jane franklin wrote:ok.
I went to Quebec Canada last week and had my very first experience with Poutine at Ashtons Restaurant which is like a fast food place that sells burgers and poutine.
It was ok... I really don't understand the fascination with this dish.
boudreaulicious wrote:I'm with Jane Franklin--cheese curds suck. They just suck. They don't really melt. They taste like plastic. I don't get them on their own and I definitely don't understand why someone would defile perfectly good French fries with them
jane franklin wrote:I never had food that would actually squeak. I think I had cheese curds once at Culvers and I don't remember them squeaking.
Tyrgyzistan wrote:I've been sucked into retrying the Trader Joe's Poutine a couple times, frozen fries to stick in the oven. It sounds good each time I walk past it, then I do it at home and the fries take forever and taste awful, the gravy cooks while heating or gets absorbed by only half the fries.
chitrader wrote:Is this a bad time to mention that I'm opening a poutine QSR in Los Angeles in the next few months?
In LA? Why would people in LA eat what is basically a heavy winter type meal for people in Quebec? They'll nickname it Kryptonite Poutine because no one will want to go near it for fear of gaining weight. I get the same reactions here when I order it. Open it in Milwaukee or Chicago.chitrader wrote:Is this a bad time to mention that I'm opening a poutine QSR in Los Angeles in the next few months?
nr706 wrote:chitrader wrote:Is this a bad time to mention that I'm opening a poutine QSR in Los Angeles in the next few months?
How do you plan to make your cheese curds in the morning so they'll still be squeaky for service?
Darren72 wrote:I spent some time in Kingston, Ontario this week and had two takes on poutine: the bad one was sweet potato fries, feta, and guacamole.
Darren72 wrote:To be fair, it was billed as "(It's not) Poutine".
BR wrote:My point is just that it sounds like an awful combination of flavors, one competing against the other.