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Nova Scotia Food & Dining

 
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    Seafood features strongly on most menus. The Pub District in Halifax is said to be one of the best in North America, with over 55 establishments.

    Things to know: Beer and alcoholic beverages are sold by the glass in licensed restaurants (food must also be ordered) and in licensed lounges (opening hours generally 1100-1400). Beer by the bottle and draught beer is sold by the glass in taverns, pubs and beverage rooms, which offer great snacks and light meals.

    Regional specialties:
    • Seafood galore: try fish and clam chowders, lobster and salmon. Not forgetting
    scallops: fried, baked or grilled, and usually served with tartar sauce.
    • Solomon gundy (a herring dish).
    • Lunenburg sausage exemplifies the German influence, as do hugger in buff, fish and scrunchions, Dutch mess and house bunkin - all names for tasty combinations of fish and potatoes in cream sauce, onions and salt pork.
    • Desserts make use of plentiful fruit and berries, especially blueberries, and include a stewed fruit and dumplings dish called grunt, and baked apple dumplings wrapped in pastry and served with cream, sugar or lemon sauce.

    Regional drinks:
    • Nova Scotia beer warmer is a glass of beer with a dash of hot pepper sauce to get the blood circulating again. Provincial beers include Alexander Keith’s and Propeller.
    • Nova Scotia has recently become a popular wine-producing area, especially in the Annapolis Valley. A number of good vintages have been produced there.
    • North America’s only single malt whiskey, Glen Breton Rare, is produced by the Glenora Inn and Distillery in Cape Breton.

    Legal drinking age:
    19.

    Nightlife
    Nightclubs are mostly centered in Halifax. Scottish bagpipe music and Gaelic songs can be heard all over the province in concerts, bars, hotels and restaurants. Professional and amateur theater is very popular; details of forthcoming attractions are available from Tourism Nova Scotia (see General Info).


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