Sea-pie

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sea-pie an entity of type: Thing

Le cipaille est un plat de la cuisine québécoise d'origine anglaise d'Angleterre, soit sea pie, un gros pâté de viande en croûte fait pour les navires transatlantiques. Le mot est parfois orthographié sipaille, aussi appelé cipâte ou six-pâtes. L'usage de l'orthographe « sea-pie » est un anglicisme. rdf:langString
Sea-pie is a layered meat pie made with meat or fish, and is known to have been served to British sailors during the 18th century. Its popularity was passed on to the New England colonies sufficiently to be included in Amelia Simmons's landmark 1796 book American Cookery. Sea-pie is made by lining a saucepan or pot with a thick layer of pastry, and then filling the pot with alternating layers of meat (such as pork, beef, fish, or pigeon) or stew, and vegetables; and, topping the layered ingredients with pastry. There is no set list of ingredients; rather, sea-pie is made with whatever meat and vegetables are on-hand at the time it is made. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cipaille
rdf:langString Sea-pie
rdf:langString Sea-pie
rdf:langString Sea-pie
xsd:integer 19610238
xsd:integer 1098473295
rdf:langString Cipaille, cipâtes, six-pâtes
rdf:langString British America, New France
rdf:langString Meat or fish
rdf:langString Le cipaille est un plat de la cuisine québécoise d'origine anglaise d'Angleterre, soit sea pie, un gros pâté de viande en croûte fait pour les navires transatlantiques. Le mot est parfois orthographié sipaille, aussi appelé cipâte ou six-pâtes. L'usage de l'orthographe « sea-pie » est un anglicisme.
rdf:langString Sea-pie is a layered meat pie made with meat or fish, and is known to have been served to British sailors during the 18th century. Its popularity was passed on to the New England colonies sufficiently to be included in Amelia Simmons's landmark 1796 book American Cookery. Sea-pie is made by lining a saucepan or pot with a thick layer of pastry, and then filling the pot with alternating layers of meat (such as pork, beef, fish, or pigeon) or stew, and vegetables; and, topping the layered ingredients with pastry. There is no set list of ingredients; rather, sea-pie is made with whatever meat and vegetables are on-hand at the time it is made. In Quebec this dish is called cipaille, cipâtes or six-pâtes (in French), and is a traditional Quebecois dish. It contains no fish or other seafood, but moose, partridge, hare, beef, veal, pork and chicken (or a simpler permutation of these). The French name most likely originated as an adaptation of sea-pie.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3743
rdf:langString Cipaille, cipâtes, six-pâtes
xsd:string Meat or fish

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