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Liz Crain

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  • Food Lover's Guide to Portland
  • People & Places I Love

Food Lover's Guide to Portland Blog...

began as a collection of some of the research, recipes, images and culinary adventures that went into the making of Food Lover’s Guide to Portland. The first edition came out in 2010 and I started the blog in February 2009 as a companion piece to it and to help organize my thoughts while researching and writing it. The second edition came out in September 2014 from Hawthorne Books. The blog is now home to all different food, drink and beyond things I want to show and tell.

I’m also co-author of Fermenter: DIY Fermentation for Vegan Fare, author of Dumplings Equal Love, co-author of Toro Bravo: Stories. Recipes. No Bull from McSweeney’s, as well as Hello! My Name is Tasty: Global Diner Favorites from Portland’s Tasty Restaurants from Sasquatch Books and Grow Your Own: Understanding, Cultivating, and Enjoying Cannabis from Tin House Books.

I didn’t think I’d like blogging when I first started this, but it turns out I really do, mostly because I get to shout out people and things that I love.


Featured posts:

Featured
Oct 18, 2024
Portland Fermentation Festival 2024 Redux
Oct 18, 2024
Oct 18, 2024
Oct 25, 2023
Portland Fermentation Festival 2023 Redux
Oct 25, 2023
Oct 25, 2023
Jan 31, 2023
Deb Perelman's Smitten Kitchen Keepers Powell’s Books Event
Jan 31, 2023
Jan 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2019
Portland Fermentation Festival 2019 Redux
Oct 31, 2019
Oct 31, 2019
Sep 17, 2019
Tenth Annual Portland Fermentation Festival -- Three Weeks Away!
Sep 17, 2019
Sep 17, 2019
Nov 30, 2018
Videos of the 2018 Portland Fermentation Festival
Nov 30, 2018
Nov 30, 2018
Oct 24, 2018
Portland Fermentation Festival 2018 Exhibitors, Vendors and Demo Leaders
Oct 24, 2018
Oct 24, 2018
Oct 23, 2018
Portland Fermentation Festival 2018 Redux
Oct 23, 2018
Oct 23, 2018
Sep 18, 2018
Ninth Annual Portland Fermentation Festival 2018 -- One Month Away!
Sep 18, 2018
Sep 18, 2018
Aug 21, 2018
Ninth Annual Portland Fermentation Festival 2018 -- Two Months Away!
Aug 21, 2018
Aug 21, 2018
There are many ways to use a garage...

There are many ways to use a garage...

Portland Garagistes Pt. 1

September 03, 2012 in Edible Gardening, Food Fermentation, Food Preservation, Homemade Food, Portland DIY, Portland Garagistes, Portland Pickles, Portland Weird, Uncategorized

When I was a full-time freelance food writer I got used to rejection. If you can't accept the lack of a timely response too often eventually followed by rejection then you shouldn't freelance because that's unfortunately the nature of the beast most of the time. I learned how to spin very different pitches for the same story as well as restructure stories for numerous local and national publications. Now that I've published a book, am working on another book due out fall 2013 and am editor and publicity director at a publishing house I have less patience for that process so I mostly just write stories that I'm asked to write or put things that I'm interested in up here on my blog.

A while back though I met one too many people in Portland crafting delicious foods and drinks in their garages and decided I should write a story about it. I set up interviews and spent a good amount of time in garages throughout Portland talking with folks about the delicious foods and drinks that they craft in them -- a dessert maker, a cider maker, a winemaker, a beer brewer and a Persian pickle maker. I learned a lot and had a great time.

When it came to pitching the story the process took much longer than I remembered. I know that editors are very busy and receive an never ending, steady supply of pitches -- some good, many bad -- so I understand their often delayed responses to a certain degree. This is all a long way of saying that I tried and failed a few times to get this story published nationally and locally and I don't want to try to spin it any more. I'm doling it out to you in five installments here over the next several weeks because I love these people and think what they're doing is inspiring and important and, of course, delicious. I should have put this up here in the first place because it would have been a longer, more developed story if I hadn't tailored it so much. Stop complaining. Without further ado...

Portland Garagistes

In the Bordeaux region of France the term "garagiste" was coined in the mid 1990s when a group of winemakers began a movement of small batch wines, often made in their garages, that bucked the Bordeaux standard. I like the name "garagiste" and think it fits in spirit with what the five Portlanders featured here are doing -- making tasty stuff in their garages.

Sure, a kitchen is for cooking but they can get cramped and sticky hot -- especially when you've got a five-gallon homebrew pot simmering on the stove top for hours. I don't cook anything in my garage but in the past several years I've moved a lot of my food and drink ferments into the utility room at the back of the house. That's where I make and store crocks of miso, carboys of homemade fruit wines and hard ciders and buckets of kraut and sour pickles. More and more Portlanders are taking that kitchen extension one step further and into their garages.

I spent time with five such folks checking out their set-ups (all of their garages are average-sized at 250-350 square feet) and tasting what they make. Some are crafting commercial products and see their garage as an affordable space to work with while others just enjoy the larger square footage and freedom to be a little dirtier, a little scrappier, and a more isolated and less distracted by the outside world. Portland is fairly temperate so the home garage never gets too hot or cold. Nothing a couple space heaters or fans can't fix.

Stay tuned for Portland's "Garagistes" to be featured in five upcoming installments:

Pickler Charles Attarzadeh Sweetmaker Cheryl WakerhauserCidermaker Nat West Homebrewer Aaron Cohen Winemaker Jan-Marc Baker

Tags: Home Cooked, Keep Portland Weird, Portland DIY, Portland Garagistes, Portland Gardening, Portland Pickles
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