A.B.C. Seafood Co.
6509 SE Powell Blvd., 771-5802. 9:30 am-8:30 pm daily.
[LIVE FISH]
At once cavernous and cramped, this chilly Chinese seafood market is
the place to go if you like your fishies alive: Whether you’re after
clams, abalone or a king crab in all its spidery alien glory, the
bubbling tanks at A.B.C. deliver the goods. The larger of the market’s
two rooms contains a freezer case with fish that don’t transport well,
like cuttlefish, and a wall of slightly limp produce and fruit, along
with a large selection of dried seaweed. (BW)
Shopping list: Feel like a high roller? There’s live king crab. For simpler tastes, the clams are cheap.
Chop Butchery
735 NW 21st Ave., 221- 3012; 3808 N Williams Ave., Suite E, 288-1901; chopbutchery.com. NW 21st: 9:30 am-7 pm Monday-Saturday, 10 am-7 pm Sunday. N Williams: 10 am-6 pm Tuesday-Sunday.
[BUTCHER]
Chances are, if you’re in City Market Northwest, where Chop shares
space with PastaWorks and Newman’s Fish Market, you have a good idea of
what you’re looking for: premium, mostly locally produced, small-farm
meats and the products derived from them. Can’t wait to tear into the
pampered proteins behind the glass? Snag a made-to-order deli sandwich.
(Anything with porchetta is a sure bet.) Need back fat for
sausage-making or leaf lard for pie crusts? Chop has you covered. You
won’t be able to stretch your meat dollar quite as far here as at your
typical megamart, but knowing you’re putting your money back into the
local economy rather than some agro-business leviathan is worth the
premium. (BP)
Shopping list: Grass-fed beef, pâtés, caul fat.
Edelweiss Sausage & Delicatessen
3119 SE 12th Ave., 238-4411, edelweissdeli.com. 9 am-6 pm Monday-Saturday.
[GERMAN, MEAT]
This efficient, well-organized little slice of Munich, complete with
fantastic housemade wieners, will make you homesick for Germany—even if
you’ve never visited the country. House-cured hams, bacon, huge
meatloafs and sausages—dried and fresh, from Polish to
wienerwurst—nestle in the meat case, while a Bavarian bounty of pickled
cabbage, tinned herring and fine chocolates pack the small aisles. Grab a
number if you want immediate service, but expect smiles and lots of
meat and cheese samples if you’re still deciding on your order. Grab a
booth and spend hours consuming double bocks and brats. (KC)
Shopping list: Sausage, cuckoo clocks, Fressen
breads, Spaten and every type of minced fish or roe you could ever hope
to stuff into a toothpaste tube.
Flying Fish Company
Southeast 50th Avenue and Hawthorne Boulevard; 3221 SE
Division St.; 260-6552; flyingfishcompany.com. 11 am-6:30 pm
Wednesday-Friday (50th and Hawthorne), noon-7 pm Saturday-Sunday
(Division).
[SUSTAINABLE SEAFOOD]
Yes, it’s a fish truck. Lyf Gildersleeve, a second-generation
fishmonger, sold his mobile fish counter in Park City, Utah, last year
and set up shop in a pair of Portland parking lots. The truck is
outfitted with a pair of refrigerators and a freezer chest, and deals
exclusively in sustainably harvested fish, with some local lamb, beef,
buffalo, chicken and eggs thrown in for good measure. On a recent visit,
I was offered fresh mahi mahi, cod, sole, halibut cheeks, Oregon shrimp
and clams, along with several flash-frozen sushi cuts (I went with the
clams, which were excellent). Watch the Twitter feed (@flyingfishpdx)
for the latest catch. Gildersleeve doesn’t half-ass the sustainability
thing. His fish is wrapped on biodegradable foam trays, and you won’t
find albacore or Chilean sea bass on his chalkboard. (BW)
Shopping list: Dungeness crab, scallops, buffalo steak.
Gartner’s Country Meats
7450 NE Killingsworth St., 252-7801, gartnersmeats.com. 9 am-6 pm Tuesday-Saturday, 10 am-4 pm Sunday.
[OLD-SCHOOL MEAT]
Anxiety (and euphoria) strikes as you survey the football-field-long
meat counter and the buzzing hive of attendants and choppers behind
it—do you order the porterhouse steak? Or the Polish sausages? Beef
ribs? Portland’s best butcher shop cures wishy-washiness. There are no
bad choices here: top-notch ground beef, world-class chops, marinated
chicken, two kinds of house-smoked, nitrate-free bacon, and the best
pepperoni sticks (two for a buck) in the galaxy—mostly sourced from
Northwest ranchers. Housed in the same outer Northeast Portland location
for 50 years, and currently run in part by one of the original owner’s
granddaughters, the space is utilitarian and often very busy on the
weekends. It’s worth the wait—the old-school crew will cut roasts to
order, patiently explain what head cheese is and slice their excellent
house pastrami and other lunch meats to your liking. (KC)
Shopping list: Pepperoni, pastrami, steaks, and smoked cow femurs for the dog.
Halal Meat & Mediterranean Foods
11535 SW Pacific Highway, 293-3020. 10:30 am-8 pm daily.
[HALAL MEAT]
Iranian-born Mustafa Elogbi has been offering halal goods—meats
butchered according to Muslim customs, much like keeping kosher—for more
than two decades. Give a respectful nod to the very fresh-lookin’
whole, skinned goat staring up at you from the butcher’s case at this
small market buried in a Highway 99W office park and load up on beef and
lamb cuts (about $4.99 a pound), hearts, tongue and kidneys. Elogbi
gets his animals from local farmers every Wednesday and Friday. The
market also carries Persian and Mediterranean staples like kefir,
olives, cheap spices, Kontos Greek pastries and long, flat, sourdoughish
sangak bread. (KC)
Shopping list: Ground goat meat, halva with pistachios, chana flour, date syrup, flatbread.
Laurelhurst Market
3155 E Burnside St., 206-3099, laurelhurstmarket.com. 10 am-8 pm daily.
[ARTISAN MEAT]
The city’s best new steakhouse is also home to the city’s best new
butcher shop. The refrigerated case of this converted convenience store,
owned by the team behind Simpatica Catering and Viande Meats, holds
extraordinary housemade sausages (Spanish-style chorizo, Italian-style
lamb, French-style garlic pork), beautiful cuts of dry-aged beef and
local lamb, and a rotating cast of feats of butchery (parsley and cheese
mixed with pork and wrapped in caul fat; duck confit). A chalkboard
lists the larger cuts available in the fridge at the back of the shop
and the day’s menu of sandwiches. Laurelhurst is one of the few
retailers of Tails & Trotters pork. (BW)
Shopping list: One pound sausage, 1 pound bacon, one hanger steak.
Newman’s Fish Market
735 NW 21st Ave., 227-2700, newmansfish.com. 9:30 am-7 pm Monday-Saturday, 10 am-7 pm Sunday.
[FRESH FISH]
Newman’s wholesales to the likes of Andina, Toro Bravo, Castagna,
Bluehour and Paley’s Place, and you can get the same sweet and briny
goods—often air cargoed in (in 100-pound boxes with gel ice and
liners)—at the company’s fish counter and live tanks in Nob Hill’s City
Market. You’ll find a wide variety of seafood—salmon, halibut, grouper,
rockfish, scallops—and the majority is wild and fresh or frozen at sea.
Newman’s live tanks are always changing, but a typical selection
includes oysters, crab and lobster; the clams and mussels are kept in
the back. If you’re looking for whole fish as opposed to fillets and
steaks, drop by on the weekend when there are usually a few types to
choose from. (LC)
Shopping list: Oregon albacore, chinook and coho, crawfish.
Nicky USA
223 SE 3rd Ave., 234-4263, nickyusa.com. 8 am-3 pm Monday-Friday.
[GAME]
Geoff Latham’s game-bird and meat shop is mostly a wholesale affair,
but consumers with freezers can find far better deals on buffalo,
rabbit, goose, quail, squab, duck, goat and venison than ever appear at
more conventional meat counters. You do have to meet a $125 minimum
order (and provide 8 hours notice), so make sure you’ve got a crowd
coming. (BW)
Shopping list: Whole hog.
Old Country Sausage
10634 NE Sandy Blvd., 254-4106. 9 am-6 pm Monday-Saturday.
[GERMAN DELI]
“We make it all here—the sausage, the meats, with none of the
shippings,” booms Lydia Heredea, a warm-eyed woman with a heavy Romanian
accent standing behind Old Country’s chest-high case of kielbasa,
knackwurst, Hungarian black paprika links, Polish dogs, hot
pepper-sprigged bologna and mild wieners (“for dee bay-bies,” as she
puts it). This Teutonic imports wonderland has been selling its sausages
made from local meats and German grocery staples for 25 years (the
original owner still drops by to cook every week), but Heredea now runs
the shop, making sure locals get their creamy butterkase cheese, pickled
herring, and potato-dumpling mixes at a fair price. You’re in luck if
she’s baked a savory, juicy German meatloaf ($4.29 a pound) that
morning; gorge on a slice or two for lunch in the small, cheery cafe
area and you won’t need to eat again for the rest of the day. (KC)
Shopping list: Polish sausage and brats, house-baked Lüneburg country rye bread, Ritter Sport squares.
Olympic Provisions
107 SE Washington St., 954-3663; 1632 NW Thurman St., 894-8136; olympicprovisions.com. 11 am-10 pm Monday-Saturday.
[CURED MEAT]
Consistently the source of one of the longest lines for samples at the
Portland Farmers Market, Olympic Provisions is all about the celebration
of the art and craft of meat. Offering locally sourced and produced
fare with an obsessive attention to quality, the operation deserves the
attention it’s attracted from foodies and journalists nationwide. Its
cozy restaurant and small deli, in the restored Olympic Cereal Mills
building amid the warehouses of the Central Eastside Industrial
District, is a stylish way to try out and take home the “American
charcuterie” created by salumist Elias Cairo, including three types of
chorizo and regional salumi specialties like finocchiona and saucisson d’Alsace.
It’s always a learning process, and good charcuterie costs a bit more
than the stuff you ate on white bread when you were a kid. But once
you’ve plowed through your first cacciatore or kielbasa, your only concern will be when you can get back for more. (CB) Note:
Olympic Provisions opened a second, larger processing facility and
accompanying “meat bar,” offering rotisserie chicken and really good
sandwiches, in April. It will be open for dinner soon.
Shopping list: Bacon, kielbasa and any salami variety you’ve never heard of before.
Original Bavarian Sausage
8705 SW Locust St., Tigard, 892-5152, originalbavariansausage.com. 9 am-6 pm Monday-Saturday.
[WURSTS]
While I can’t confirm the originality of this emporium of all things
Deutsche just off of 99W, I can say that it is genuinely Bavarian, from
the high peaked roof to the jars of Süßer Senf mustard to the piles and
rings of wurst in the glass case that runs the length of the room. It’s a
cavalcade of all things pink and sliceable, from smoked schinkenwurst
to teewurst, weisswurst to rotwurst, along with loads of imported
candies and housemade pickles. (BW)
Shopping list: Bismarck herring, landkäse, green-tomato pickles, hausmacher leberwurst.
Otto’s Sausage Kitchen
4138 SE Woodstock Blvd., 771-6714, ottossausage.com. 9:30 am-6 pm Monday-Saturday, 11 am-5 pm Sunday.
[WIENERS]
There’s pretty much nothing better than devouring a spicy, juicy smoked
pork link ($3.75) at a picnic table out in front of the Eichentopf
family’s Woodstock sausage shop (open since 1929!). Just don’t be
surprised if the whole neighborhood is out there with you, waiting
patiently to order up an old-fashioned wiener ($2.75) or chicken sausage
at the big black grill that sits belching smoke outside the shop all
summer and winter long. Inside, the quaint operation stocks nearly 50
more types of housemade sausages, from kielbasa to chorizo, as well as
bologna, salami, lunch meats and smoked salmon. And there’s salads by
the pound, cheeses, sandwiches, German staples and, of course, a heart
attack. (KC)
Shopping list: Bockwurst, potato sausage, six-pack of beer, and a pound of curry chicken salad.
Overseas Taste
4431 SE 64th Ave., 771-7450. 10 am-9 pm daily.
[SLAVIC SMOKED]
Many are the joys of this Eastern European market specializing in
smoked meats of all shapes and species, though mostly ground and stuffed
into sausage casing. We know better than to question the provenance of
the meat, but we assure you it is both sanitary and delicious. And
cheap—the excellent double-smoked bacon goes for $7.49 a pound. The
walls are lined with oils, pickles and canned goods from the East. Don’t
skip the fresh cheese. (BW)
Shopping list: Hungarian sausage, garlic sausage, smoked herring and Hunter’s wieners.
Pacific Seafood
3380 SE Powell Blvd., 233-4891, pacseafood.com. 9 am-6 pm Monday-Friday.
[FRESH FISH]
Pacific Seafood has grown a bit since its humble Portland beginnings
seven decades ago. The company remains family-owned, but now manages an
extensive seafood processing and distribution empire stretching from
Alaska to Texas. The Powell Street Fish Market is a glimpse back to the
company’s humbler roots. A knowledgeable staff ably assists customers
not only in choosing the right fish, crustacean, bivalve, or other
desired denizen of the deep, but also explains how to prepare and enjoy
it. All this takes place below the observant gaze of mounted giant king
crabs on the wood-paneled walls, giving the odd impression that despite
the rush of traffic outside on Powell Boulevard, one may actually be
aboard a fishing trawler somewhere on the open seas, choosing from the
day’s catch. For a moment you might actually taste salt in the air.
Ahoy! (CB)
Shopping list: Always fresh and changing, but we recommend the cracked crab and wild-caught salmon when it’s in.
Phil’s Meat Market
17 NW 23rd Place, 224-9541. 10 am-6 pm Sunday-Friday, 10 am-5:30 pm Saturday.
[MUCHO Meat]
Three decades in, Phil’s still keeps it simple with quality meats cut
in-house, a couple shelves of sauces and rubs, an impressive wine cellar
and a small deli. The main floor’s top attraction is its meat counter,
with tenderloin steaks, buffalo kebabs, baby back ribs, meatballs the
size of an 8-year-old’s fist and a handful of fresh seafood options.
Head downstairs for the store’s other main source of pride, its cellar
filled with an extensive wine selection, including some rare bottles
you’d be hard-pressed to find around town. Don’t miss the stellar bento
cart on your way out. (NB)
Shopping list: Tangy pork kebabs, fresh potato pancakes, homemade applesauce.
Tails & Trotters
Tailsandtrotters.com.
[HAZELNUT HOGS]
Aaron Silverman sells some amazing pig. Raised on a family farm in
Washington, finished on 60 days of hazelnuts and sold with all the
delicious fat still attached, Tails & Trotters’ pork is the next
best thing to raising your own (which, as a Portlander, you are legally
prohibited from doing). For now, Silverman is selling at the PSU and
Eastbank farmers markets, but a retail location is in the works and
expected to open by the end of 2011. (BW)
Shopping list: Pig meat. The loin roasts are outstanding.
Victor’s European Meat Market
13500 SW Pacific Highway, Tigard, 684-2580. 10 am-7 pm Monday-Saturday, 10 am-4 pm Sunday.
[KING OF CURES]
You can die a happy carnivore in Witold Lunkiewicz’s Tigard shop, where
the Poland-born butcher grinds, smokes and cures everything from
Hungarian, Yugoslavian and Romanian-style sausages to hunks of Danish
bacon with the proud flourish of a new father. Just don’t ask him which
of his children is the best: “Everything I make is best!” he grumbles,
running his hand across the top of the fridge case. “It’s Polish.” (KC)
Shopping list: Kielbasa, Lithuanian garlic sausage, sour cherry jam, sauerkraut, free copy of Romanian Times.
Western Meat Market
4707 N Lombard St., 283-5174, westernmeatmarket.com. 9 am-6 pm Tuesday-Friday, 9 am-5 pm Saturday,
9 am-4 pm Sunday.
[BASIC BUTCHER]
Western Meat Market isn’t pretty. In fact, it’s as old school as it
gets: painted plywood sign out front, old black-and-white checkered
floor, and enough butchered meat (boneless pork ribs, rump roast,
marinated pepper steak, etc.) to make you shudder at the thought of a
power outage. If you hunt, the Western Meat butchers will cut and wrap
your deer or elk for you. They’ll also make it into sausage for $3 a
pound. (LC)
Shopping list: Meat packs ($59.95-$229.95),
housemade spicy Oktoberfest sausages, pork shoulder or tri-tip for the
’cue, a russet potato for vegetarians or vegans.
Thanks for such a glorious source list of meat products. Can't wait to try them all!
I can't believe Sheridan's on MLK didn't make the cut....best combo of price and quality in SE Portland
They're under "Grocers."