-crossing beams soar high
above diners tucked into comfy banquettes.
A gas fireplace and sleek handblown
glass light fixtures cast luminous
shadows against the original stone walls
and intricate ironwork.
"I grew up on my grandmother's shepherd's
pie," says Blais, a second-generation
Quebecer, "leftover meat, corn, potatoes."
His hachis Parmentier — he makes several
seasonal versions, including lamb,
hare and vegetarian — typifies nouvelle
Quebec cuisine, a back-to-basics type of
cooking that began to emerge a little more
than a decade ago in Québec and Montréal
with an exciting new generation of chefs.
These young up-and-comers were trained
in the rigorous and elaborate cuisine
of France. Like Blais, however, they had
also grown up on Québécois home cooking,
based on simple peasant fare.
Nouvelle Quebec cuisine draws from both
of these legacies and uses local, seasonal
produce in dishes inflected with Quebec's
particular cultural influences.
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