Acadian cuisine is the traditional dishes of the Acadian people. It is primarily seen in the present-day cultural region of Acadia. Acadian cuisine has been influenced by many things throughout its history, mostly the Deportation of the Acadians, proximity to the ocean, the Canadian winter, bad soil fertility, the cuisine of Quebec, American cuisine, and English cuisine.
Acadian cuisine is not very well known in Canada or internationally. It has much in common with Québécois cuisine because of its geographical proximity. The two often feature the same dishes, but the cuisine of Acadia puts more emphasis on seafood. Acadian cuisine has notably served as the base for Cajun cuisine because the Cajun cuisine are descendants of Acadians who were deported to Louisiana. It is also believed that Acadians are responsible for normalizing potato consumption in France—a vegetable the French once considered poisonous.

Also known as:
Wikidata ID: Q3006862
Wikipedia title: Acadian cuisine
References:
Inbound Links


Unlinked Mentions

Article content licensed under CC-BY-SA; original content from Wikimedia Foundation; image data under CC-BY-SA from Wikimedia Foundation

        
    ID: 17361