What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Package?

Semperfi_dani

Electoral Member
Nov 1, 2005
482
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Edmonton
As some of you have read in the music forum, i am making a CD of Canadian music for some of my American friends (which btw..still looking for ideas!!!).

Anyways, its all part of a larger package that i want to make that is my own patriotic bragging gift :canada:

So far, in addition to the CD, i am tossing in a Coffee Crisp bar because none of my friends have ever heard of it! *how can that be???*

Other ideas i have heard is a CBC tshirt, a bottle of maplesyrup, slippers...

Any other ideas (that are reletively cheap in price)...
 

peapod

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2004
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pumpkin pie bungalow
Re: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

How about some tim hortens coffee...see I cannot even spell it, I drink starbucks :p hows about some maple syrup.
 

Reverend Blair

Council Member
Apr 3, 2004
1,238
1
38
Winnipeg
RE: What would you put in

How about a t-shirt out of a case of Canadian? You could put in one of those little hockey sticks too. You could send them a Linda McQuaig book.
 

no1important

Time Out
Jan 9, 2003
4,125
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Vancouver
members.shaw.ca
RE: What would you put in

Smoked Sockeye Salmon ( I know you can get gift boxes of all sizes of it usually in the supermarket or tourist type gift store, out here anyways).

A small plush toy of a beaver in an RCMP uniform, or any other RCMP plush toy, as they are popular with many people not living in Canada.

Pictures or better yet postcards as people do like them. ( I sent a bunch to a pen pal in Kenya and she thought it was cool).

If I can think of anything more I will post it.
 

Jo Canadian

Council Member
Mar 15, 2005
2,488
1
38
PEI...for now
RE: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

I hear Kraft Dinner is hard to find out of North America. It is severely coveted by canadians overseas doing school.
 

zenfisher

House Member
Sep 12, 2004
2,829
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Seattle
RE: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

Smarties...beats M&M's any day. Maple cookies...they have some down here but they just aren't the same. As for music Stompin' Tom Connors....
 

Andem

dev
Mar 24, 2002
5,643
128
63
Larnaka
Re: RE: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Pa

Jo Canadian said:
I hear Kraft Dinner is hard to find out of North America. It is severely coveted by canadians overseas doing school.

Ack, yeah... I brought 2 boxes of the stuff (on request) for someone over here and that wasn't even enough. Can't imagine WHY people would want it outside N.A.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
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Minnesota: Gopher State
Re: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

Ok, ok --- so I'm an ignorant Yank.

I had no idea that you Canadians used the word brewis for hard tack or sea biscuits!
:D

http://www.billcasselman.com/cwod_archive/brewis.htm


Newfoundland’s BREWIS
A traditional Sunday morning breakfast in Newfound-land and Labrador is fish and brewis. The fish in this dish is often salt cod. Brewis is hard bread or hard tack, also known as ship's biscuit or sea-biscuit, soaked in water and cooked with salt cod, and often served with scrunchins, which are cubes of fat-back pork fried golden brown and tossed over the brewis as a garnish or mixed right in with the cod and bread.
Hard tack is a dry biscuit or bread made of flour and water with no salt, often baked in large ovals. It keeps for months. It must be soaked or dipped in hot liquids to be eaten easily.
Many islanders consider brewis the best use of hard tack ever invented. Brewis has several spelling variants and pronunciations but is usually said as “broos.” In the lyrics of four different Newfoundland songs, brewis is rhymed with spruce in one ditty, with news in another, with lose in a third, with youse in the fourth. Local folk etymology claims the word derives from breaking, that is bruising, the hard biscuit, before soaking it—a fine old practice reflected in one complimentary catch phrase of Newfoundland: “as fine a b'y as ever broke a cake o’ bread.” The folk etymology is colourful but incorrect.
Brewis existed as a word in Middle English, a period of development in our language usually dated from 1150 to 1450. The earliest printed reference in English occurs around 1300 in The Lay of Havelok the Dane as “make the broys in the led” which means “make the brewis in the lid,” that is, remove the convex lid of a pot or cauldron, turn it upside down and use the hollow to make a sauce. In this case, it means to ladle broth from the pot into the lid, then put the lid, still upside down, back on top of the pot, and make sops by putting hunks of hard bread into the liquid.

As one who has tasted this scrumptious dish, I can only quote one outport cook on brewis: “She tastes a fair bit better ‘n she sets.”
Brewis or browis (or one of a dozen variant spellings) entered Middle English and Scots from a Norman French form of Old French brouetz, a soup made with meat broth, itself a diminutive of Old French bro or breu. It caught on in English by popular association with an Old English cognate, briw, plural briwas, a word for soup. All of these words, including the English verb brew, hark back to the Indo-European mother tongue, where bhereu was a verbal root whose meanings included stirring, warming, and boiling. Distantly related words in English, fifth cousins of brewis, are braise, bread, breath, breeze, broil, broth, and imbrue. Latin cognates include the roots of English words like effervescent, ferment, fervent, and fry. The Bourbons who once ruled Naples, Spain, and France took their surname from a town in central France originally named after Borvo, a Celtic god of warmth.



The Brewis Bag
Some Newfoundland kitchens stock a special implement called a brewis bag, a netlike pouch in which to soak the pieces of hard tack and boil them, after which the pieces are dumped in a colander to drain. Thus, one who does not retain imparted information, who is scatter-brained or forgetful, may be chastised in Newfoundland with the outport snub: “He have a head like a brewis bag.”


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I love fish chowder (esp if it contains lots of kippers or what we call smoked herring in Minnesota) ) so if anyone was ever going to send me a Canadian gift package, please be sure to send me a bunch of brewis!
:D
 

missile

House Member
Dec 1, 2004
4,846
17
38
Saint John N.B.
Re: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

Growing up,I ate more than a few of the hardtack biscuits[very hard on the teeth!] How's about including some fiddleheads and a small bag of dulse?
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
65
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Minnesota: Gopher State
Re: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

Yumm, yumm!!!


Garlic Fiddleheads

Recipe By : The First Ever Fiddlehead Harvesters Guide
Serving Size : 1 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories : Fiddleheads

Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
1/4 pound butter
2 cloves garlic -- pressed
2 cups fiddleheads
juice of one lemon

Steam fiddleheads in petal steamer for 10 - 15 min. Heat butter and
saute garlic gently. Add fiddleheads and continue to saute. Squeeze
juice of lemon over all the cook gently 2-3 min. Season with salt and
pepper.



++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



Dulse Information



Dulse is a sea vegetable that has a fine distinct taste of seaweed. My teenage daughter and I really enjoy the flavor and generously sprinkle it on our salads. My sister, on the other hand, has tasted it and found it unpleasant. Dulse powder is worth trying for the nutrients alone. You may find that you either love it, or dislike it. If you dislike it, don't waste the powder, just add it to your garden or plants since they don't have taste preferences.

(Rhodymenia palmata), red seaweed found along both coasts of the North Atlantic; a salty confection made from this red algae is also called dulse. Shaped like the palm of a hand, it has the texture of thin rubber; both the amount of branching and size (ranging from 12 to about 40 centimetres [5 to 16 inches]) vary. Growing on rocks, mollusks, or larger seaweeds, dulse attaches by means of disks or rhizomes. It is commonly dried and eaten raw by North Atlantic fishermen; the flavour becomes evident after prolonged chewing. Dulse is eaten also with fish and butter, boiled with milk and rye flour, or as a relish. The gelatinous substance contained in dulse is a thickening agent and imparts a reddish colour to the food with which it is mixed.
(From the Encyclopedia Britannica)


Nutritional Information:

Dulse contains calcium potassium, magnesium, iron, iodine, manganese, copper, chromium, zinc, and vitamins A, B1, B2, B3, B6, B12, C and E.


Usage of dulse:

~ sprinkle on salad or add to salad dressings
~ add to soups, stews, chowders and casseroles
~ add to fish sauces for sea flavor
~ bake in breads
~ complements most cheeses, nuts and seeds,
potatoes, tomatoes, most seafoods, most fruits,
all salads, all sea vegetables




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missile

House Member
Dec 1, 2004
4,846
17
38
Saint John N.B.
Re: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

Some more musical choices for you: Ian Tyson[any of his cowboy ballads],Wide Mouth Mason[This Morning],and some Spirit Of The West :)
 

Jo Canadian

Council Member
Mar 15, 2005
2,488
1
38
PEI...for now
Re: RE: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Pa

manda said:
Great Big Sea, the bare Naked Ladies, a photo of Islanders burning an Anne doll...Nickleback.....shall I keep going?
...What aboot Stompin' Tom?
 

annabattler

Electoral Member
Jun 3, 2005
264
2
18
RE: What would you put in a "Canadian Gift" Packag

And a string of small paper Canadian flags !!!
 

Andygal

Electoral Member
May 13, 2005
518
0
16
BC
RE: What would you put in

How about a bag of ketchup flavoured potato chips? I was shocked when I first heard they don't have those in the US, I used to love those as a kid.