Friday, May 25

Market Watch: Enslaved by the Bell at Shemanski Park

Food & Drink The scene at the farmers market starts long before the crowds show up.On a sunny Wednesday morning... More

May 24, 2012 10:56 am by Kimberly Hursh  | Comments 0
 

Oregon Beer News: Fresh'n'Fruity

Food & Drink Suck it, hops.There's a new sheriff share of crops in town. Burnside Brewing welcomes the return of... More

May 21, 2012 03:21 pm by Brian Yaeger  | Comments 1
 

Future Drinking

Native Tap House, N.W.I.P.A., 24th & Meatballs and more new places to eat and drink

Food & Drink Our weekly glimpse into the future of Portland's restaurant and bar scene...Das Beer, an upcoming on... More

May 18, 2012 12:10 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

Restaurant Cheap Eats Drink Devour
 
 
Home - Blogs - Staff Blogs - Latest Blogs
 
by Kimberly Hursh 05.24.2012 18 hours ago
Posted In: Market Watch at 10:56 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
 
 
tree

Market Watch: Enslaved by the Bell at Shemanski Park

Food & Drink

The scene at the farmers market starts long before the crowds show up.

On a sunny Wednesday morning, vendors at the Shemanski Park farmers market are setting up during the hour before opening, deftly arranging their fruits and vegetables into artistic displays and chatting among themselves.

A bit over-excited for my first go at beat reporting, I arrive long before the market opens. It's not a problem, though. At 9:30 am, the market is calm, the sun is warm and the vendors have an extra five minutes to talk about their wares and their family's long history in Oregon. Linger long enough by their baskets and they'll get around to your family history, too.

The vendors are generally so friendly, that it's surprising to see Sun Gold Farm's Chris Hertel turn a customer away. The customer is surprised too, and walks away in a huff, muttering something about the customer always being right. Chris shrugs. He can't sell until the market officially opens.

He has to wait for the bell. It's the rule. 

The bell rule adds a little excitement. And it's classier than a bunch of pick-ups dropping off their goods to an eager swarm of people buying them right off the tailgate. It feels like something out of the opening scene of My Fair Lady, perfectly suiting this put-together market. As part of the Portland Famers Market, Shemanski Park is neater and tidier than most unaffiliated markets. The rules help that image along. 

At precisely 10 am, the bell rings. To my delight, a slight cheer rises up from the sellers. They are now open for business. And business is good. 

The vendor at Suzanne's Chocolaterie beams when a customer she had to turn away 5 minutes ago shows up just seconds after the bell, looking to buy. 

"You came back!" she says, wrapping up his purchase. She looks triumphantly to the vendor at Olympic Provisions.

"Haha, sold before you!" she teases. 

Location: SW Park Ave & SW Salmon St. 
Time: Wednesdays, May 2 through Oct. 31.10 am – 2 pm.
The crowd: Shemanski Park draws a lunch-time rush and is patronized by local chefs, the older set and school groups field-tripping it at the Schnitz. 
Senior sellers: Sun Gold Farms 
Freshman sellers: Goldin Artisan Goat Cheese
Highlight: Divine Pies are gluten, dairy and sugar free, yet manage to be full of taste, incorporating unexpected ingredients like dates, almonds and avocados. 
Food carts on site: Tastebuds, Hoda's Middle Eastern Cuisine 
Coffee availability: Nite Owl Roasters 
Dog friendly: No
Parking: Limited, even vendors struggle to find a spot. 
 
For more information click here.
 
 
by Brian Yaeger 05.21.2012 3 days ago
Posted In: Beer at 03:21 PM | Permalink | Comments (1)
 
 
kali-ma-beer-goddess

Oregon Beer News: Fresh'n'Fruity

Food & Drink Suck it, hops.

There's a new sheriff share of crops in town. Burnside Brewing welcomes the return of the Fruit Beer Festival, which will feature over 30 breweries and even more fruitastic beers.

The website lists “only” 25 beers and two ciders, but more kegs are being added. Most of the beers should have a very good chance of sticking around the whole weekend of June 9-10, though even amid a festival featuring nearly exclusively one-off beers brewed for the fest, some rare shit will be tapped (and promptly kicked) as well. Unlike the Fresh Hop beer fest(s) which are still a few months away, events where brewers predominantly go with IPAs to showcase beer's top ingredient, the Fruit Beer Fest boasts almost as many base styles as it does fruits.

Flat Tail Brewing's Strawberry Rhubarb Corvaller Weisse respectfully maintains Berlin's appellation while emulating its sour wheat Berliner Weisse because this Corvaller Weisse is, well, made in Corvallis. Meanwhile, fans of L-iteration will like Lucky Labrador's Lychee Lager.

The host brewery, Burnside, takes its inspiration from Belgium (naturally) as well as Amsterdam (seemingly) with their Red Light District, an imperial stout brewed with loads of Belgian chocolate and a strawberry field's worth of berries before aging it in Pacific Rum barrels. Even Portland's only cidery, Bushwhacker, is getting in on the action of adding fruit despite the fact that cider is already a fruit beer minus the beer, so it's adding tart cherries—and pucker-inducing Lactobacillus wild yeast to Brookland Sour Cider.

The event turns into a street fest this year occupying Northeast 7th Ave. between East Burnside and Couch adjacent to Burnside Brewing and takes place Saturday June 9 from 11 am-9 pm and Sunday June 10 from 11-6 pm. Tickets start at $20.

In other beer news:

The Beer Goddess blog wished local legend Fred Eckhardt a happy 86th birthday in advance of FredFest, a party held annually at Hair of the Dog Brewing. Eckhardt is known as the Dean of Beer Writing and penned A Treatise on Lager Brewing in 1969 (a full decade before it was legal to brew lagers or ales at home, because Portlanders are always ahead of the curve.) One of the 30 or so brews on hand at the party was Collage, the first in Deschutes' Conflux series of collaborations (it tag-teamed with Kansas City's Boulevard Brewing on Conflux #2 which came out over a year ago, but that's because Collage's roots date back to spring 2010, when brewmaster Alan Sprints made Hair of the Dog's Fred and Adam, two beers that were blended with Deschutes's the Dissident and the Stoic, before aging in a smattering of new and used barrels that will soon go on sale soon in a finite amount of 12-ounce bottles.

At the biannual World Beer Cup earlier this month— entries are judged blind and, unlike the Great American Beer Festival in Denver, opened to breweries the globe over—five local breweries took home some hardware including Breakside, Upright, newcomers the Commons, and aforementioned Laurelwood. Oh, and Columbia River Brewing. While beer geeks love Twitpic-ing themselves at the first four, the often neglected CRBC was the only one won two medals, for Stumbler's Stout and Drunken Elf Coffee Stout.

Kali-Ma won't be bottled. John Foyston at The Oregonian, among others, covered how the teensy-tiny brewpub was on the verge of releasing a black wheatwine ale brewed with toasted cardamom, fenugreek, cumin, apricots, Scotch bonnet peppers, and native India dandicut peppers. The ingredients weren't the news story, the name was. The beer was to be called Kali-Ma, both the Hindu goddess worshipped as the mother of the universe, as well as a reference in Indiana Jones a reference in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.

Naming a brew after a Goddess had some Indian parliament members perturbed, going so far as to demand that the United States apologize. Granted, it's less dire than a Danish cartoonist blaspheming the prophet Muhammad resulting in calls for his death, but as you can see from one reader's comments in the Hindustan Times, “The USA has committed an act of blasphemy...they have shown their evil thoughts - if they do not correct this matter they will arise the wrath of Gods.”

Fearing that wrath, Burnside canceled the beer.
 
 
by Ruth Brown 05.18.2012 6 days ago
at 12:10 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
 
 
benderbeer

Future Drinking

Native Tap House, N.W.I.P.A., 24th & Meatballs and more new places to eat and drink

Food & Drink

Our weekly glimpse into the future of Portland's restaurant and bar scene...

Das Beer, an upcoming online beer store, has applied for a license to offer on-site customer pick-up at 211 SE Madison two days a week.

Bill Hayden has applied for a full license to Pub @ The Yard, a bar at the Lumberyard indoor bike park at 2700 NE 82nd Ave.

Native Tap House has applied for an off-premises license in the space formerly home to Ellington Handbags at NW 1533 NW 24th Ave.

Tabla owner Adam Berger's upcoming meatball and milkshake concept, 24th & Meatballs, which is scheduled to open at developer Kevin Cavenaugh's "food cart incubator," the Ocean, at 2341 NE Sandy Blvd., has applied for a limited license.

The Elysian Ballroom will apparently replace the Crown Ballroom on the fifth floor of 918 SE Yamhill St.

More fresh produce in the Pearl? Yes, please. Local Choice Produce Market, a produce market and deli, has applied for an off-premises license at 830 NW Everett St. According to the application, the business will host "farmer dinners" and live music on first Thursday.

Thai restaurant Siam Society at 2703 NE Alberta will be replaced by a yet-to-be-named establishment from the owners of downtown's Paddy's Bar & Grill. The application says it will be "family friendly."

The Waffle Window is opening a second window at 2624 NE Alberta, for which it has applied for a limited license.

Rodney Dewalt of Dewalt Productions is opening Fontaine Bleau at 237 NE Broadway St. He has applied for a full license.

Daniel Huish has applied to open a bottleshop called N.W.I.P.A. at 6350 SE Foster Rd., in the former location of Guapo Comics and Coffee.

Bleachers Bar & Grill at 575 SW Saltzman Rd. has changed hands and will become Cedar Mill Grill. Will it still be "the local home for 'Parrotheads,' the fun-loving fans of tropical rocker Jimmy Buffett"? Time will tell.

Dilly's Bar & Grill at 2002 SE Division St. has a new owner: Patti Lassell, who is renaming it Seven Corners Bar & Grill. According to the application: "Our family originally purchased this business in 1983 and in 1987 purchased the building. It has been an [indecipherable] gathering place in this historic neighborhood for over 75 years and we are excited!" Seven Corners will offer video lottery, karaoke and dancing.

Boogies Burgers & Brew is going into a former used-car lot at 910 E Burnside St. Sassy’s strip club proprietress Stacy Mayhood owns the biggest stake, although the shop’s liquor-license application says Boogies will be “family friendly.”

Both Hopworks locations have applied for full liquor licenses. A nice stiff whiskey should help drown out all those screaming kiddies.

Milwaukie's Casa de Tamales has also applied for a full liquor license.

 
 
by AARON MESH 05.15.2012 9 days ago
at 12:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
 
 
pokpok

Pok Pok Ny Has the World's Most Adorable Back Porch

Food & Drink

When last we checked in with Andy Ricker's expanding Thai food empire, he had unleashed Pok Pok Wing on New York City's Lower East Side, but was a little unsure when he'd open full-menu restaurant Pok Pok Ny in Red Hook.

Well, it opened. And, judging from this photo gallery at Gothamist, Ricker has given New York not only spicy mushrooms and mussel crepes, but the most adorable back patio in the history of the Big Apple. Seriously, we are shamelessly envying those hanging planters in the shape of gift-wrapped presents.

For those Ricker completists among you, there's also a recent interview with him in Paper magazine, where he says a lot of Portland restaurants "would be up shit's creek if they had to survive here."

Because they don't have hanging planters in the shape of gift-wrapped presents, that's why.

Fix this, Portland.

 
 
by Ruth Brown 05.14.2012 10 days ago
at 10:46 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
 
 
food+cart+festival+196

Eat Mobile 2012: The Video

Food & Drink

Relive delicious memories of Eat Mobile 2012 with this lovely video from our friend Zach Smith.




 
 
by MARTIN CIZMAR 05.05.2012 19 days ago
Posted In: Beer at 10:39 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)
 
 
logsdon-peche-2

Beer Review: Logsdon Peche 'n' Brett

And other Oregon beer news

Food & Drink

Portland breweries usually roll out a couple new beers every month. Some, like Cascade Barrel House, tap several kegs of new stuff every week, more than anyone not behind their bar can track. In the hype-driven craft brew market this makes sense, I guess, as there's no easier way to distinguish your product than to make hundreds of slightly different versions of it.

Logsdon Farmhouse Ales' approach is refreshingly different. The tiny brewery in the countryside near Hood River has only four products out right now. And they're all great. Willamette Week named the fresh hop seizoen Oregon's Beer of the Year for 2011. Brewvana readers said the same about its seizoen bretta. A few weeks back the brewery won the Cheers to Belgian Beers festival.

So when Logsdon roll out a new brew, like the Peche 'n' Brett dropped off at Portland stores on Thursday, it's actually kind of exciting. Having figured this out, it's nearly doubled the price on this one, charging $17.50 a bottle at BeerMongers instead of their standard $10.

I know what it looks like, but, seriously, this isn't at all unreasonable.

First, because it's an expensive product to make. Logsdon used a pound and a half of organic peaches per gallon of this stuff, which was kept in barrels after fall harvest until their once leaky bottling line could get it into glass without spilling too much.

Second, because it's really, really good beer. Like Logsdon's other bretted beers, the peche uses the special yeast that gives lambics and gueuze their distinct tart character. Working on the peaches, the result isn't as tangy as you might expect. This is a balanced beer, with less peachyness than, say, Dogfish Head's peche, but far more nuance. Think Cantillon, not Lindemans. All those additional fermentable sugars from the fruit did, however, pump the alcohol way up, to an imperil-grade 10% ABV, meaning this 750 ml has nearly as much go-go juice as a bottle of wine.

And would anyone think twice about paying $17.50 for a great bottle of Oregon wine?

Well, Archery Summit's 2009 pinot noir is $48.

Logsdon might not have reached Archery Summit yet, but they're climbing fast.

Other beer news from around Oregon...

Speaking of things vineal, the New School tells how Hop & Vine is creating its own private label collection of beer and wine. The Berliner Weisse made with Burnside seems interesting, though why would a cloudy, low-alcohol style like Berliner Weisse need wood? Woodruff syrup, yes. Aging in pinot and gin barrels? Hmmmmm.

Meanwhile, over at OregonLive, John Foyston has the scoop on Gigantic Brewing's opening in Southeast Portland. (Spoiler alert: this Wednesday.)

Oh, and in the interest of balance, since we don't want to be too pro-bretta, here's Beervana explaining how rogue yeast can cause problems for brewers.

 
 
by WW Editorial Staff 05.01.2012 23 days ago
at 05:50 PM | Permalink | Comments (16)
 
 
bagel

BagelGate: Former Kettleman Employees No Longer Allowed to Accept Tips

Food & Drink More bad news about Kettleman Bagels being purchased and chewed up by national chain Noah’s Bagels. First, Portlanders lost out on great (that is, authentic) bagels. Turns out the employees of the newly branded Einstein Bros. Bagels lost out, too: They’re no longer allowed to accept tips—even a little change in the jar.

The Einstein Noah Restaurant Group tells WW: “[W]e want our employees to deliver on our hospitality and guest service commitment each and every time without any expectation of a cash tip from our guests.”

Unhappy employees say the policy will cost them about $100 a week.
 
 
by BEN WATERHOUSE 04.30.2012 24 days ago
at 01:25 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)
 
 
food+cart+festival+196

Koi Fusion, PDX 671, Taco Pedaler Take Top Honors at Eat Mobile 2012

Food & Drink

Over 3,000 hungry Portlanders flocked to OMSI's north parking lot Saturday to sample the wares of 51 Portland food carts—some ten percent of all the carts in the city—at WW's fifth Eat Mobile festival. Of course, Eat Mobile isn't just about eating—it's also about awarding awesome handmade trophies to the best carts. Here's who won this year:

The people's choice was perennial favorite Koi Fusion, which wowed the crowds with a kim chi Reuben. Close behind in second place was Lardo, who brought its excellent interpretation of a meatball banh mi.

Koi Fusion's Bo Kwon with his People's Choice award
PHOTO Jenna Haar


Our judges' favorite was PDX 671, which brought the flavors of Guam to the Willamette with linechen gollai, tangy cabbage spinach in coconut milk, and estufao, soft and savory pork. Second place went to Lardo, again.

The award for style went to Eat Mobile first-timers Taco Pedaler for their adorable handmade bike cart, with second place going to Fuego de Lotus, because we're suckers for fire.

The day also featured a live sandwich showdown between the Grilled Cheese Grill and Big Ass Sandwiches, who both grilled up 3-foot-long sandos to sate the crowds. Judges WW Music Editor Casey Jarman and Mayor Sam Adams declared the GCG's giant Cheesus the winner.

Congratulations to the winners, and thanks to all the carts, our sponsors, OMSI and everyone who attended. We'll see you all next year!

Here are some photos. We'll have more up tomorrow:

The Eat Mobile crowd at OMSI
PHOTO Elizabeth Young

 

The Biggest-Ass Sandwich ever
PHOTO Elizabeth Young

Pynnacles perform at Eat Mobile
PHOTO Elizabeth Young

 
 
by bwaterhouse 04.29.2012 25 days ago
at 10:10 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)
 
 
modela_aperitif

Future Drinking: April 23-26

This week's liquor license applications

Food & Drink
Daniel Thomas of local construction company Hammer & Hand and an Elizabeth Davis (maybe this Elizabeth Davis? There are several.) have applied top open Xico in the building at 3715 SE Division St., next door to the former Egyptian Room. The application hasn't yet been posted by the city, leaving the name totally open to interpretation. Will it be a Mexican restaurant, named for either of the two cities in Mexico named Xico? Or is it a play on the Spanish "chico," meaning "little"? The website seems to indicate a Mexican theme. A city waits with bated breath....

Downtown's River's Edge Cafe at 710 SW 2nd Ave. will soon become Kac Thai Fusion.

Grand Cru Hospitality has applied for a limited license for 224 NW 13th Ave., which is also the headquarters of Wieden Kennedy.

Perennial health department inspection-failer Rococo's at Cedar Mill has closed, and will soon become Wan Q Restaurant.

Sometimes it seems like we get another new brewery in Oregon every week. The latest is Apocalypse Brewing Company, coming soon to Medford.
 
 
by Ruth Brown 04.23.2012 31 days ago
at 10:47 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
 
 
barista

Championship Coffee

Portland places fourth in U.S. Barista Championships

Food & Drink The number of really silly moustaches in Portland increased ten-fold last week as the Specialty Coffee Association of America's annual "Event" and the U.S. Barista Championships came to town.  

While sweaty salespeople and momtrepreneurs flogged labeling equipment and smoothie mixes at the SCAA expo, the cool kids were in the "activities hall," sucking up free wifi (comically sponsored by Dunkin' Donuts) and cheering on their well groomed peers (almost exclusively white men in between the ages of 25 and 35) as they battled it out in the U.S. Barista Championships and Brewers Cup.

Portland's great white hope came in the form of Coava Coffee's Devin Chapman, the northwest regional champion and the only Rose City representative to make it through to the final round on Sunday. 

Coava Coffee's Devin Chapman

Chapman performed a 15-minute routine to "Holocene" by Bon Iver, sporting a natty industrial apron, working with a coffee he described as "delicate, smooth, graceful, lovely." After serving the requisite espressos and cappuccinos, Chapman presented the judges with his signature piece: a flight of three drinks—one espresso, one brewed in a Hario V60 and one in a Chemex using Coava's Kone filter. The espresso was served with smoked salt and syrup, while one of the other drinks (it was really difficult to see from the bleachers) was mixed with wildflower honey.

The performance was enthusiastically received by a sizeable home town crowd, dressed in Timbers and Blazers garb, blowing vuvuzelas, chanting Chapman's name and cheering, "What a professional!"

Video evidence:

   

Despite the home court advantage, Chapman placed fourth in the competition. First place went to Katie Carguilo from Counter Culture in New York, whose signature drink was espresso with jasmine green tea, lemon juice, a nectarine, soda water and white vinegar, served in a champagne flute. Intelligentsia's Charles Babinski (Los Angeles) and Verve Coffee Roaster's Chris Baca (Santa Cruz) took second and third, respectively. The Brewers Cup (which focuses on brewed coffee rather than espresso) went to Andy Sprenger from Ceremony Coffee Roasters in Annapolis, MD.
 
 

 

 

 

Web Design for magazines

Close
Close
Close