Culinary Tourism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 102
About This Presentation
Title:

Culinary Tourism

Description:

Culinary Tourism – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:3073
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 103
Provided by: francisboy
Category:
Tags: culinary | ewr | mus | tourism

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Culinary Tourism


1
Culinary Tourism
  • Smoothwater of Temagami

2
What is Culinary?
  • Everyone eats.
  • Food is comforting.
  • Food is fun.
  • Food is a shared experience, a common ground.
  • Food builds community.
  • Use food as a method of geographic inquiry.
  • Use food to enliven natural, cultural, economic
    and political realities.

3
What is Tourism?
  • Traveling as a recreation, for pleasure.
  • The activities and businesses providing services
    for, profiting from, or benefiting from,
    tourists.
  • Tourist is one who makes a tour or a pleasure
    trip.

4
Culinary Tourism is Sense of Place.
  • Sense of place is geography.
  • Through food we identify, investigate,
    analyze, describe, evaluate, compare the
    relationship between the land and
    people.

5
But a meal is so much more than just the food.
  • Context
  • Company
  • Purpose
  • Country
  • Atmosphere

6
Local Global Issues
  • Industrial revolution the commoditization of food
  • Role of feminism
  • Media junk food
  • Food as medicine/health pharmaceuticals,
    processed foods, cosmetics, pet foods.
  • Universal access to food a human right?
  • Terminator gene
  • Organic food movement
  • Slow food movement
  • Community Sustained Agriculture (CSA)
  • Footprints
  • Hunger in Canada worldwide
  • GMO, United Nations
  • World Trade Organization

7
(No Transcript)
8
Temagami Region Northeastern Ontario-northwestern
Quebec a.k.a.The Little Clay Belt, Temiskaming
basin, Ottawa River watershed
9
Unique Features ofTemagami-Temiskaming
  • Great Lakes - St. Lawrence forest
  • Recreation mecca since late 1800s
  • First Nations presence for over 5,000 years
  • Largest contiguous stands of old growth pine
    forests
  • Ontarios two highest landforms
  • Fur trade, logging mining
  • Francophone - Anglophone cultures
  • Farming since late 1800s
  • History of environmental activism

10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
(No Transcript)
13
Sourcing locally. Farming the Clay Belt.
14
(No Transcript)
15
  • Local flour mill -oats, wheat, buckwheat
  • Temiskaming lamb (Queens coronation)
  • Market gardeners for organics heritage
    varieties
  • Bison, fish, beef, elk
  • Wild foragers
  • Foire Gourmande festival
  • Local wines beers

16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
Farmers Harvest Dinner
  • Carrot buckwheat fritters
  • Smoothwater beer bread made with flours grown
    and milled in Temiskaming
  • Balsamic yellow and red cherry tomatoes with
    local feta on a bed of arugula
  • Local beef ribs slow roasted with garlic and
    salt
  • Roasted rosemary potatoes
  • Garden bean medley
  • Hours-old corn on the cob
  • Chocolate zucchini cake with homemade chai ice
    cream

21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
886 farms 57 of available land base
farmed382,052 acres
24
(No Transcript)
25
Forestry Jobs, services, heritage, economic
trends, biosphere health
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
Working ConditionsWinter hauling, storage,
spoilage, kitchen technology, access to
ingredients.
  • INGREDIENTS early 1900s
  • Salt pork, hardtack, dried peas, pear barley for
    soup, dried apples, molasses, hogshead of rum,
    spruce tea, occasional wild fish/game.
  • INGREDIENTS post WW1
  • Bread, corned beef, white beans, China tea,
    sugar, prunes, raisins, fresh beef, vegetables,
    pies, butter, jam. Coffee came with Finish and
    Scandinavian loggers after 1920.

29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
Teme-Augama AnishinawbegDeep Water People
  • Presence in Temagami for over 5,000 years
  • Developed Nastawgan (todays canoe routes)
  • Aboriginal farming, hunting, gathering
  • Language, ceremonies
  • Concept of medicine compare Aboriginal,
    Western,
  • Ayurvedic, Natural, etc.
  • Western realities fantasies of First Nations,
    appropriation
  • Tourism Education

35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
Sugar Shack Lunch
  • Homemade maple bread made with locally grown and
    milled flours
  • Maple syrup baked beans with Mennonite summer
    sausage
  • Smoothwater home pickles and spiced peaches
  • Nuns farts and sugar shack coffee

39
The Canadian Potato ( Jerusalem artichoke)
  • Root vegetable soup drizzled with high bush
    cranberry confit
  • Canadian potato poutine with local goat cheese
    curds and lamb gravy
  • Garden cold weather harvest of beets and carrots
    served on a bed of arugula, daisy leaf, french
    sorrel
  • Tuxedo beans with balsam fir
  • Apple galette with homemade buckwheat honey ice
    cream

40
(No Transcript)
41
Medicinal Concepts Cultural Health Strategies
42
(No Transcript)
43
(No Transcript)
44
(No Transcript)
45
(No Transcript)
46
(No Transcript)
47
Autumn Bounty Dinner
  • Grilled Temiskaming raw milk sheeps cheese
    served on a new apple slice
  • Cranberry beer bread made with flours grown and
    milled in Temiskaming
  • Cabbage rolls made with local lamb
  • Buckwheat kasha
  • Jump fried puffballs
  • Grandma Mins buckwheat honey cake made with
    local honey and flours
  • Hot spiced black tea

48
Culinary Workshops
49
(No Transcript)
50
(No Transcript)
51
(No Transcript)
52
(No Transcript)
53
(No Transcript)
54
Summer Solstice Dinner
  • Wild day lilies stuffed with soft Temiskaming
    chevre and a morsel of local smoked trout
  • Wild flower challa made with Temiskaming milled
    flours
  • Smoothwater garden salad with arugula, daisy
    leaf, french sorrel, oak leaf lettuce and
    tarragon baby beets
  • Slow-grilled Temiskaming lamb ribs brushed with
    garlic and salt
  • Boiled new potatoes roast tomatoes
  • Mess of jump fried garlic scapes
  • Wild rose homemade ice cream

55
Trapping Canadas first natural resource
56
(No Transcript)
57
Trappers Bread
Wives of trappers make this heavy bread to
sustain their husbands on the trapline. The
bread is 'worn' next to their hearts, to stay
warm. Sentimental or practical?
58
Colourful characters Grey Owl Anahareo circa
1920s
59
Rebel Oblate Father Paradis 1882-1924
60
Poutine, the Francophone Delicacy? (pronounced
poo'teen, poo'tin or pootzin?)
61
Silver Mining in Cobalt
  • Toronto Stock Exchange, Casa Loma, 1929 crash
  • Immigrant workers North vs. south share of
    wealth
  • NHL, Unions, Work conditions
  • Use of open pits for fisheries
  • Environmental law

62
(No Transcript)
63
(No Transcript)
64
(No Transcript)
65
(No Transcript)
66
Wilderness Adventure Every meal tells a story
67
(No Transcript)
68
(No Transcript)
69
(No Transcript)
70
(No Transcript)
71
(No Transcript)
72
(No Transcript)
73
Paddlers Breakfast
  • Local oat porridge with seeds of hemp, sunflower
    and pumpkin
  • Buttermilk pancakes made with local buckwheat
    flour just-picked wild blueberries
  • Mennonite slab bacon
  • Temagami Maple Syrup

74
(No Transcript)
75
(No Transcript)
76
(No Transcript)
77
Spring Hikers Dinner
  • Smoothwater garden rhubarb punch with Strawberry
    Frasil
  • Baked dumplings with wild ginger, stinging
    nettle and Temiskaming spring lamb
  • Homemade chive bread made with locally milled
    flours
  • Linguine with grilled Mennonite sausage, garlic
    fronds, wild dandelion, morels and fresh parmesan
    cheese
  • Smoothwater garden asparagus wild fiddle heads
  • Ten pound chocolate cake

78
(No Transcript)
79
(No Transcript)
80
(No Transcript)
81
(No Transcript)
82
Skiers Lunch
  • White bean turnip soup with local chevre
    cheese crumble
  • Hot organic chicken sandwich with savoury gravy
    on Smoothwater bannock
  • Cabbage carrot salad with loveage seed
  • Chocolate chip meringues

83
(No Transcript)
84
Christmas Light Dinner
  • Bison carpaccio on triangle crisps
  • Cranberry bog and mulled cider
  • Beets, blood oranges horseradish medley
  • Local duck, slow roasted with blackcurrant and
    beer
  • Braised brussel sprouts Ontario chestnuts on a
    bed of wild rice
  • Hedgehog saffron pudding
  • Coffee-hazelnut dacquoise

85
Value-added workshops retreats
86
(No Transcript)
87
(No Transcript)
88
(No Transcript)
89
(No Transcript)
90
Your Foodstyle Statement
91
(No Transcript)
92
(No Transcript)
93
(No Transcript)
94
(No Transcript)
95
(No Transcript)
96
(No Transcript)
97
  • Culinary tourism
  • A worldwide foodweb connecting suppliers,
    educators consumers.

98
(No Transcript)
99
(No Transcript)
100
(No Transcript)
101
(No Transcript)
102
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com