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razazteca

Canadians I have a question for you

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What is Back Bacon on a Bun, eh? The Mike Myers interview on Conan O'brian show is driving me crazy. So what was he talking aboot?

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Guest Museite
It's back bacon that's been put on a bun. Maybe.

That sounds pretty accurate to me...but then it's a Canadian term. Maybe its a weird hockey analogy.

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Guest The Winter Of My Discontent

I'm Canadian and I have no clue. Nor do I have any interest in knowing. Of course I am one of the most Un-Canadian Canadians out there, so huzzah.

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Found this whole thread on a message board about the subject. To sum it up and avoid reading the garbage below, Back Bacon = what we know as Canadian Bacon

 

 

It's Canadian Bacon, New "signature" dish for Toronto?

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Marlene Posted: Mar 9 2004, 04:27 PM

 

 

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As noted in the Toronto Star Digest, here on eG.

 

 

 

QUOTE

The food lovers of Toronto have spoken — forcefully, argumentatively, persuasively.

 

Hogtown needs a signature dish. (No it doesn't.)

 

Let's be pro-active citizens and create one. (It won't be authentic unless it creates itself.)

 

Making the Hogtown — peameal bacon on a sourdough bun slathered with maple mustard — the taste of Toronto is an awesome idea. (It's ridiculous beyond belief.)

 

 

 

Toronto (or Hogtown as we are affectionately known) speak out on the concept of having a Toronto "signature" dish. So, fellow Torontonians, I want your opinion. Do we need a special dish to call our own? Is this the right dish?

 

Discuss!

 

 

 

This post has been edited by Marlene on Mar 9 2004, 04:29 PM

 

 

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Keith Talent Posted: Mar 9 2004, 04:57 PM

 

 

 

 

 

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Leave a bag of unmarked twenties in the washroom of the Starbucks on Robson and Thurlow, the cool north one, not the trendy south one, or I'll cross post this to the Vancouver board, and then all the smart mouthed lotus eaters will flood in here and make a mockery of Canada's number one city.

 

 

 

Marlene Posted: Mar 9 2004, 05:00 PM

 

 

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QUOTE (Keith Talent @ Mar 9 2004, 06:57 PM)

Leave a bag of unmarked twenties in the washroom of the Starbucks on Robson and Thurlow, the cool north one, not the trendy south one, or I'll cross post this to the Vancouver board, and then all the smart mouthed lotus eaters will flood in here and make a mockery of Canada's number one city.

 

 

I don't think that's quite what I meant by discuss. And I never step willingly into any Starbucks.

 

I also happen to like the West Coast

 

This post has been edited by Marlene on Mar 9 2004, 05:01 PM

 

 

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fresco Posted: Mar 10 2004, 08:38 PM

 

 

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Peameal bacon on a bun is already the signature food of Toronto, in much the same way that smoked meat is for Montreal. Why does it require a special designation?

 

 

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Marlene Posted: Mar 10 2004, 09:15 PM

 

 

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QUOTE (fresco @ Mar 10 2004, 10:38 PM)

Peameal bacon on a bun is already the signature food of Toronto, in much the same way that smoked meat is for Montreal. Why does it require a special designation?

 

 

I don't know. But the Star thinks it does. I'd really prefer to do away with "Hogtown" though

 

 

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Kenk Posted: Mar 10 2004, 10:12 PM

 

 

 

 

 

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The signature dish of Toronto should be Bubble Tea, or Pho.

 

 

 

mnebergall Posted: Mar 11 2004, 09:17 AM

 

 

 

 

 

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Just what is "Canadian Bacon?" The only thing that seems to be available south of the border is Canadian "style" bacon which suggests to me that the real thing is probably qualitatively different and likely better.

 

fresco Posted: Mar 11 2004, 10:23 AM

 

 

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QUOTE (mnebergall @ Mar 11 2004, 11:17 AM)

Just what is "Canadian Bacon?" The only thing that seems to be available south of the border is Canadian "style" bacon which suggests to me that the real thing is probably qualitatively different and likely better.

 

 

"Canadian bacon" and "peameal bacon" are two different things.

Peameal is a brine cured loin, coated in cornmeal.

Canadian bacon is a smoke cured loin. Usually. Although it's referred to in Canada as "back bacon" never "Canadian bacon."

 

 

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Betts Posted: Mar 11 2004, 04:10 PM

 

 

 

 

 

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As an expat Canadian - I truly miss peameal bacon sandwiches. I don't know why it never caught on in the US - it's tasty, healthy and easy to cook.

 

Pere Hugo Posted: Mar 16 2004, 07:54 AM

 

 

 

 

 

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I had thought that "peameal" bacon was the same thing as "Canadian" bacon because historically the Canadians fed their pigs peameal instead of whatever the American hogs got.

 

Presumably the peameal made for more tender and better flavoured meat.

 

By the way, is that really peameal that coats Canadian bacon? It seems to me to be more like cornmeal.

 

 

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Guest cobainwasmurdered

You didn't know?

 

Am I the only one who spent his formative years living on a pig farm?

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Guest Choken One

Toronto isn't Hogtown...

 

Cincy is the city of pigs bitch...and city of soap and city of chili.

and of course the city of the queen.

 

we can't fucking decide.

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Guest cobainwasmurdered
That crazy stuff with gravy on it? Silly Canadians nothing goes on fries but chili or ketchup.

oh you are SO wrong.

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Gravy on fries is indeed delicious. Chili and ketchup is very limiting. You can put many many things on fries, they're a very all purpose food. Not mayonaise though, that's disgusting.

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So would the official Canadian fast food meal would be back bacon on a bun with fries & gravy and a Molson beer............is this #6 in the McDonalds drive thru menu?

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Fries and gravy is called Poutine, just fyi up in this bitch. Except that has cheese curds also. Maybe they like to eat it without the cheese curds and just call it "fries and gravy" up in Canada. I wouldn't know.

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Canadian bacon: A leaner alternative to regular bacon, Canadian bacon is smoked and cured pork loin. (In Canada and Great Britain, it is called back bacon.) It's used in much the same way as bacon, though it resembles ham in appearance and taste. Three and a half ounces of this meat will supply 185 calories, 41% of them coming from fat.

 

It comes from the Canadian Back Pork Loin Primal cut which is located in the area number 2 in the chart below, which is then cured and smoked.

 

Pig_carcus.gif

 

*took a meat cutting class*

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Guest cobainwasmurdered
Last time I did McDs in Canada they still have that gross pizza there.

they're gone now

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