I tried my first BeaverTail in Canada … and loved it!

I tried my first BeaverTail in Canada … and loved it!

BeaverTails

Pam LeBlanc enjoys a treat from BeaverTails at Sunshine Ski Resort in Alberta, Canada in February 2022. Chris LeBlanc photo

Add BeaverTails to the list of Canadian food specialties I taste tested during last week’s trip to Banff.

First, I tried poutine – a mound of French fries topped in cheese curds and doused with brown gravy. Then I tried a BeaverTail – a ball of dough hand stretched into the shape of a beaver’s tail, then fried and sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar.

If you want, you can get your BeaverTail topped with banana slices. Perhaps you’d prefer maple cream. Or try vanilla frosting and crunched up chocolate cookies. Or Reese’s pieces. You can even order what’s called a PouTail, a BeaverTail crowned with French fries, cheese curds and gravy.

Trying BeaverTails at Sunshine Ski Resort

While skiing Sunshine Ski Resort a few days ago, I stopped by the new BeaverTails trailer that opened on the mountain this season. People told me this was a big deal. And I have to say, I’m a fan. Imagine eating a broad, flat donut, hot out of the fryer, during a break in a day spent whizzing down frozen mountain slopes.

RELATED: Poutine: French fries, cheese curds and gravy combine for national dish of Canada

Sublime.

BeaverTails

Chris LeBlanc picks up his order at the BeaverTails trailer at Sunshine Ski Resort. Pam LeBlanc photo

I ordered the classic – just cinnamon and sugar. While I watched from a safe distance, the BeaverTails’ technician stretched out a wad of dough into an oval about 12 inches long and 5 inches wide. Then he dropped it in hot oil, plucked it out when it had bubbled to perfection, sprinkled it with the goods, and served it to me piping hot.

I washed it down with a side of hot cocoa.

BeaverTails originated in Ontario in 1978. The chain has expanded throughout Canada and into the United Arab Emirates, Mexico, France and, yes, the United States.

So far, though, BeaverTails has not made its way to Texas.

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This year’s Banff Film Fest is going virtual

This year’s Banff Film Fest is going virtual

One of the films featured in the Sapphire collection is about a piano tuner who delivers a 100-year-old upright piano to a remote mountain village. Photo courtesy Banff Mountain Film Fest

The Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour is going virtual in 2021.

That means instead of putting on my best hiking boots and pants and hanging out at the Paramount Theater with my hiking, biking and paddling pals for two consecutive nights in April, I’ll be curled up on my couch at home, watching the year’s best outdoorsy films from a nest of blankets on my sofa.

The Virtual Banff World Tour is offering four, two-hour collections of films. It costs $15 to rent a single collection for three nights, or $28 to access two collections for 14 days.

I’ve been attending the festival since it first came to Austin, and while I love the adrenalin-fueled films about extreme kayaking, cycling, skiing and mountaineering, my favorites are usually the less heart-pounding ones. This year’s selection includes a film called “Piano to Zanskar,” about a 65-year-old piano tuner faced with the task of transporting a 100-year-old upright piano from downtown London to the heart of the Indian Himalayas. Other films focus on the art of aerial silk performance, 10-time world dogsled racer George Attla, a mountain bike race in Bhutan, and one-star reviews of national parks.

To read more about what films each two-hour collection (titled Ruby, Sapphire, Amber and Onyx) features, or to rent the films, go here.

Me? I think I’m ordering two – Sapphire and Onyx. I’ll miss seeing my friends at the Paramount, but look forward to sharing thoughts on this year’s films right here.

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Banff Film Festival comes to Austin March 8-9

Banff Film Festival comes to Austin March 8-9

“Surfer Dan,” about a surfer who braves the ice of Lake Superior each winter, will screen on night two of the Austin event. Photo by TK Merrell.

Lace up your hiking boots for two nights of outdoors-themed films that’ll draw Austin’s tent-and-backpack set to the Paramount Theatre on March 8 and 9.

The Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour, presented by Whole Earth Provision Company, features shorts about travel, culture, environment and adventure around the world.

This year’s lineup includes “Surfer Dan,” a docu-short about a trident-wielding surfer, his beard and hair crusted with ice, who braves a partially frozen Lake Superior to hang 10 in the winter.

Rock climbers will get their fix with “The High Road”; mountain bikers will appreciate “Life of Pie”; kayakers get a turn with “Camel Finds Water”; and skiers can geek out with “Circle the Sun.” The films – 10 the first night and 11 the second – range in length from 3 to 45 minutes each. Each night’s programming is different.

The film festival got its start in Banff, Canada in 1976. The festival in Canada features about 400 films. About two dozen are selected for the traveling show, and this year stops are planned in more than 40 countries.

I make it down for the event every year, along with other Austin outdoor junkies who consider the festival their version of the Academy Awards, minus the gowns and heels. I even love hearing the narrator, whose dramatic booming voice announces the names of the sponsors, which include Banff & Lake Louise Alive, Deuter, Clif Bar, Mountain House, Oboz Footwear, Smartwool, Buff, Sierra Nevada, Kathmandu, Yeti, National Outdoor Leadership School, World Expeditions, Kicking Horse Coffee, Lake Louise and the International Alliance for Mountain Film.

Nina Bishop climbs in a scene from “The High Road,” which will be shown on night one of the Austin festival. Photo by Brett Lowell

The show starts at 6 p.m. Sunday, March 8, and 7 p.m. Monday, March 9. Tickets, which cost about $22 each and are available at www.austintheatre.com, have sold out in past years.

This year is the ninth that proceeds from festival, along with donations from customers at Whole Earth stores during April, will benefit Texas state parks. So far, more than $230,000 has been raised for public programming at the parks.

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

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