Québec Pork Pie (Tourtière) →
This recipe was developed in memory of my French Canadian grandmother, Pauline Mason, who was born in the late 1800s near St. Albans, Vermont, but spent the majority of her adult life living in the Italian immigrant community in and around Providence, Rhode Island working as a mid-wife, reading cards, telling fortunes, and doing what she needed to do to survive difficult times during the Great Depression. It was Pauline who instilled the love of cooking in me. Québec Pork Pie is traditionally served at Christmas with Green Ketchup, but like meat-filled pastries from so many ethnic cuisines (eg. empanadas, Cornish pasties, and other British meat pies, samosas, Nigerian and Ghanaian meat pies, etc.) it should be eaten and enjoyed anytime. Much like Italian red sauce, every Quebecois family has its own tourtière recipe which is believed to be “the best”. Unfortunately, my grandmother didn’t write down the meat pie recipe I remember from my childhood, but after researching numerous recipes, this comes close to what I remember. Because I prefer apples or pears with pork, I serve my tourtière accompanied by a Green Apple Chutney in place of the traditional green ketchup. Served with a green salad, it makes a satisfying lunch or light dinner. Bon appétit
Classic Tourtière or Québec Pork Pie
Servings 4-6 (a 9-inch pie)
Ingredients:
1 pound ground pork ideally organic & local
¾ cups cold water or chicken stock (I use chicken stock)
½ cup finely chopped onion
¼ cup finely chopped celery
½ teaspoon ground black pepper
1 bay leaf
½ teaspoon dried savory
¼ teaspoon dried rosemary
¼ teaspoon grated nutmeg
¼ teaspoon cinnamon
Salt
a small potato diced
Pastry for one double-crust 9-inch pies
1 egg beaten, for glaze
Preparation:
In a large, heavy frying pan, sauté the onion and celery until translucent
Add the meat and brown; when brown, add the stock and the rest of the ingredients (onion, celery, pepper, bay leaf, savory, rosemary, nutmeg, and cinnamon). Cook, covered, over medium-low heat for 30 minutes; stir often. Add more water if the mixture dries out.
Halfway through cooking time, season with salt to taste.
Remove bay leaf and allow to cool before assembling the pie
After assembling the pie crust, lightly brush the top of the pie with an egg wash comprised of a well-beaten egg and a tablespoon of water. This will give the crust a shiny golden sheen when it comes out of the oven.
Preheat the oven to 375F and bake for 45-50 minutes until the crust is golden brown.
Adapted from:
https://simplebites.net/how-to-makeclassic-tourtiere-qubec-pork-pie/
https://www.davidlebovitz.com/the-joy-of-cooking-meat-pie-recipe-tourtiere/
Wine pairing: light to medium-bodied red wines like Pinot Noir or Beaujolais; Zinfandel or Primitivo from southern Italy or French Grenache from the Rhone Valley, and Garnacha from Spain; not overly minerally white wines like Dry Riesling and Viognier will also complement this dish.