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-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   French Canadian meat pie "Tourtiere" (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/french-canadian-meat-pie-tourtiere-66552/)

JeffAVEWS 12-27-2012 10:24 AM

French Canadian meat pie "Tourtiere"
 
I married Irish, but my wife's grandmother's parents were from Quebec. When I married my wife 40+ years ago I was introduced to the custom of having a Christmas meat pie on Christmas morning. My Mother-in-Law would make 60 of them around Thanksgiving and freeze them. I made some this year and are they delicious! Any other Villagers enjoy this custom?

BaylorBear 12-27-2012 12:16 PM

Not us, but it sounds like an excellent tradition! ....and yummy too!

Suzi 12-27-2012 02:00 PM

In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, a traditional meat pie is a "pastie" and, years ago the wives of the copper and iron workers and lumberjacks would make them for the men to take to work for lunch. These are hearty meals: pie dough with chopped steak, potatoes, rutabagas and carrots folded in half and then baked: eaten like a sandwich. I make them also and sometimes buy them from local bakers. They are great for growing boys and men with big appetites.

LittleDog 12-27-2012 02:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by svgephart (Post 600251)
In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, a traditional meat pie is a "pastie" and, years ago the wives of the copper and iron workers and lumberjacks would make them for the men to take to work for lunch. These are hearty meals: pie dough with chopped steak, potatoes, rutabagas and carrots folded in half and then baked: eaten like a sandwich. I make them also and sometimes buy them from local bakers. They are great for growing boys and men with big appetites.

We've ordered pasties online and really enjoy them for an easy to prepare meal. The Cornish women used to make them for their miner husbands. They stayed warm until lunchtime. My wife is into Cornish "stuff".

John

Cantwaittoarrive 12-27-2012 03:23 PM

I guess we don't at least not technically, we did however make homemade turkey pot pies from our leftovers. My wife's family is Irish and they have made homemade turkey pot pies with leftovers going back at least 3 generations

rubicon 12-27-2012 05:00 PM

I am going to ask my wife to make me a meat pie so I can eat it while playing golf

eweissenbach 12-27-2012 05:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rubicon (Post 600322)
I am going to ask my wife to make me a meat pie so I can eat it while playing golf

You're liable to get a meat pie right up the side of the head! :boxing2:

Cateca 12-27-2012 05:49 PM

Tourtiere
 
Yes. I am part of a French Canadian family that celebrated Christmas with toutiere pies. The modern version is much like a meat pie with some potatos. However, tourtiere comes from word tourte, a small bird, now exatinguished, that was hunted so as ro have the "meat" for the tourtiere pies.
From a Former Maniac. Bonne et Heureuse Annee!

Dirigo 12-27-2012 09:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cateca (Post 600339)
Yes. I am part of a French Canadian family that celebrated Christmas with toutiere pies. The modern version is much like a meat pie with some potatos. However, tourtiere comes from word tourte, a small bird, now exatinguished, that was hunted so as ro have the "meat" for the tourtiere pies.
From a Former Maniac. Bonne et Heureuse Annee!

As I lived in Central Maine for 35 years and know many Franco-Americans, I have eaten many a toutiere pie, and have made quite a few with recipes given to me.

I haven't made a toutiere pie for several years now, but my mouth is watering just remembering how good they are.

rockyisle 12-27-2012 09:19 PM

Will anyone share their recipe here? I'd love to make one. My Mom made Gorton for us when we were kids. She only made it in the winter months - great on toast...

chuckinca 12-27-2012 10:33 PM

Sounds like a Burrito to me.

.

crgski 12-28-2012 06:45 AM

Love Meat Pies too
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JeffAVEWS (Post 600157)
I married Irish, but my wife's grandmother's parents were from Quebec. When I married my wife 40+ years ago I was introduced to the custom of having a Christmas meat pie on Christmas morning. My Mother-in-Law would make 60 of them around Thanksgiving and freeze them. I made some this year and are they delicious! Any other Villagers enjoy this custom?

Hi, my family originates from canada and meat pies were always on the table from thanksgiving thru christmas. Love them.

Pa & Giggi 12-28-2012 08:46 AM

Meat pies were always on the table for Thanksgiving and Christmas in our family as my mother came from Canada and moved to the states after she married my dad. To this day they still are part of our family tradition and my kids look forward to my meat pies. I left one in my son's freezer when I left NH last month. I made mine with 5 lbs of pork from the butcher, one large onion and let that cook in a metal pan so it can have bits stick to the bottom. When 3/4 cooked, add 2 potatoes (cubed), salt and pepper 1 tbsp all spice (or more if you like) and 1 tbsp or more of turkey seasoning (the yellow box with the turkey)

Cook the meat down until it sticks to the bottom a bit and don't cover your pan during this process. Taste during seasoning and add more if needed which you might. When it sticks to bottom, scape with spoon to get those tasty bits and stir those bits into your meat. Your potatoes should be cooked and you shouldn't have any grease.

You will have enough meat to fill two deep dish pies. My pie plates are very deep, if you are making smaller pies, use less meat. Good luck and happy eating!

entemedor 12-28-2012 03:08 PM

Love tourtiere ... we use the same meat filling for turkey stuffing. And after the turkey is gone, we make pea soup out of the turkey carcass. And, of course, pea soup out of a ham bone too.

A bientot ...

rubicon 12-28-2012 03:23 PM

I found a receipe that includes a combination of three meats celery, carrots onions and potatoes. Marinade is a combination of salt pepper allspice cinnamon, red wine thyme sautee the incredients then place in pie dough and bake. to the experts out there is that close? Any secret family deviations tha make it better?


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