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PDX Cartathalon II

Food & Drink Put your eating pants on, Portland: Willamette Week's now annual Cartathalon is back! The Cartathalo... More

Feb 1, 2012 01:30 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

BagelGate: Kettleman to Become Einstein Bros.; Portlanders Hit Back

Food & Drink News that Portland's Kettleman Bagels had been sold to the vastly inferior national chain Noah's Bag... More

Jan 31, 2012 12:45 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 10
 

Hair of the Dog Heads to Belgium

...and other Oregon beer news

Food & Drink For the last five years, much-decorated Belgian brewmaster Dirk Naudts, who develops beer recipes fo... More

Jan 30, 2012 02:50 pm by Brian Yaeger  | Comments 1
 

Portland, These Are Your Coffee Champions

PDX sweeps North West Regional Barista Competition

Food & Drink Competitive coffee making: yes, it exists, and it's serious business. There's music and costumes and... More

Jan 29, 2012 08:50 am by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

Restaurant Cheap Eats Drink Devour
 
 
Home · Articles · Food & Drink · Food Reviews & Stories · Openings, Closings And Dishy Gossip
April 16th, 2008 Deeda Schroeder | Food Reviews & Stories
 

Openings, Closings And Dishy Gossip

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GONE NUTS: The former Filbert’s restaurant space, 1937 NW 23rd Place, will soon be home to Mangia Pizza, owned and run by the same duo behind the Industrial Cafe and Saloon, just a few blocks west at 2572 NW Vaughn St. Mary Starr says she and her partner, Russ Hubbard, are planning for a late-May opening after the space gets fresh paint and a new outdoor seating area in the back. The pizza, Starr says, will be thin-crust New York style, embellished with homemade sausage, house-smoked chicken and roasted local vegetables. Bonus: They’ll deliver to businesses at lunch.

POP LIFE: They won’t be quitting their day jobs…yet! Lawyer Aaron Harmon and his wife, model Danielle Koppel, have joined with insurance salesman and friend Noah Cable to launch bicycle-powered Sol Pops, a south-of-the-border frozen fruit popsicle business which will debut at the Portland Farmers Market on Saturday, May 3. Harmon and Cable studied the art of the paleta (Mexican frozen fruit bar) with pros from Hubbard’s Paleteria el Paisanito, and have been fine-tuning recipes for their colorful, icy rectangles—including inspired flavors like lemon-rosemary and cucumber-lime-jalapeño, and basics like marionberry and raspberry. The two have purchased five three-wheeled vending bikes, fitted with freezers up front to sell the $2.50-$3 treats. Slurp.

 
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