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Québécois Tourtière - Mémère Ouellette's Recipe - Christmas Meat Pie Recipe 

Glen And Friends Cooking
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Nana Murphy (nee Ouelette) wrote down this recipe and said that it came from her Mother - the Ouellete family is from Nicolet Quebec. This has always been on the table for our family feast on Christmas eve (Réveillon), and now the tradition of making it has passed to my generation and hopefully on to the next.
Nana's recipe was for 12 - 9" pies - I scaled it down for one 10" deep dish pie, to better suit the needs of Covid Christmas 2020.
Ingredients:
500g (1 pound) ground beef
500g (1 pound) ground pork
500g (1 pound) ground veal
3 small onions minced fine
2 smallish potato, diced and boiled (about 350g)
Salt and pepper to taste
2 mL (½ tsp) cloves
2 mL (½ tsp) allspice
2 mL (½ tsp) marjoram
1 recipe pie crust: • How To Make And Roll L...
Method:
Preheat oven to 425ºF.
Cook onions, in a little bit of oil.
Add meat and cook without browning.
Remove excess fat, and add in the spices, salt, pepper, and potatoes.
Stir to combine.
Transfer to a lined 10" deep dish pie plate, and cover with pastry.
Bake at 425ºF for 10 minutes and then reduce temperature to 350ºF for 45 minutes - 1 hour.
#LeGourmetTV #GlenAndFriendsCooking
0:01 How to make Québécois Tourtière Recipe
0:29 Old Québécois Family Tourtière Recipe
1:29 What kind of meat is in Québécois Tourtière
1:45 Making a Québécois Tourtière filling
3:57 What spices are in a Québécois Tourtière Recipe
5:16 Are there potatoes in Québécois Tourtière meat pie
8:33 Tasting Québécois Tourtière

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6 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 712   
@TheDevnul
@TheDevnul 3 года назад
My mom passed away in 1987. My aunt Colombe invited me for Christmas dinner about 10 years after. My mom’s sister. Everything she cooked tasted exactly like my mom used to make. It took everything in me to keep it together. I had 3 servings of that tourtiere, memorizing every single bite. It’s been a horrible year. Make sure to tell everyone you love that you love and miss them. Happy holidays everyone.
@dmoon1874
@dmoon1874 3 года назад
I hope you're able to take home some of those recipes... happy holidays to you as well.
@thehangmansdaughter1120
@thehangmansdaughter1120 3 года назад
I have a similar experience but in reverse with my late father. He died suddenly, young, at 53, and it was devastating for my sister and I. The following Xmas I decided I would cook all the foods my Dad loved. I now do it every year. It's like having dinner with Dad, treating him to everything he loved to eat. It's been 18 years since we lost Dad, but we still have dinner with him. Keep making those dishes, share them with younger family members and keep your family together.
@sharonelrod5390
@sharonelrod5390 Год назад
Celebrate your good memories and pass them along .
@RazzUK
@RazzUK 3 года назад
So sweet to see Nana at the end, what a lovely lady.
@oreally8605
@oreally8605 3 года назад
I wonder if they're married, Brother and sister, friend etc.
@357Addict
@357Addict 3 года назад
I love the way it says "Good Luck" at the bottom of the recipe.
@philiposm
@philiposm 3 года назад
When my wife's grandparents were still alive and were still living in their home, this was a staple at Christmas and Easter. Christmas was Turkey, Tourtière, ragoût de boulettes, homemade cranberry sauce, beets and LOTS of potatoes. Did I say potatoes? One year they got a new potato ricer that had the holes along the sides too. It was exploding in all directions except in the bowl below. We had my father in law who punched a few holes in a garbage bag and wore it like a smock. One of my wife's uncles and I were on barricade duty. We had a plate on each side of the ricer and our job was block the projectile potatoes from going everywhere. It was hilarious. We offered to mash them but nope. Grandmaman Cécile said potatoes had to be riced so we riced them. No one argues with Grandmaman on Christmas.
@CallMeVie
@CallMeVie 3 года назад
Ragu de boulettes... Ah les mémoires!! Still make it but I swear my mom's secret ingredient is her 40 yr old season pot! That is SO TRUE! LOL! NEVER QUESTION OR ARGUE WITH YOUR MÉMÈRE/GRANDMAMAN/MAMI! HEAD OF THE KITCHEN KNOWS HOW TO RUN IT... to get the results she wants! CHEERS! Vie 🇨🇦
@heatnicoleher
@heatnicoleher 3 года назад
That is such a great story 💜
@TheAmazingChuckBros
@TheAmazingChuckBros 3 года назад
I come from Sherbrooke and my mother's tourtière looks a lot like this one. But! My girlfriend is from Gaspésie, and it looks a lot more like a "Six pâtes", a tourtière but with several layers of meat, potatoes, etc.! Which is totally different. Quebec cuisine is made for our big winters: to cheer up our spirits! Joyeux temps des fêtes à toi et ta famille Glen!
@belamoure
@belamoure 3 года назад
Aalso sea pie ...hence six pâtes.
@Mental_Patient
@Mental_Patient 3 года назад
Like a Lac St. Jean tortierre?
@franky4000
@franky4000 3 года назад
OOOHHHH YESSSSS pleaseee make your ''version'' of Ci-paille or six pâtes (in my family it's Six Pâtes) Please Please Please, since i won't be able to eat it this year!!!!
@lafemmenat
@lafemmenat 3 года назад
We're from Northern Ontario and our family does pork, beef and wild rabbit, along with carrots and potatoes.
@Xloi63
@Xloi63 3 года назад
@@LeDardeursPalace my dad from les eskoumins calls it ci'pâte or cipaille
@yannickbelleau-roy6340
@yannickbelleau-roy6340 3 года назад
Belle hommage Glen, merci de partager ce classique Québécois! :)
@buckeyenation1681
@buckeyenation1681 3 года назад
Glenn has the best reaction ever. *looks at camera, “yes...yes”, starts laughing*
@caroleflynn1207
@caroleflynn1207 11 месяцев назад
Agreed
@jacobchalut706
@jacobchalut706 3 года назад
While I am an American my family has pretty deep roots in French Canada. Grew up having meat pies just like this made by Grandma every Christmas. This video brought up some great memories.
@pennykay6149
@pennykay6149 3 года назад
Same here. American with French Canadian roots. We still have this every New Year's Day. That and a spoonful of black-eyed peas.
@JeremyCaron
@JeremyCaron 3 года назад
Ditto.
@Linuxpunk81
@Linuxpunk81 Год назад
Same. It's sad that my mom and all my aunts have passed. Holidays are just not the same
@irishpixierose
@irishpixierose 3 года назад
Thank you for sharing a very special memory of your Nana Murphy. I miss my Nana do much.
@MrsMac3099
@MrsMac3099 3 года назад
Thank you for making this ! My great grandpa's mom was French Canadian , I only have one family recipe that made it down to me . That is Pâté Chinois , its one of my favorite winter comfort foods ! We add extra creamed corn and of course dont forget the to add a pat of butter at the end to finish the corn, onion and meat mixture :).
@Djieff
@Djieff 3 года назад
Hi Glenn! I’m from lac-st-Jean, and the tourtiere du Lac St-Jean can feed 20 people easily! Still the only Christmas meal for me! I hope you do more Quebec recipes!
@jdancause
@jdancause 3 года назад
And You had an excellent idea to mixte it with a poutine
@MREmusique
@MREmusique 2 года назад
Same here, though we moved to Montréal shortly before I was born. We make our tourtière in a huge rotissoire (large enough for a large turkey.)
@MikeTheBlueCow
@MikeTheBlueCow 3 года назад
I'm a Ouellette! My grandmother Ouellette (Mémé) made a meat pie I had as a kid and due to unfortunate events the recipe is lost. I will make this recipe and hope that it is similar to the meat pie of my childhood. I'm so thankful to have come across this video, I've been enjoying your videos all this time without knowing we had a familial connection.
@wendelynyoung8609
@wendelynyoung8609 3 года назад
“It’s a meat pie”! 😍 love seeing them outside picking veggies. That’s a good looking meat pie. Thanks guys
@TL_oS
@TL_oS 3 года назад
Jules’ dress is so cute!
@asilverfoxintasmania9940
@asilverfoxintasmania9940 3 года назад
Isn't it just! Would love to know where she gets a lot of her stuff from, as she always looks so stylish!
@carolhutchinson566
@carolhutchinson566 3 года назад
Yes, super cute! How does she keep her excellent figure with Glen cooking all these pies and cakes all the time?
@heatherens4836
@heatherens4836 3 года назад
I agree, love that dress.
@KevinSchmitt77
@KevinSchmitt77 3 года назад
@@carolhutchinson566 it must have something to do with their hatchet throwing nights. It is a good core workout. Ha!
@MR101722
@MR101722 3 года назад
I'm a Ouellette from Nova Scotia! My father's side of the family traces back to Quebec, my grandfather is from Farnham Quebec which is an hour and half away from Nicolet!
@jongardner90
@jongardner90 3 года назад
Québécois cooking is underrated. My family usually uses Bell’s Poultry seasoning in our pie. You should consider making a video about Cretons.
@AndreQuirion
@AndreQuirion 3 года назад
Creton is awesome, I have yet to ask my mom for a recipe. Can only describe it as "ground up head cheese", but it's just as good :O
@mindspring20
@mindspring20 3 года назад
@Olaf Sigurson Sucre a la creme lol, I made that at a work potluck. people ask "what is it?" i always say "Direct translation is : Cream with Sugar" Then they Say " yeah but what's in it?" me "Cream and sugar."
@graytart
@graytart 3 года назад
Yes! My former next door neighbour made amazing cretons. You can readily buy it in the stores here but homemade is best.
@untermench3502
@untermench3502 3 года назад
Cretons was one of my Grandmothers specialties. As a child, I used to eat them all the time, usually they were just skimmings of fat from the cooking pork from the Tortieres. A lot of calories, but in Winter, who cares.
@wbflowersvt
@wbflowersvt 3 года назад
Yes! Bell's is our family tradition, too. Tourtière is so wrapped up in memories of Mémère. She emigrated to New Hampshire and we now live in Vermont.
@applehouseart
@applehouseart Год назад
I am from the Laurentian mountains. We made Tourtière every Christmas Eve, walking home from mass, thinking about the food and all our gifts helped make the cold walk a wonderful time. My Grandmother made it almost the same as you, but she didn’t put potatoes in it.
@ketocanuckleheads4501
@ketocanuckleheads4501 3 года назад
Cutting three slices & then removing middle slice will solve first slice issue
@frankmosuch6798
@frankmosuch6798 3 года назад
I make this every year. My Grandmother made this for the Holidays every year as well. Of course many of the French in Wisconsin came from Canada.
@Sqwirle
@Sqwirle 3 года назад
Madame Jehanne Benoit, the encyclopedia of Canadian Cooking. My Mom bought it weekly in instalments from the grocery store. I borrowed it one day and ‘forgot’ to give it back.
@carolhutchinson566
@carolhutchinson566 3 года назад
Did it have an orange cover? My mom got hers in instalments from Safeway!
@Sqwirle
@Sqwirle 3 года назад
@@carolhutchinson566 it was yellow
@TheDevnul
@TheDevnul 3 года назад
I have a Jeanne Benoit big cookbook, this was given to me early 80s as a Christmas present from my family. La nouvelle encyclopedie de la cuisine. It s blue.
@Mach1127
@Mach1127 3 года назад
Found mine in a yard sale
@graytart
@graytart 3 года назад
My late husband always made tourtière for Christmas Eve. He liked to use Jehanne Benoit’s recipe, and her rich Torte de Noel pastry dough. He would grind the pork himself and I would make the pastry. Using an egg wash inside the shell helps with preventing leaks. This is my first Christmas home alone without him and I don’t think I can bring myself to make it yet.
@toddmoore9678
@toddmoore9678 Год назад
Born and raised in Michigan. We have a lot of French heritage around here and I've never even heard of such a thing until this. I guess we'll just keep our pasties. 😄
@chrisstarfire
@chrisstarfire 3 года назад
i'm a native californian who's never heard of tourtière but wants to try it now! jules, your dress is fab!
@Babababababe
@Babababababe 3 года назад
Thank you Nana Murphy!!
@fpoiana
@fpoiana 3 года назад
Awwwww, the Nana images at the end! so lovely!
@theresamcrae5427
@theresamcrae5427 3 года назад
I am in tears here. I am a Ouellette, living in Windsor Ontario. Meat pie is a must for Christmas. Our mother always made several to give away and since she is no longer with us, we have tried to carry that tradition on. I do have her handwritten recipe to follow. And her handwriting is very much like the one you have shown. Another cause for tears. And while our construction may be a bit different than the one you have shown, they all taste pretty darn good. Thank you so much
@paulasimson4939
@paulasimson4939 3 года назад
That was so lovely seeing Nana at the end, what a delight.
@eliselang
@eliselang 3 года назад
You share your love for Quebec, Quebecers and French Canadian cuisine! I really appreciate it! Food unites the two sides of Canada!
@mytosismisco554
@mytosismisco554 3 года назад
I love your vibe, rhythm, karma whatever that makes you special in the videos! I find this calming as much as instructive and encouraging :) Please never stop! Thank you!
@kathleenmouat8499
@kathleenmouat8499 6 месяцев назад
I made my first tortiere this Christmas 2023. In honour of my daughter in law. It was a hit ❤️👍
@cecilelevesque4354
@cecilelevesque4354 3 года назад
Pour nous Le matin de Noël , la tourtière était notre déjeuner . Tellement bon , je crois que nous avons tous gardé notre tradition . Nous étions 13 enfants alors beaucoup de tourtières à faire .
@papa.and.mimis.country.life.58
@papa.and.mimis.country.life.58 2 года назад
The end made me tear up. How special to see Nana Murphy! ❤️ She reminds me of my own great-grandmother, Hannah who taught me to cook with methods, not a cookbook.
@chlemtom1
@chlemtom1 3 года назад
Glenn's hair is completely on point in this video and I'm absolutely loving it!
@classicbandgeek
@classicbandgeek Год назад
My wife's family is French on both sides from the Maritimes & Quebec - her family actually does pork roast & beef roast with onions, salt & pepper. They slowcook it all together until it falls apart, run it through a food mill and then use that as their filling - no spices besides the salt & pepper. All butter pastry crust - I look forward to it every Christmas and often my wife will make smaller versions for me to hand out to the guys at work. Such a classic part of the holidays!
@kmac7255
@kmac7255 3 года назад
My colleague who grew up in Montreal in the sixties serves tourtiere with maple syrup, poured over like on pancakes. I was so incredibly sceptical at first. Thought he was playing a trick on us. But it was delicious!! A great addition!
@sealfan1000
@sealfan1000 3 года назад
This is MYFAVORITE! Thank you, so much for the recipe and the memories. I am from NC and this is not a family tradition from childhood, but I began a new tradition a few years ago after watching a video of a family making tourtiere. My children love it and demand meat pie for Christmas. I also love seeing your precious grandmama :). You are blessed to have these videos.
@danielmiddleton8173
@danielmiddleton8173 3 года назад
Thank you for this one Glen and for your memory of your Nana. Wishing you, Jules and your family a happy and safe holidays in whatever shape or form it takes.
@MikeTheBarber63
@MikeTheBarber63 3 года назад
The footage at the end was solid gold! Thanks for that so much, it made the recipe complete.
@SmallWonda
@SmallWonda 3 года назад
Such a delight, merci! This is what I love about your channel, Glen, is how you love food & how you understand it's an evolution, a tradition and often was at the center and heart of wonderful family traditions - so when you eat that Québécois Tourtière, or any family 'traditional' dish, it's not just the food you enjoy but all the memories - so many memories, the collective family recollections, your history down the generations - la mémoire collective! I am fearful there is a diminishing of our heritage and family when folk turn to the supermarket for their culinary solutions - especially for Birthdays, High Days & Holidays - hopefully yours will be blessed with the magic and lore of Christmas... Thanks for sharing the love! 💖🙏🦘🐾🎅🐓
@S550STANG
@S550STANG 3 года назад
I have a few of my great grandmother's recipes that I occasionally make for the family. Good throwback to the good ol days!
@itatane
@itatane 3 года назад
Family recipes are such a wonderful treasure. In fact, when you bump into relatives you haven't met before, old recipes are a great way to connect. For example, my grandmother's people, the Pennells, came to Ohio from Bushmills, Antrim in 1817, with 10 children. That's a lot of potential 200 years later.
@briannafinnegan9671
@briannafinnegan9671 Год назад
My Memere was from Sherbrooke, Quebec and I remember eating this dish as a child. I have made it a small handful of times and I’ll make it again today to share with another family in California! Quebec culture spreading far and wide ❤️
@michele7944
@michele7944 3 года назад
Oh Glen, I had tears in my eyes watching the video of your Nana. She has the same accent and the same recipe as my gramma who was from Laval. I’ve got her hand written recipe book and it’s in French. That woman could cook! I miss her very much. Merry Christmas to you both.
@pcau
@pcau 3 года назад
Yup! This is your basic tourtière and as you mentioned, each family had a variation on the theme. Great job Sir! :)
@chrisparent4660
@chrisparent4660 3 года назад
Loved the video of Nana at the end. Reminded me of my mother bossing me around in her garden.
@mariedrader7926
@mariedrader7926 3 года назад
This is a Christmas Eve tradition for us at Réveillon. The predominant spice flavour in our family recipe is definitely clove. We pronounce it a bit differently than you guys do - tour-ti-air ... love seeing these traditional recipes!
@magoobtoys
@magoobtoys 3 года назад
I'm with you, it's more like Pierre and not pied ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-g28u4UGd07o.html
@NVanslee
@NVanslee 3 года назад
Yeah, same from around here. Never heard "tor-tee-yay" before, but I'm guessing it's the same crowd that says "pooo-teen".
@deborahchapman222
@deborahchapman222 3 года назад
My mom’s parents were Finnish immigrants. They settle in a Finnish community in Owen, Wisconsin. Mom made a similar dish except she used hamburger only, did not precook anything, used only salt and pepper to season, and added chopped potatoes. The Finns called it Pastie. It would be served with ketchup. To feed a large family, mom made her pasties like you would make a 2 crust cobbler. I understand in those Northern Finnish communities, they make individual pies. Pasties made a great lunch for the Finnish copper miners ( my grandfather was a copper miner when he was young). They tasted good when cold. Mom’s Pastie was so delicious that everyone wanted to come home from school with me and eat supper when mom made pastie. Yum! I understand that the pasties that we ate were from the Welsh mining tradition.
@stevenrldenault7451
@stevenrldenault7451 5 месяцев назад
Hi Glen Our side of the Denault family were from Fort Coulonge and we lived in Kipawa Quebec. My matante was a Lumber Camp cook. Her pie was much the same as yours but also had diced onions and I use apple juice instead of water. All such meat pies are awesome especially if it’s a flaky lard crust. Steve (67yrs)
@CreeSweetSage61
@CreeSweetSage61 2 года назад
I'm french canadian and cree and I grew up eating Meat pie every Christmas and New Years. In my great great Me'Me's recipe, she didn't use potatoes. Just beef, pork, onions and spices. I don't think I appreciated it as much as a child as I would if I had it now. :D
@markwebster7652
@markwebster7652 3 года назад
My mother's maiden name was Rolande Yvonne Fortin from the Maniwaki region of Quebec. She came from a large family and would make about 30 pies for family members and the Christmas Eve post-midnight mass dinners. Since she has passed my sister and me share the job of making these pies. This year I swapped out lard crust for butter. It turned out great. And I had to cut out the cloves and onion because my family now includes an onion/spice-sensitive member, so it is good to hear that I have not committed a complete tourtiere sacrilege by doing so. My mother's recipe also calls for a splash of vinegar in the pie crust mix? Pourquois?
@pennykay6149
@pennykay6149 3 года назад
My Memere gave my mom (her daughter-in-law) our Masse family recipe and Mama gave to me. We have this every year for New Year's Day dinner. I had to tweak it. Clove is the one flavor my hubby can't stand. But its still delicious and a great family tradition I hope to teach my kids how to make someday.
@untermench3502
@untermench3502 Год назад
My grandmother from St. Joseph de la Rive, Charlevoix, used to use only Pork, Onions and Allspice. The excess fat from cooking, she used to pot-up as Croutons, one of my favorites to spread on toast. I still remember the smell of her kitchen and the wood stove she used exclusively to cook.
@indigoh1262
@indigoh1262 2 года назад
Thank you for sharing this recipe and family history with us. It is important that there are differences, that is what makes us unique and the same.
@westislandkev
@westislandkev 3 года назад
Wow, what a nice surprise. I love that you prepared this. I never heard the English pronunciation before and I’m a Montreal mixed anglo :) My mom is French Canadian (Bonaventure, QC). I usually use pork and beef, similar spices to my Ragoût de boulettes et de pattes de cochon. Same as you with a bit of cinnamon and nutmeg. I love the Tenderflake crust too. Mine is a little more wet than yours, it doesn’t crumble but definitely not drenched. We enjoy this with different pickles, pickled onions, homemade pickled beets and chow chow or other homemade condiments. This year it’s especially important to celebrate tradition and custom for some peace, joy and normalcy. Merry Christmas / Happy Holidays!
@Mary-jv6rk
@Mary-jv6rk 3 года назад
That was our New Years day food....my grandmother would serve it with gravy......now I need to make this......
@asilverfoxintasmania9940
@asilverfoxintasmania9940 3 года назад
I am so loving all the recipes that you are doing, exploring food from different countries is so much fun. I look forward to our colder weather to do this one! And thank you for sharing images on Nana!
@relax2dream164
@relax2dream164 Год назад
This has been a tradition in my family. My Grandmother was French Canadian. I don’t have her recipe sadly but we have found one to make our own. Always looked forward to at Christmas, the only time we make it. ❤️🇨🇦
@paulsaintlaurent
@paulsaintlaurent Год назад
Nicolet is where I used to go visit my aunts in the motherhouse of the Sisters of the Assumtion... my family roots are all over Quebec a large number in Rimouski... Thank you for your recipe... I make French meat pie always around the holidays 😋
@beatles2001
@beatles2001 3 года назад
Love my family meat pie been eating it for 36 years and it is funny how everyone has their own variation of the pie and it's top secret only the closest of family members know the recipe. Merry Christmas Everyone.
@liamtahaney713
@liamtahaney713 3 года назад
I went to the festival d'Ete in 2017 it was amazing. Absolutely wonderful festival.
@joannbedillion3454
@joannbedillion3454 3 года назад
I am franco-American from central Maine where we have historically had a very large quebecois population from a migration to work in mills from the farmers near the Canadian border, my own Nana and her 11 siblings included. Our tourtiere (too-chay as we call it) is very similar to this recipe. We have it every Christmas eve and it MUST be served with sharp cheddar cheese slices, dill pickles and Lays potato chips.
@shawnfarquhar2434
@shawnfarquhar2434 3 года назад
I've watched a ton of vids from this channel but this one tugged at my heart in a way that I never could have anticipated. [spoiler alert] I miss my Grandma so much...
@Aethelgeat
@Aethelgeat 3 года назад
Several years ago, I started making a steak and mushroom pie for Christmas Eve dinner, primarily to simplify the cooking over the holiday. It's a modification of a steak and kidney pie from a British cookbook, and the only seasoning is salt, pepper, and ground sage. The beef is dredged in seasoned flour then browned (and forming it's own gravy), and then the double-crust is made with the same seasoned flour. I am inspired to make a tourtière this year. 24 December 2020: it was delicious. Thank you for the recipe!
@erinchamberlain1315
@erinchamberlain1315 2 года назад
Oh Nana!! How wonderful! Just love your channel ❤️. Thank you for sharing
@GavinByrneLand
@GavinByrneLand 3 года назад
Thanks for sharing such a personal recipe and story. Best wishes to you for a healthy Christmas and New Year. Thanks for all the videos keeping us sane throughout 2020.
@n.caronnelson9690
@n.caronnelson9690 5 месяцев назад
Mom made this every Christmas Eve. I have her recipie (my grandfathers) but it just isn't the same without Mom. TY
@scratchbuilder5952
@scratchbuilder5952 26 дней назад
For visitors to Canada. In the supermarkets up here, they sell pies like these(frozen section) but they are cheaply made-mass produced with way too much MSG added that tastes good at first but leaves you thirsty for hours… your homemade version is the only way to go Thanks for the great video
@rabidnarcissist
@rabidnarcissist 7 месяцев назад
I started making this for American Thanksgiving, it is a super hit, especially with friends from Canada. Make sure I watch this every time for a refresh. Thanks Glen for all your work on your videos, they are super easy to follow and I love all the history!
@AM-qp2wx
@AM-qp2wx 5 месяцев назад
Correctly pronounced Tour-tee-aire.
@321southtube
@321southtube 4 месяца назад
Glen....This looks good!!! A blast from the past. Simple and satisfying. Thanks so much
@Linuxpunk81
@Linuxpunk81 Год назад
Aw man, my mom and all my aunts would make these every year for Xmas. They would spend a week making them for everyone 😂they're all gone now. Good memories 😊
@bobxor
@bobxor 3 года назад
Tourtiere is definitely something Ill miss from not being able to visit the cousins this Christmas, thank you for sharing this recipe!
@jakester1390
@jakester1390 3 года назад
Glen, I'm not going to lie; But I really enjoy smoking a lot of weed and getting really baked and watching you. I keep your videos on all the time and use them as background noise. You're the best! Thank you
@billrowse2266
@billrowse2266 3 года назад
Oh man absolutely same.
@420greatestqueen
@420greatestqueen 3 года назад
Agreed
@beaver6d9
@beaver6d9 3 года назад
Same
@pvkat1982
@pvkat1982 4 месяца назад
I just wanted to say that I do the exact same thing. It’s the best thing to calm me down after a mentally exhausting work day.
@kevinolive
@kevinolive 3 года назад
When you said the first piece is always tricky, it brought to mind an experience from when I was a teen. Our church had a chicken dinner with lots of home made pies. My job was to help Grace with plating pies. Yes, the first is tricky but then you can come in from the side on the rest to get a nice looking piece, right?. Nope! If Grace was watching, she’d come over and tell me I was doing it wrong and show me again how to come in from the back which only works on the sturdiest of pies. I didn’t like plating the rhubarb pie because those were almost always too thin and hard to plate. But when Grace was done plating rhubarb pie, it looked like somebody puked up a piece of pie. We have a saying in our family when we mess up a piece of pie, “I graduated from Grace’s school of pie serving”. Is it a fond memory? This is almost but not quite a fond memory.
@Aethelgeat
@Aethelgeat 3 года назад
There is a point I consider forgetting about slices, get a spoon, and just scoop it out. It still tastes as good.
@timbillings6884
@timbillings6884 3 года назад
Meat pie!!! 😋😋😋😋😋😋 My mom always maid it on new years Eve!!! Mashed potatoes and bells poltry seasoning!!! 👍👍👍
@lindalenehan6204
@lindalenehan6204 Год назад
My husband is an Ouellette from Windsor, Ontario. The main street in town is Ouellette Ave. And they have this Tourtiere, also. Always, served on Christmas Eve.
@mithmaniac9
@mithmaniac9 3 года назад
YES! I grew up on these! We called them "Paté à la viande" cause where my dad is from tourtière is used for "Tourtière du lac St-Jean" usually with cubed meats like moose, rabbit, venison. At my mom's there's always about 3-4 meat pies in the freezer and you don't leave there without one. We also eat them with ketchup mashed with our forks. Tourtière du lac however takes longer to prepare and was always made MASSIVE and was reserved for christmas and/or new years.... with some pain-fromage.
@joeyboivin5389
@joeyboivin5389 3 года назад
You’re right! I live in Saguenay/Lac-Saint-Jean and in Quebec, a « Tourtière » stands for « Tourtière du Lac-Saint-Jean » and the others recipe is a « Paté à la viande »(meat pie). Cheers!
@cobia40
@cobia40 3 года назад
That’s been a family tradition in our family for as long I’ve been alive. My great grandfather, who was a traveling magician “The Great Reno” (Renaud) from Quebec, moved from Quebec to Southbridge, Massachusetts and my grandfather got station in Biloxi, MS in the 40’s with the Air Force and married my grandmother and stayed in Biloxi, MS until his passing. He would make this every year but instead of having it on Christmas Eve we had it on New Year’s Day. We use Bell’s Seasoning which has All Spice, Clove, Marjoram. We also add a box stuffing mix in the mixture and use the water the potatoes boiled in for liquid to make it moist. I think we just used ground beef and pork though. Veal is hard to get down here on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Enjoy your shows. Thanks for doing them.
@notold37
@notold37 3 года назад
Wow, I like this recipe, as an Australian its something I've never had, I'll have to make an Aussie version, thank you Glen and Julie for the recipe 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🦘🦘🦘🦘
@GuiOmania
@GuiOmania 3 года назад
I am from saguenay lac st-jean and the tourtiere is really awesome !!!
@PatrickAustin
@PatrickAustin 3 года назад
Having grown up in Burlington, VT I can totally appreciate these recipes!
@joeyhardin1288
@joeyhardin1288 Год назад
Thank you, Merry Christmas. God Bless and stay safe.
@TheProseRose
@TheProseRose 3 года назад
Thanks so much for this video! I'm an expat Canadian living in the US and now I can make this, which my family had every Christmas 🎄Happy Holidays!
@deniseschleckser1598
@deniseschleckser1598 3 года назад
Thanks for this, so fun! Tourtiere is a Christmas tradition in our family even though our relatives have not lived in Quebec for several generations. This Christmas, even though I can't see my mom, dad or brother due to COVID, I will still be delivering the pies!
@sdega315
@sdega315 3 года назад
I am so excited to see you present this dish. My Quebecois grandfather used to make this when I was a child. It took me many years (before RU-vid) to figure out what the dish was. But now I have cooked it many times for my own children. Happy Holidays to you and Jules!
@sharonledwell6807
@sharonledwell6807 3 года назад
I'm an Anglo who grew up in the Saguenay. We always had meat pie for (after midnight mass) usually made with ground pork, allspice, mace, salt, pepper served with red tomato chow. Tortiere in the region was a robust double crusted pie made in a deep roasting pan. Traditionally I think it had game (rabbit, moose, etc) and diced potatoes - I remember eating it at Carnival.They're both delicious but very different.
@YH-gn6uu
@YH-gn6uu 3 года назад
I'M Acadian French from N-B just east from Quebec ,and we are like cousins of Quebeckers and our meats pies are not at all like in Quebec. We cook , pork, beef and poultry and onions. We boil everything ,debone then we will have to put flour to thicken the water with salt and pepper ,so it not running and sometime we put cube of potatoes like the size of the meat we put in, put between the crust and its so so good...i was raise on that one but i try the tourtiere i like it but for us its the meat pies that are on the table for Christmas Have a happy New years...D'une lointaine coussine Acadienne car nous somme des francais aussi et beaucoup de nos ancetres étais des freres et soeurs exillés en 1755...
@ChakatSandwalker
@ChakatSandwalker 3 года назад
I love how the rounded capital letters (B, C, P, R) are written in the recipe. Seeing examples of handwriting from decades ago is so wonderful. Today people can't write nor read cursive, which is a shame.
@gimpycpu
@gimpycpu Год назад
Living in Japan for almost 10 years now, I miss tourtiere.
@Clairevoyante
@Clairevoyante 3 года назад
Homemade chunky ketchup, marinated beets, and you've got yourself a really delicious repas Québécois!
@christinablenkhorn2931
@christinablenkhorn2931 Год назад
We use Heinz chili sauce in our house.
@nitrampd
@nitrampd 3 года назад
My family is from Southern Ontario, for about the last century. In 1985 my parents moved us to New Brunswick. My mother got a recipe from our Acadian neighbour for this thing called tourtiere. It’s been part of our family’s Christmas Eve tradition ever since. I married a Catholic so no meat for me Christmas Eve but I make it over the holidays. So good. Lard crust only.
@debrajouglard8344
@debrajouglard8344 3 года назад
My Grandma Adelina Marie Juneau Jouglard was born in Echo Louisiana and her ancestors were from Canada and France. She was a very good cook. She made individual meat pies when I was little. She also made meatballs with a roux that she served over rice. It was one of my families favorite dishes. She was part Tunica Indian. I miss her cooking. My mom learned how to make the meatballs, roux and rice and it was passed on to me. I always have trouble getting the roux just right. I have a Cajun Cookbook but even using the roux recipe in it doesn’t help me get it right.
@TracyLalonde
@TracyLalonde 3 года назад
My grandmother (French Canadian from Alexandria in Eastern Ontario) made her tourtière very similarly to this recipe, but using only ground pork instead of a mixture with beef/veal. It was absolutely delicious, and a family holiday staple for sure!
@ronee1959
@ronee1959 2 года назад
Hi Tracey my late mother in law was from Alexandria. Estelle Lefebvre. Many Christmas Eves at Lochiel. Hers had pork and veal with sariette, gloves ,cinnamon and garlic. This brought back those times.
@ryanmeashaw4487
@ryanmeashaw4487 3 года назад
My Father's side is French Canadian, immigrating from Quebec to here in Upstate NY. We never had this, but I think it's a grand tradition to embark on this Christmas. Thanks for sharing!
@bmrrman
@bmrrman 2 года назад
Two words... salted herbs Or herbes salee. Quebec's finest. My Ouellette family recipe is 200 years old. My wife makes it and my three daughters 5,4,18months adore it. Butter isn't fine. Lard makes or breaks the crust no lard no love
@lylymongeon
@lylymongeon 3 года назад
Granby, Eastern townships here. Mashed potatoes instead of cubes helps make the mixture smooth, binding and keeping shape for easier serving. We add cinnamon and nutmeg. Rest is spot-on for my family.
@melissathomas1138
@melissathomas1138 3 года назад
My ex. His mother ran my through her recipe of there family tourtiere. Lac St. John area. And I’ve made it several time for our Christmas Eve. I haven’t made it in a few years, I loved it, so delicious. I’m here for a recap. I want to make it again, for Christmas and for whenever. Thanks, Melissa from Thunder Bay.
@littlecrookedhouse
@littlecrookedhouse 3 года назад
Mom's side of the family was from western Ontario, but tourtiere sneaked in there somehow. My granny made it with pulled, pot-roasted versions of the same 3 meats. Her personal touch was a very small handful raisins & finely pounded almonds. She also poured a hearty broth from the reduced cooking juices through the vent after the pie had cooled. Best made early in the day & eaten cold. Potatoes served separately. Tourtiere is one of the things I love most about Christmas eve.
@VintageLilacMemories
@VintageLilacMemories 3 года назад
My father always made the tourtiere. He mashed the potatoes more to make more of a creamy filling, the meat had a finer grind. He always added garlic and a splash of HP steak sauce. Our gravy was cream of mushroom soup with beef boveril.
@RuralSpanishRetirement
@RuralSpanishRetirement 3 года назад
I'm always interested in regional historical cooking, since this is really high meat content it suggests a fairly high standard of living in the past. Insights into history can be found in all sorts of places. Family recipes are also priceless 💓
@MrBeav1018
@MrBeav1018 3 года назад
when my parents were alive every Christmas eve mom would bake a rabbit pie that she made earlier . That turn out to be a family tradition every year
@flyingsealtv
@flyingsealtv 2 года назад
i made this today in prep for christmas eve! it smells wonderful. can't wait to eat it!
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