Calgary Herald

Food Day celebrates Canadian cuisine

Regions boast unique dishes

- LOIS ABRAHAM

A uniquely Canadian meal for 7,000 people is just one of the events being hosted as part of the country’s largest culinary party.

Chef Andrew Hodge is gearing up to feed hungry oilsands workers near Fort McMurray, a special menu this Saturday to mark Food Day Canada.

Meanwhile, Roary MacPherson at the Sheraton Hotel Newfoundla­nd aims to be first to celebrate Food Day Canada by kicking off a two-day party on Friday.

Food Day Canada organizer and founder Anita Stewart expects some 250 restaurant­s across the country will mark the occasion with special menus.

She says the annual event is a chance for Canadians to celebrate the country’s farmers, fishers, chefs, researcher­s and home cooks.

Hodge’s meal for Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. workers is the largest Stewart has seen in the dozen years she’s been co-ordinating Food Day Canada.

The chef has divided his menu into main and side dishes from western, eastern and Central Canada; the dessert tray will feature sweets from across the country.

His interpreta­tion of food from the west includes sweet and sticky Saskatoon berry barbecue ribs, corn on the cob, and maple and bacon roasted brussels sprouts. From the Atlantic region is seafood stew, while a poutine bar represents Central Canada.

MacPherson has invited chefs from the region and several provinces to take part in his East Coast party in St. John’s. The public can mingle with the chefs at the hotel on Friday, while the main event Saturday is called The Great Canadian Food Market.

Diners can check the Food Day Canada website for participat­ing restaurant­s in their area along with their stories and menus.

Home cooks too are invited to “cook their own stories” at backyard barbecues and picnics and share them via social media, Stewart said from Elora, Ont.

“The goal is to create a strong culinary nation. That’s what we have to do and having a national food party is the best way to do it,” says Stewart, author and food laureate at the University of Guelph.

Stewart says many Food Day Canada chefs “are doing pretty cool things in terms of sustainabi­lity, harvesting the wild and preserving the harvest.”

You don’t have to go to major cities to find great restaurant­s, she adds.

“There are little clusters of excellence across the country that cross all genres of cooking and a variety of price points,” Stewart says.

Food Day Canada was initially called the World’s Longest Barbecue and was launched by Stewart in 2003 to support farmers whose livelihood­s were threatened in the wake of the mad cow crisis.

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