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Liz Crain

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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 16, 2025
Portland Fermentation Festival 2025 Redux
Oct 16, 2025
Oct 16, 2025
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
Magic beans?

Magic beans?

Good to know: F.H. Steinbart, Portland Nursery and heirloom beans

February 23, 2009 in Portland DIY, Uncategorized

Over the weekend I stopped by F.H. Steinbart Co. to pick up a small sack of corn sugar/dextrose for the hard cider we pressed this fall. It was my fastest in-and-out ever at Steinbart mainly due to weather. Saturday was so sunny and nice it felt wrong to be inside.

After resisting a long look at Steinbart's wine, beer and soda supplies, where I would not have been alone -- I counted almost 20 molasses-speed people scooping malt, handling carboys and discussing the pros and cons of cork versus rubber -- I made my way east on Stark toward Portland Nursery. I found most of the seeds I still needed there -- several varieties of tomatoes, pickling cukes, arugula, watermelon radish and more -- but was sad to find that they're already out of Ananas Noire tomatoes. Anyone know of a local nursery that still has this seed?

At PN I also picked up some Amber's Heirloom Beans from Red Truck Farm (if you follow this link be sure to scroll down till you get to "Dry Beans Available"). These heirloom beans -- produced by Amber Baker a former intern at Sauvie Island Organics -- are going for $3.49 per packet and they're going fast. I picked up a packet of the Golden Appaloosa and Peregion, both bush beans that I've never tried that sound delicious. The packets tell me to sow them in May-June and to harvest them when plump. Easy enough.

A couple more weekend finds:

While I was wandering PN picking my asparagus crowns and gathering seeds, I heard on the intercom that Vern Nelson of the O was about to host a free class on crop rotation in greenhouse two. I went, I learned, it was great. Apparently there are loads of free classes offered at Portland Nursery. Good to know.

Mirador Community Store is having a 25% off book sale through February. I bought a food preservation cookbook and a root cellar how-to book.

People's Food Co-op is hiring. Check out what for here. They're accepting applications until this Sunday, March 1st.

A half teaspoon of that corn sugar from F.H. Steinbart went into each of these bottles of hard cider.

A half teaspoon of that corn sugar from F.H. Steinbart went into each of these bottles of hard cider.

Tags: Hard Cider, Heirloom Beans, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening, Portland Nursery
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One of the first signs...spring fennel

One of the first signs...spring fennel

It's happening: spring gardening

February 20, 2009 in Portland DIY, Portland Gardening, Uncategorized
1Sorrel in the sun

1Sorrel in the sun

This week there have been a group of seagulls hanging out in the neighborhood. What do you call a group of seagulls? Probably just a flock. There are usually seagulls here and there in the Overlook neighborhood since we're so close to the river but there have been more than usual this week and they were sunning on our neighbor's roof for an hour or so yesterday morning. The gulls coupled with all the purple and yellow crocuses popping out in our yard and around the neighborhood and the sunny 50s weather mean one amazing thing...

It's time to till. I signed up yesterday to volunteer at the Oregon Food Bank's Eastside Learning Garden for a few hours in a couple weeks. They need volunteers year-round to help sow, weed, water, and harvest fruits and vegetables for hunger-relief agencies around Portland. There's also an OFB Learning Garden in Hillsboro.

This fall I took the first-of-its-kind, 10-week-long Organic Gardening Certification Program -- a partnership between OSU Extension Service, Oregon Tilth, Metro, PSU and East Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District. During the 10 week organic equivalent of the Master Gardening Program we learned all about plant biology, taxonomy, vermiculture, cover cropping, and more. As a part of the course you agree to a 30-hour volunteer practicum. I'm participating in Dig In! to kick that off. I'm also planning to volunteer with Portland Fruit Tree Project and Growing Gardens.

But I want to start my garden volunteering early this season because there's going to be a lot happening in my own garden this summer. I did a lot of sheet mulching this winter and now have more space than ever for annual vegetables. The mound below isn't a burial site it's the front yard parking strip sheet mulch patch where I plan to grow tomatoes this summer. I covered it with burlap sacks from a local coffee roaster. A month or so ago one of the burlap sacks was taken -- hopefully it's a rough pillow now...

Hard and softneck garlic getting taller

Hard and softneck garlic getting taller

Dirt lasagna

Dirt lasagna

Tags: Organic Gardening Certification Program, Portland Gardening, Spring
1 Comment
After four savory pizzas...

After four savory pizzas...

Bananas Foster...Pizza

February 17, 2009 in Portland DIY, Uncategorized
We got sweet.

We got sweet.

Maybe you thought those three words -- Bananas Foster pizza -- would never get along but let me tell you that this weekend they did and somehow we didn't burn down the house.

My boyfriend and I and our friend Duc went to a Portland International Film Festival screening on Sunday of the Higgins sponsored documentary The Chicken, the Fish and the King Crab. If you get a chance to see this movie  all about the 20-plus-year-old international French cooking contest the Bocuse d'Or I think you should. It was so popular that there's an encore screening -- February 22nd at 2pm at the Whitsell. Get your ticket!

The gist: "happy" Norwegian halibut, Bresse chicken, Arctic King Crab, 24 internationally renowned chefs, and a year of too-many-chefs-in-the-kitchen training for a couple days of intense competition.

So we saw the movie as an appetizer and then came home to cook. On the menu: pizza. FIVE to be exact. I won't bore you with the lamb and olive sausage, spicy Italian pork sausage, roasted red peppers, spicy sopressata, fresh basil, mozzarella goodness. But I do want to let you know that Bananas Foster pizza -- which we devised while walking to the movie -- is a grand idea.

I rolled out the dough, baked it for a few minutes, and then pulled it out. Once it cooled I finely grated dark chocolate over the top (Chuao's Firecracker chocolate to be exact that our superfine friend from San Diego gave us) and threw it in the oven for a minute longer while sauteing the bananas in a little butter and sugar over medium. Once they were nice and caramelized -- not so long, 2 minutes and a bit -- I added the Pyrat rum, cooked it off for 30 seconds and then lit the whole slurry on fire. We poured that onto the hot chocolately pizza and then topped it with scoops of Tillamook vanilla.

Next time I think that we'll light the bananas once they're actually on the pizza and then throw the flaming pizza like a frisbee onto the table. If you work for the fire department I apologize.

Tags: Home Cooked, Portland DIY
2 Comments
Most of the group at Acadia

Most of the group at Acadia

Needles and Knives: Portland chefs and tattoos

February 12, 2009 in Portland Chefs, Portland Chefs and Tat..., Uncategorized
John Gorham preparing Sambuca fennel pork sausage at Acadia

John Gorham preparing Sambuca fennel pork sausage at Acadia

At the end of November I covered a tattoo/food event for Portland Monthly that took place by day at Infinity Tattoo and by night at Acadia. During the day eight Portland chefs got food-themed tattoos and by night those chefs, and one bartender, prepared food and drink related to the tattoos.

I interviewed the chefs and tattooists throughout the day. Most interviews were a quick walk around the block from Infinity since the shop was so loud. There were a couple times when I was tempted to snag a chef or two that had strayed to the tavern across the street but I didn't and just moved on down the list. For the most part I asked everyone the same set of questions.

The resulting Portland Monthly story was all about the visuals -- chefs under needle, tattooists and their art, inspired food, celebration -- and Chris Ryan's photos capture all of that. Jessica Helmke took the candids here.

I'm going to give you some more words, some snippets from the interviews not included in the original story. I'd also like to add that it was great working with PM's Camas Davis on this assignment and I'm very disappointed that she was laid off in late January.

Participating tattooists: Infinity Tattoo's Alice Kendall, Paul Zenk, Amanda Myers, Tyler Adams, Rich Cuellar; Tigerlily Tattoo's Matt Reed, Optic Nerve Art's Tim Jordan, Pussycat Tattoo's Saad Sweilem.

Participating chefs: Gabriel Rucker Le Pigeon, John Gorham Toro Bravo, Sarah Higgs Acadia, John Eisenhart Pazzo, Karl Zenk Heathman, Adam Higgs Acadia, Tommy Habetz Bunk Sandwiches, Dusty York bartender Bluehour.

TATTOOISTS

Amanda Myers, 43, Infinity Tattoo

When did you start tattooing?

I've been tattooing for many years -- since 1991. I started at Sea Tramp with Don Deaton.

How many chefs/restaurant workers do you see?

A lot. It's working class people that we see mostly, those people are interested in tattoos. Not so much lawyers -- although we get white collar folks too.

What are some of your favorite foods?

Mushrooms, especially wild ones. Local food, local produce and greens. Food that we grow in our yard.

Alice Kendall, 38, Infinity Tattoo

What's your favorite tattoo or your first tattoo?

I can't say I have a favorite because then the people who I don't mention would feel bad so the first one was in 1989 -- a moon, star and cloud from Pinky Yun in San Jose, California.

How often do you tattoo chefs and restaurant workers?

Pretty often. I think it's mostly because of Paul [Zenk] and all the restaurant people he knows. It's also that they're both alternative cultures -- cooking seems to be an alternative lifestyle just like tattooing.

Paul Zenk, 37, Infinity Tattoo

Is there anything that still makes you nervous about tattooing people?

I'm always nervous about tattooing.

What's your favorite tattoo?

The one that Amanda [Myers -- Paul's wife] did in 1985 of Notre Dame de Paris.

What's your favorite type of food?

Mexican

Tyler Adams, 34, Infinity Tattoo

Why do you think chefs are so into tattoos in Portland?

Because they're low-lifes and sailors at heart.

Is there anything still make you nervous about tattooing people?

Portraits. You can mess them up pretty easily -- one false move and a tattoo turns from mom into dad.

Rich Cuellar, 42, Infinity Tattoo

When did you start tattooing?

About 5 years ago in 2003/2004. I always wanted to tattoo. I went to school as a graphic designer, quickly got tired of that, quit and started tattooing.

What are some of your favorite foods?

Mexican foods. Tamales. I use my dad's old recipe from his mom. There's brown sugar, garlic, pork, and chicken in them. We used to fill them with goat when we were kids in LA but I didn't really like that as a kid. I thought the goat was too tough and gamey. I really love garlic. I'd eat garlic out of my shoe.

Matt Reed, 38, Tiger Lily Tattoo

Why do you think chefs are so into tattoos in Portland?

It's a job where you're not in the public eye and I think chefs tend to be more creative people. I enjoy cooking but I'm not very good at it. I get flustered with the timing of cooking, things getting done at the right time. Dinner is a joke -- there has to be a three or four hour window. My wife is a really fast cook though and she makes food better than most restaurants.

What kind of foods do you eat as a family?

When my daughter was three she said, 'Do you know why I like pigs?' I asked why and she said, 'Because they're pink AND they make pork.' I've been cooking a lot of bacon wrapped scallops lately.

Tim Jordan, 32, Optic Nerve

What's your favorite tattoo?

The one on my ribs that's an ode to my dad. There's a frozen raven in an icicle, with a hockey and broom stick crossed behind it, and snowflakes.

What do you like to eat?

I'm pretty easy to please. I'm a carnisaur -- I like eating meat. Whatever as long as it's got some meat in it.

Saad Sweilem, 34, Pussycat Tattoo

How many tattoos do you have?

For a tattoo artist I'm not that heavily tattooed. I don't know, probably 10 to 15.

What's your favorite food?

Garlic. I think it's because I'm Arabic, my dad's full Arab. My dad would eat garlic raw growing up, but I like it cooked, a little more mild. My sister makes a really good baba ganouj.

CHEFS

Gabriel Rucker, 27, Le Pigeon,

What's your favorite tattoo?

My Mother's Day tattoo that says mom on my ribs. I got it last year on Mother's Day.

What food do you most like to prepare?

Probably foie gras because it's so versatile. You can make dessert with it, you can poach things in it...

John Gorham, 36,Toro Bravo,

What do you like to cook at home?

I like to pick a cuisine and cook it. A couple weeks ago I cooked a Tuscan dinner, then a Moroccan dinner. I pick a cuisine I don't cook at work and just go with it.

What's your favorite tattoo?

The one that Tyler [Adams] did of the pin-up girl, broken into cuts of meat. Chicken Shit Mills is another favorite. My sous-chef chickened out of getting a tattoo so I got a chicken shitting out his name -- "Mills" -- on my ass.

Sarah Higgs, 31, Acadia,

What do you like to cook?

I like to cook French style food -- sausages, pates, and more complex charcuterie.

What's the painful tattoo you've gotten?

The part of my sleeve near and on my wrist that Paul [Zenk] did of birds and plants.

Tommy Habetz, 36, Bunk Sandwiches,

Where have you worked locally?

Lucere, Genoa, Family Supper, Ripe, Gotham Building Tavern, Meriwether's, Bunk Sandwiches.

Why do you think so many chefs have tattoos?

Because we're cool and chicks dig tattoos. [laughter]

John Eisenhart, 38, Pazzo,

When did you start cooking?

When I was 14 I was a dishwasher for two years. Then I just made my way up in that Italian restaurant in Sonoma, California.

What was your first tattoo?

A crown of thorns.

Karl Zenk, 44, the Heathman,

When did you start cooking?

1984

When did you get your first tattoo?

My first real tattoo?

Well, not your first fake tattoo...

I did my first tattoo with a Bic pen and wire when I was 21 but my first real one Amanda [Myers] did in 1986. It's a Northwest Indian style raven.

Adam Higgs, 33, Acadia,

Where have you worked in Portland?

I was chef at L'Auberge for a year then moved to Acadia. I started working there and then soon after bought the restaurant.

When did you get your first tattoo?

In about five minutes.

Dusty York, 30, former bartender Bluehour,

Where have you worked as a bartender in Portland?

Brasserie Montmarte and Bluehour. It was truly an honor to be the last bartender at Brasserie. We ran out of liquor closing night.

Why do you think so many food and drink professionals have tattoos?

I have no idea but I do know that tattoos confuse people -- especially people with preconceived notions about you. I guess one reason why is that restaurant work is so stressful, and maybe doing that day-after-day leads to tattoos. Then you're putting that same thing into your body. It definitely has a masochistic side.

Alice Kendall tattooing a brook trout on Tommy Habetz

Alice Kendall tattooing a brook trout on Tommy Habetz

Tags: Food Event, Portland Chefs, Portland chefs and tattoos
1 Comment
Kimchi loot

Kimchi loot

You can call me Kim, Kimchi

February 09, 2009 in Portland DIY, Uncategorized

I think a good way to start this blog devoted to the research and writing of my upcoming spring 2010 Sasquatch Books title Food Lover's Guide to Portland is to show you what I made last weekend, and jarred this weekend...

I promise to hold my hand over my mouth the next time I talk to you

I promise to hold my hand over my mouth the next time I talk to you

Kimchi! I've been making kimchi for several years now and love how every batch is unique. For this crock I added burdock, lotus root and dried chiles from a friend's summer harvest. I also used my new mandolin and I'm happy to say that this time all of my fingertips can still be inked and printed if I do something illegal. The last mandolin I owned was apparently a vampire.

I signed my contract with Sasquatch on January 9th and have since been creating my master list -- a long list of all purveyors, farmers, chefs, food and drink artisans, ingredients and more that I want to include in the book. It's going to be an all-consuming and ongoing process -- businesses open, businesses close, and unfortunately there's been a lot more of the latter lately.

The ethnic market chapter of the book sent me to Anzen Importers on NE MLK across from the convention center last weekend. Before I knew it I had all the necessary ingredients for a big batch of spicy, fermented kimchi. I highly recommend this market. They carry tasty local miso, sushi grade fish, waikame salads, and a lot of nice produce.

Tags: Asian, Home Cooked, Portland DIY
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