5 Canadian Foods You Need To Travel For
There is more to Canadian cuisine than poutine and all things maple. Really! We have lined up five beloved Canadian delicacies to prove that that stereotype is far from true.
Photo Modified: Flickr/Craig Dugas
BeaverTails
If it's good enough for President Obama, who stopped by the Byward Market in Ottawa on the way to the airport just to buy one, it's good enough for you. BeaverTails are discs of fried dough with a bevy of topping options, such as whipped cream, banana slices, crumbled Oreos, and Nutella. You should go to Byward Market and try one, too.
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Bloody Caesar
Bloody Caesars are similar to bloody marys, except they use Clamato — a combination of tomato juice and clam broth. Give it a chance; after all, the drink recently earned itself a national day: May 14 has been declared National Caesar's Day. Try it at Mission Diner in Calgary, where the drink has its own section of the menu dedicated to it.
Montreal Bagels
Montreal-style bagels are smaller, denser, and, as a result of being boiled in water infused with honey, sweeter than your standard New York bagel. They are always baked in a wood-fired oven. Try them at Montreal's famous St-Viateur, but don't ask for them to be sliced and spread with cream cheese. That's so New York. Try them plain and you won't regret it.
Nanaimo Bar
This no-bake dessert consists of a layer of wafer crumbs topped with a layer of custard-flavored icing which is then capped with melted chocolate. Perfection, in other words. This treat is so popular in the city of Nanaimo, where it was invented, that there is a "Nanaimo bar trail" that tourists can follow.
Photo Modified: Flickr/Craig Dugas
Rappie Pie
This Acadian specialty, also called "rapture pie," is made by grating potatoes, squeezing them through cheesecloth, replacing their lost moisture with a meat or seafood broth, and adding meat. Right by the coast in Little Brook, Nova Scotia, you'll find Évelina's — look no further.