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Liz Crain

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  • Food Lover's Guide to Portland
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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 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
Please bite the baby.

Please bite the baby.

EaT Oyster Bar: Mardi Gras Mayhem and King Cake Babies

January 26, 2010 in Portland Food/Drink Event, Portland Seafood, Uncategorized

Several years ago a baby was born. A little pink plastic king cake baby.

I can't remember how I got the baby but I'm guessing from my friend Loly who's from Lafayette, Louisiana. I'd never heard of king cakes until I met Loly. I kept the baby on my windowsill for a year or so with all the other knick knacks that reside there -- figurines, shot glasses, a corn cob pipe, a couple shells. It fit right in until one day I kidnapped the baby from its comfortable home.

I was making postickers for New Year's Eve and decided to put the king cake baby in one. Whoever bit into the potsticker with him in it (or her -- it's hard to tell) would be on track for a very fortunate year. Don't worry, I warned everyone not to bite too hard. My friend Chris got the baby that year. One of the only times when it is ok -- in fact your encouraged -- to bite a baby.

Shrimp, cabbage and mushroom potstickers.

Shrimp, cabbage and mushroom potstickers.

So I've done this a few times since. It's a great tradition -- an every couple of years tradition.

This all leads me to Mardi Gras. King cakes and Mardi Gras...

One of my favorite North Portland restaurants has some fantastic Mardi Gras action this year that you might want to check out. Here's the scoop straight from the source: EaT Oyster Bar is hosting a big Mardi Gras party as well as lots of events during the entire week leading up to Fat Tuesday.

Bon Ton Roulet is playing live on February 13th for EaT's Crawfish Boil, which starts at 1:30pm and goes until they run out. There will be king cakes, traditional beads and doubloons along with a Grand Mardi Gras Dress-up Ball on Fat Tuesday February 16th. Festivities start at 11:30am and go all night with live music, cajun specialties and the crowning of the Mardi Gras King and Queen of Portland. Check out the website for a schedule closer to the day of the event.

EaT Oyster Bar www.eatoysterbar.com

Tags: Food Event, Home Cooked, Portland Food Event
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Oregon Tilth is offering all sorts of great gardening classes in 2010.

Oregon Tilth is offering all sorts of great gardening classes in 2010.

Oregon Tilth's 2010 Gardening Classes

January 21, 2010 in Oregon Farms, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening, Uncategorized

No, this post isn't about how my boyfriend constructed an awesome two-stage compost set-up in our backyard. I just thought it'd be a good segue into a post all about Portland gardening classes.

In 2008 I had the pleasure of taking several classes via the local Organic Gardening Certification Program with various Oregon Tilth teachers (and lots of other knowledgeable folks) and I learned so much. We all did. A couple weeks ago I got word from Kathy Dang, Oregon Tilth Organic Education Center program manager, that Oregon Tilth has doubled its classes this year and added new ones for beginning and advanced gardeners.

Classes are diverse in terms of topics covered, cost, and location. Here are some highlights from Oregon Tilth's 2010 class program. Visit the Oregon Tilth website for more information. Tilth Toolshed Series: Plan, Sow, Plant! Our practical 3-class series offered in partnership with the City of Portland's Urban Growth Bounty gardening initiative. Take each class separately or together as a series. Read More… Four-Season Vegetable Gardening Series Another series offered in partnership with the City of Portland's Urban Growth Bounty Initiative. Come find out how to encourage a bountiful harvest from your garden every season of the year! Read More… Tilth Toolshed Series at Luscher Farm The Tilth Toolshed Series: Plan, Sow, Plant! is being offered at second time at our demonstration garden at Luscher Farm. Come discover simple techniques for getting your garden started and increase your urban bounty this season! Read More… Comprehensive Organic Gardener Program The curriculum merges scientific and practical information, emphasizing hands-on practice. This unique and popular course introduces beginning gardeners to the dynamic world of organic gardening and gets their hands dirty in the process! March 4th - 25th! Read More…

Organic Gardening Certificate Program In partnership with Oregon State University, Oregon Tilth offers a program similar in size and scope to the OSU Master Gardener program, with an organic gardening focus. Read More… Urban Gardener Series Offered in partnership with the City of Portland's Urban Growth Bounty initiative, Oregon Tilth's Urban Gardener Series equips city gardeners with the tools necessary to farm our urban landscape. Read More…

In an Oregon Tilth class you might even learn how to plant kiwi vines that attract white fluffy dogs.

In an Oregon Tilth class you might even learn how to plant kiwi vines that attract white fluffy dogs.

Oregon Tilth www.tilth.org

Tags: Oregon Farms, Organic Gardening Certification Program, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening
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Leopards love tiny tangerines.

Leopards love tiny tangerines.

Fremont Tangerines: New Seasons Markets

January 18, 2010 in Portland Food Products, Portland Kitchen Equip..., Uncategorized

In recent years my relationship with citrus has grown. Lemons, limes, oranges, tangerines, grapefruit and then some. I've always loved citrus -- from quartered oranges at half time during elementary school soccer, to childhood morning's eating halved grapefruit topped with a generous pour of sugar, to fresh squeezed lemonade when lucky in the summer growing up.

What's changed in recent years is that I don't just appreciated citrus solo as in a slice of orange or a segment of tangerine -- I appreciate it as an accent, a bright contrast to everything from soups and salads, to pastas and marinades. A generous squeeze here, a bit of zest there.

Below is visual evidence of my evolving relationship. It happened around the time I found the beautiful piece of heavy aluminum kitchen equipment on the left of this photo at an estate sale. I'd been looking for one of these citrus juicers for some time because we grew up with one and it worked wonders come lemonade time as a kid. A few months after I found it, my brother and his wife bought me the new orange one. And then just weeks later I found the old stand up citrus juicer (good luck comes in threes) at a thrift store. I juice citrus so frequently now that three is indeed better than one. Do my dishes?

The long limbs and beauty of synchronized juicing.

The long limbs and beauty of synchronized juicing.

Anyhow, my original train of thought with this post was this:

A couple weekends ago when New Seasons Market hosted a front-of-the-store Saturday and Sunday citrus tasting I was very happy. I tried a bunch of citrus that I'd never tried before.

The best of the batch that I tried -- the tiny but oh-so-full-of-flavor Fremont tangerines. Wow -- if you haven't tried them and you love tangerines even a quarter as much as I do you better get your heinie over to New Seasons and grab a few.

They've brought me back to wanting citrus and only citrus -- no accouterments.

I think you're going to like these.

I think you're going to like these.

Tags: Home Cooked, Kitchen Equipment, Portland Produce
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Eat, drink and be hairy!

Eat, drink and be hairy!

Never Cry Wolf

January 11, 2010 in Uncategorized

I need to take a little hiatus from the blog this week for personal reasons and just want to let you know that I'll be back next week. Don't you worry about me -- I'll be back before you know it.

Eat, drink and be hairy!

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Maple spice hazelnut, brussels sprout and bacon spaghetti loaded with freshly grated parmesan and a good squeeze of lime juice.

Maple spice hazelnut, brussels sprout and bacon spaghetti loaded with freshly grated parmesan and a good squeeze of lime juice.

White Pine Products: Kinda Nutty

January 06, 2010 in Oregon Farms, Portland DIY, Portland Food Products, Uncategorized

A couple years ago I wrote a story about locally grown horseradish (wasabi grows in the Pacific Northwest too by the way) and for that I interviewed the Krizos in the Klamath Basin. It was a really interesting story to research and then I didn't talk with the Krizos for a couple years.

A few weeks ago I got to see the working cover design for my bookFood Lover's Guide to Portland. I love it and I should because I took all of the cover photos except one -- the one of the Krizos' harvest truck.

So I got to check in with them about this agricultural shot of their truck filled to the brim with horseradish. They gave the green light and that opened up the dialogue. A couple weeks later I heard from their son -- Ira Krizo -- who lives in town and runs a thriving local, wholesale food business -- White Pine Products. Ira provided the recipe to go with that seasonal horseradish story in 2007 -- horseradish crusted filet mignon with a blue cheese cream sauce.

In 2007 Ira's all-natural (some organic) White Pine Products -- granolas, candied nuts, pancake mixes, and more -- were only in a few stores. Since then WPP has grown and diversified. You can now find White Pine Products in local Whole Foods Markets, Market of Choice stores, and other food and drink shops around town.

The past few weeks I've been lucky enough to sample several White Pine Products and here are a few of the tasty treats I've enjoyed as a result...

Caramalized onion, feta, white wine and spinach spaghetti topped with candied pecans.

Caramalized onion, feta, white wine and spinach spaghetti topped with candied pecans.

Butter lettuce, bacon, egg, and maple spice hazelnut salad with a miso lime vinaigrette.

Butter lettuce, bacon, egg, and maple spice hazelnut salad with a miso lime vinaigrette.

As you can see from the photo below there's a lot more to White Pine Products than spiced nuts (Although WPP's are so fresh and perfectly spiced they takes spiced nuts to a whole new level.) I'll let you know how the pancake mixes, granola and muesli are next time...

White Pine Products line-up.

White Pine Products line-up.

White Pine Products 503.794.4083 www.whitepine.usWPP online store

Tags: Food Product, Home Cooked, Oregon Farms, Portland Food Product
6 Comments
Celebrate 2010 with these Grand Central Baking Book chocolate shortbread mint chocolate ganache sandwich cookies.

Celebrate 2010 with these Grand Central Baking Book chocolate shortbread mint chocolate ganache sandwich cookies.

The Grand Central Baking Book: Chocolate Mint Sandwich Cookies

January 01, 2010 in Portland Bread and Pas..., Portland DIY, Uncategorized

I'm not a big baker. I don't have a stand-up mixer, I rarely sift, I can't remember the last time I bought shortening, and I don't even own cake or bread tins. It's not that I don't enjoy baking it's just I've never gotten into the habit of doing it. Not like some people I know. A couple months ago though something happened that might have an influence on that.

I interviewed Piper Davis of Grand Central Bakery in the spring for my book and shortly after spending an afternoon with her at the Fremont Grand Central, The Grand Central Baking Book hit the shelves. Piper wrote the book with local food writer Ellen Jackson and a couple months ago their publisher Ten Speed Press sent me a copy.

I've been reading various sections of the book since then and I really like the simple and straightforward approach they've taken. It's a really nice all-level bake book because there are step by step photos for the amateur as well as more complicated techniques and recipes for the more advanced baker.

I decided to bake the chocolate shortbread, mint ganache sandwich cookies from it for Christmas and I'm so freakishly happy that I did. They were incredible.

First I made a batch of chocolate shortbread and chilled it in the fridge for a couple hours:

I doubled the batch...

I doubled the batch...

After the shortbread had chilled I sliced and baked it:

Ready and waiting.

Ready and waiting.

Then I baked the shortbread while preparing the chocolate mint ganache:

Chocolate, heavy cream, mint extract.

Chocolate, heavy cream, mint extract.

After 15 minutes in the oven the shortbread was ready:

Just out of the oven.

Just out of the oven.

The melt in your mouth chocolate shortbread combined with the creamy dark chocolate minty ganache was knee buckling good. These are definitely a new annual holiday cookie in my books. The only thing I'd change with the recipe would be to cut the ganache in half. It was a lot. That said, it never hurts to have a little extra ganache hanging around.

I'm really looking forward to trying Grand Central's pizza dough next. I love homemade pizza and I've used the same dough recipe for awhile now. It'll be nice to switch it up.

Even though I've only baked one recipe from the book so far -- the success of that combined with reading through techniques and other recipes -- I stand behind my loud and proud recommendation of The Grand Central Baking Book.

Two ganache covered thumbs up for this one.

Two ganache covered thumbs up for this one.

The Grand Central Baking Book by Piper Davis and Ellen Jackson Ten Speed Press

Tags: Home Cooked, Portland Bread and Pastries, Portland Dessert, Portland DIY
5 Comments
Juicy and full-flavored heirloom navel oranges at your service

Juicy and full-flavored heirloom navel oranges at your service

Nel Centro: Gaeta Olives, Heirloom Navel Oranges, and Lamb Burger

December 28, 2009 in Portland Chefs, Portland Chefs and Tat..., Portland Meat, Uncategorized

In addition to moving on to the final stages of my book (after final edits comes proofing and I really wish that just meant letting some dough rise) I'm working at Hawthorne Books and that means I'm downtown a lot. I love it. I like riding the MAX and bookending my work days with commute reading, I like getting takeout from yummy places, I like walking through the Portland Art Museum courtyard every day, AND I now like food and drinks at Nel Centro after work. Well, I've only been once but I'll be back.

My boyfriend Tyler tattoos Nel Centro chef de cuisine Paul Hyman and so he called and made sure he was working (he was), and let him know we were coming in for a late dinner a couple weeks ago.

We grabbed a tall table at the bar, ordered drinks and then ordered a lamb burger and whatever entree the chef recommended. We said "entree" but Chef Hyman sent out so many dishes we had to move to a four top. It was crazy and it was delicious. My favorites:

The lamb burger ($12). Must have been about a half pound of moist, well seasoned meat on an aioli slathered housemade brioche bun topped with a whipped blend of housemade ricotta and feta, and a trio of thinly sliced sauteed red peppers. I think I've said it all right there. Oh and it came with my favorite type of french fry -- fresh cut, super thin, golden and generously salted and peppered with a housemade harissa and ketchup sauce.

Frisee and thinly sliced, poached lamb tongue salad ($13) with sauteeed golden chanterelles topped with a poached egg and dressed with olive oil and salsa verde.

The duck confit ($12) with braised red cabbage and apples.

As we were eating from six -- yes six -- full plates of food Chef Hyman came out and he and Tyler talked about the next tattoo he wants -- an old French charcuterie ad. It's a great image but I don't remember too much about it because I was infatuated with the lamb burger, the pork rillettes, the mussels in vermouth, the salt cod croquettes and more.

After dinner he took us on a tour of his kitchen which was immaculate despite being at the tail end of a brisk dinner service. In his walk-in there was house bresaola soaking in brine pre-air-curing, small portions of duck prosciutto hanging and drying in cheesecloth, and all sorts of gorgeous wild mushrooms. He opened a tub of gaeta olives for us to try and they were buttery delicious. And then he gave us two heirloom navel oranges above to take home. What a man.

Nel Centro 1408 SW 6th Ave Portland, OR 503.484.1099 www.nelcentro.comDinner nightly, lunch Monday-Friday, breakfast Monday-Saturday and brunch Sunday.

Tags: Portland Chefs, Portland chefs and tattoos, Portland Meat
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Hey Chuck, why don't you slow cook?

Hey Chuck, why don't you slow cook?

Kitchen Kaboodle: Still Need Last Minute Gifts?

December 20, 2009 in Portland DIY, Portland Food Products, Portland Kitchen Equip..., Uncategorized

I love me some Kitchen Kaboodle. That sounds a little dirty but it's not. It took me a while to realize that Kitchen Kaboodle is locally owned. I think it's because it reads like a big chain -- large selection, multiple locations in town, online shopping etc. but no sir -- Kitchen Kaboodle has been a locally owned, Portland tried and true establishment since 1975.

Despite the fact that they shortened their hours drastically at all locations for a few months Kitchen Kaboodle stores are open holiday hours now through January 3rd -- seven days a week. As far as I can see the stores are filled to the brim and in full swing. I was a little worried before the holiday hours to be honest. The slashed hours felt a little last breath to me.

So last week when I purchased my very first slow cooker from them (and then made that bright red chuck above into a lovely pot roast) I was pleased to see both the Northwest and the Northeast locations hopping with local shoppers. There are loads at great gifts at Kitchen Kaboodle in every price range -- stocking stuffers, huge honking Cadillac-like kitchen equipment, and everything in between.

Kitchen Kaboodle's three Portland locations (there's also a shop in Clackamas as well as in Hillsboro) are fully loaded so you'll find the same kind of diverse assortment of cookware and dinnerware as at a Sur La Table. A lot of the products—ranging from Le Creuset and All-Clad cookery to kitchen linens, tools and gadgets, and glassware—are displayed throughout the store on tall metal racks. There's a kitchen knife and table cutlery section, a table setting and flatware section, along with all sorts of gadgets big and small, and even a home furniture section. I love this store for its diversity, friendly service, and competitive prices.

There's a lot of sale merchandise at the moment too so if you still have some shopping to do head over. And what about the pot roast? It was delicious. The parsnips, carrots, potatoes and onions soaked up all the juices and it was melt in your mouth comfort food. Next up: pulled pork, posole, and congee.

Please support our lovely and local Kitchen Kaboodle! Kitchen KaboodleHoliday hours 1520 NE Broadway St, Portland; 503.288.1500; Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 10am-6pm. 404 NW 23rd Ave, Portland; 503.241.4040; Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 11am-6pm. 8788 SW Hall Blvd, Portland; 503.643.5491; Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 11am-6pm. www.kitchenkaboodle.com

Tags: Home Cooked, Kitchen Equipment, Portland Food Products
5 Comments
Into the crock at Portland Kraut Collective

Into the crock at Portland Kraut Collective

Homemade Sauerkraut: Portland Kraut Collective and Food Fermentation

December 15, 2009 in Portland DIY, Portland Food/Drink Event, Uncategorized

Sometimes stories get bumped. That's just the way things go in print media. Page space favors money making ads and printing costs are monitored closely -- i.e. RIP Gourmet Magazine. Thankfully I haven't been bumped too often but recently I wrote a story for Edible Portland's fall issue that didn't make it to print but still made it to the magazine's online version. the problem with the online version is that it cuts the end of the piece and you also don't get the full format feel of the photos.

My friend Sarah Henderson shot the story so I'm posting a version of the story here (with some edited out portions) along with her beautiful photos. We're working on another Edible Portland story together at the moment, which makes three EP collaborations for us so far. I really want more folks to know about this Portland group. I hope PKC inspires folks to start kraut collectives and various cooking collectives in other parts of the country.

Without further ado...

Into the Crock

Portland Kraut Collective makes kraut communal

By Liz Crain

36-year-old writer George Winborn is holding a bull thistle -- a big spiny, invasive weed -- in the middle of his dining room. He’s just pulled it up from his backyard and it’s not going into yard debris, compost or trash, it’s going into the crock. The kraut crock. I ask Winborn if he cooks with bull thistle and he says sometimes he sautees it. Gretchan Jackson, manager of the Montavilla Farmer's Market adds, “Only in the leaner months,” and we all laugh.

It’s mid-morning on a sunny Saturday in April and I’m at my first Portland Kraut Collective (PKC) gathering at Winborn’s Laurelhurst neighborhood home. The PKC, also known as the Heads of Cabbage, meets a few times a year to slice, dice and craft large batches of communal sauerkraut. I’ve been invited to join in the fermentation fun.

For the first 30 minutes or so folks unload cutting boards, knives, crocks, jars and more in Winborn’s kitchen and dining room. Those who haven’t met introduce themselves while brandishing homegrown, foraged and store bought dandelion greens, parsnips, burdock, apples, seaweed and more. Although the basis of sauerkraut is salted and fermented cabbage, all sorts of other ingredients—fresh produce, spices and herbs—can be incorporated. I bring scarlet globe radishes, German red hardneck garlic and mustard greens.

Portland Kraut Collective

Portland Kraut Collective

PKC formed in the summer of 2007 after Nashville-based Sandor Ellix Katz, author of Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition and Craft of Live-Culture Foods and The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved: Inside America’s Underground Food Movements visited Portland for a two day fermentation workshop at Tryon Life Community Farm. After learning the basics of DIY homemade kraut and live-culture food that weekend, this group of Portlanders decided to meet up on a semi-regular basis to make collective batches of kraut. Sometimes five people show and other times twenty, according to Winborn. Today there are ten of us.

Jen Schlee, who Winborn refers to as a spiritual vagabond, is in the kitchen julienning burdock next to me as I mince garlic. We’re heads down, talking about everything from homemade kiwi wine to chickpea miso when Schlee says, “I’ve been doing some really wild krauts with spirulina, kombucha, bee pollen, apples and other things. Anything edible that’s at all ferment-ish.”

Sauerkraut is an easy gateway fermented food for the home cook [Sandor Ellix Katz's recipe can be found at the end of this story] because it's relatively quick and easy and all that's essential is chopped cabbage, salt and a non-reactive fermentation vessel.

Portland Kraut Collective gets chopping

Portland Kraut Collective gets chopping

Fermentation emerged thousands of years ago as a technique for food and drink preservation but these days many fermented foods are crafted more for their flavor rather than for their storage capability. Chocolate, coffee, cheese, wine, miso, yogurt and, of course, sauerkraut are all good examples of fermented foods that harness the intricate work of microorganisms for complex flavors and textures. As an added bonus fermentation often makes food more nutritious and digestible.

Out in the dining room, which is getting louder as more people trickle in, Winborn's rat terrier Sushi is at the feet of five year old Rory Jackson who's chopping seaweed that he and his mom harvested from the coast and dehydrated last summer. Sushi's nickname for the day should be Hoover because she happily cleans up fallen fruit and vegetables as we go. Rory seems right at home kneeling on a chair, chopping vegetables and telling me about how his mom Gretchan Jackson leads fermentation workshops at his school. When I ask him what his classmates' favorite food ferment is he answers quickly -- sour dill pickles. Their least favorite, according to Rory, is kimchi. He adds that the latter stunk up the room too much.

Heidi Nestler who's friends with the Gretchan Jackson and is thinly slicing red cabbage next to her, got to try those popular pickles and says they were delicious. Nestler is privy to all sorts of interesting ferments because her husband is Japanese and regularly makes natto and other traditional Japanese ferments at home. Natto is a steamed and cultured soybean ferment that's compared to Rice Krispy treats because of it's sticky, stringy consistency. Unlike our relatively benign collective kraut natto has a funky, slightly ammonia like aroma and flavor.

Kraut talk at Portland Kraut Collective

Kraut talk at Portland Kraut Collective

At first there's talk of separating nightshades (tomatoes, chiles, eggplant...) and some of the more pungent ingredients such as garlic, ginger and onions so that they can be added sparingly at the end but that's overtaken by a more festive approach as folks clear their boards with abandon into buckets and crocks.

All that needs to be done now is the mixing and mashing. We combine different batches of kraut, add salt, herbs and spices, and hand mash the mixes in order to extract the water necessary to submerge the vegetables for fermentation. Some squat on the floor elbow deep in veggie filled buckets while others stand on their tiptoes working the table-top kraut.

Tamping the kraut

Tamping the kraut

We clean up, exchange numbers and say goodbye in the early afternoon. I head home and unload my kraut supplies—towel-wrapped knives, stainless steel bowls, cutting boards—and arrange my jars of kraut on a lasagna tray (in case they bubble over during ferment) on the kitchen table where they ferment at room temperature, submerged in brine and partially covered, for a little more than a week.

Some like their kraut soft and pungent so they ferment it for weeks while others like theirs crisp and mild which usually only takes a few days. I generally like mine somewhere in between the two—flavorful but still nice and crunchy. I taste my homemade kraut periodically as it ferments and once it’s to my liking I jar it, cap it and put it in the fridge to stop further fermentation.

After my first Portland Kraut Collective gathering I end up with kraut from three different batches and my favorite is the one with red bell peppers and black radish which I put on salads, rice dishes, sandwiches and more. Sometimes when a batch of kraut is especially good I don't even bother with a bowl or plate and just eat it right out of the jar. That said, a Reuben layered with crisp, sour homemade kraut and homemade spicy chile sauce in lieu of 1,000 Island dressing is a gift from the sandwich gods.

Even though George Winborn is used to more formal gatherings at his home – his husband is a concert pianist and the couple regularly entertains with home concerts to the tune of Johannes Brahms and Franz Schubert -- it's clear that Portland Kraut Collective is here to stay. Although other members have hosted the gatherings Winborn seems to own it from the moment he welcomes you at the door to when he sweetly but curtly says to everyone milling around in the kitchen, "All right, should we get chopping?"

A morning spent talking about food, gardening, cooking and then some while crafting delicious collective batches of kraut to feed us in the weeks ahead is my idea of a morning well spent. I'll definitely be back for more if the Heads of Cabbage will have me.

The following recipe is abridged from Sandor Ellix Katz's sauerkraut recipe in Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition and Craft of Live-Culture Foods. Wild Fermentation is one of my most used and favorite kitchen references. Visit Sandor's site for more information on all things fermented.

Sandor Ellix Katz's Sauerkraut Recipe

Timeframe: 1-4 weeks (or more)

Special Equipment:

* Ceramic crock or food-grade plastic bucket, one-gallon capacity or greater * Plate that fits inside crock or bucket * One-gallon jug filled with water (or a scrubbed and boiled rock) * Cloth cover (pillowcase or towel)

Ingredients (for 1 gallon):

* 5 pounds cabbage * 3 tablespoons sea salt

Process:

1. Chop or grate cabbage, finely or coarsely, with or without hearts. You can mix green and red cabbage to end up with bright pink kraut. Place cabbage in a large bowl as you chop it.

2. Sprinkle salt on the cabbage as you go. The salt pulls water out of the cabbage and creates the brine in which the cabbage can ferment and sour without rotting. The salt also keeps the cabbage crunchy, by inhibiting organisms and enzymes that soften it. 3 tablespoons of salt is a rough guideline for 5 pounds of cabbage. Use a bit more salt in summer, and a bit less in the winter.

3. Be creative and add as many other vegetables as you want. Some tasty kraut vegetables include onions, garlic, seaweed, greens, Brussels sprouts, grated carrots, turnips, beets, and burdock roots. You can also add fruits (apples, whole or sliced, are classic), and herbs and spices (caraway seeds, dill seeds, celery seeds, and juniper berries are classic, but anything you like will work).

4. Mix ingredients together and pack into crock, food grade bucket or glass jar. Pack just a bit in at a time and tamp it down hard using your fists or any (other) sturdy kitchen implement. The tamping packs the kraut tight in the crock and helps force water out of the cabbage.

5. Cover kraut with a plate or some other lid that fits snugly inside the crock. Place a clean weight (a glass jug filled with water) on the cover. This weight forces water out of the cabbage and keeps the cabbage submerged under the brine. Cover the whole thing with a cloth to keep dust and flies out.

6. Press down on the weight to add pressure to the cabbage and help force water out of it. Continue doing this periodically (as often as you think of it, every few hours), until the brine rises above the cover. This can take up to about 24 hours, as the salt draws water out of the cabbage slowly. If the brine does not rise above the plate level by the next day, add enough salt water to bring the brine level above the plate. Add about a teaspoon of salt to a cup of water and stir until completely dissolved.

7. Leave the crock to ferment in an unobtrusive corner of the kitchen or somewhere else where you won’t forget about it.

8. Check the kraut every day or two. The volume reduces as fermentation proceeds. Sometimes mold appears on the surface. Many books refer to this mold as “scum,” but I prefer to think of it as a bloom. Skim what you can off of the surface; it will break up and you will probably not be able to remove all of it. Don’t worry -- it’s just a surface phenomenon, a result of contact with the air. The kraut itself is under the anaerobic protection of the brine. Rinse off the plate and the weight. Taste the kraut. Generally it starts to be tangy after a few days, and the taste gets stronger as time passes. In the cool temperatures of a cellar in winter, kraut can keep improving for months and months. In the summer or in a heated room, its life cycle is more rapid. Eventually it becomes soft and the flavor turns less pleasant.

9. Enjoy. I generally scoop out a bowl or jarful at a time and keep it in the fridge. I start when the kraut is young and enjoy its evolving flavor over the course of a few weeks. Try the sauerkraut juice that will be left in the bowl after the kraut is eaten. Sauerkraut juice is a rare delicacy and unparalleled digestive tonic. Each time you scoop some kraut out of the crock, you have to repack it carefully. Make sure the kraut is packed tight in the crock, the surface is level, and the cover and weight are clean. Sometimes brine evaporates, so if the kraut is not submerged below brine just add salted water as necessary.

10. Develop a rhythm. I try to start a new batch before the previous batch runs out. I remove the remaining kraut from the crock, repack it with fresh salted cabbage, then pour the old kraut and its juices over the new kraut. This gives the new batch a boost with an active culture starter.

Tags: Food Event, Food Writing, Home Cooked, Portland DIY, Portland Food Event, Wild Food
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I've got the scoop! The Dovetail Bakery scoop! Dovetail Bakery owner Morgan Grundstein-Helvey has some fabulous news.

I've got the scoop! The Dovetail Bakery scoop! Dovetail Bakery owner Morgan Grundstein-Helvey has some fabulous news.

Dovetail Bakery about to spread its wings: New retail location!

December 05, 2009 in Portland Bread and Pas..., Portland Food Products, Uncategorized

I'm in the final edits stage of my book at the moment and in an effort to stay on the sunny side about the seemingly endless tedium it's been great in the past few weeks to add some exciting new ventures to the pages of Food Lover's Guide to Portland.

One that I'm very excited about is Dovetail Bakery's soon to open retail location on Northeast Alberta Street. For years Dovetail has vended at farmers market and delivered wholesale only, with no retail location.

These lovely vegan baker ladies have been working around the clock the past few months to make the retail bakery happen and if all goes well Dovetail Bakery plans to ring in the new year and open shop on January 1st, 2010. The new Dovetail Bakery location has indoor and outdoor seating and plenty of bike parking in front.

Grand opening Jan. 1st, 2010! Dovetail Bakery 3039 NE Alberta St. Portland, Oregon 503.288.8839 Hours: Tue.-Sun. 8am-8pm

Same great vegan sweet and savory pastries at new retail location.

Same great vegan sweet and savory pastries at new retail location.

New menu to include:

Cinnamon rolls Aunt Miriam's sticky buns Seasonally inspired sweet buns Daily selection of cookies Seasonally inspired loaf cakes Seasonally inspired muffins Sweet & savory tarts Seasonal fruit pies Changing selection of cakes & cupcakes Artisan breads Housemade coconut yogurt w/ Dovetail Bakery granola & fruit Daily soup (featuring farm direct produce) French press Courier CoffeeMagic Kombucha Special orders are always welcome!

*Everything baked fresh on site. *Loads of local ingredients. *New CSA/CSB program. Dovetail has partnered with local farm Wealth Underground Farm that will provide the CSA portion (veggies, fruits, beans, etc.) while Dovetail will provide the bread and pastries CBA portion. Contact Dovetail for more information.

The fabulous Dovetail Bakery ladies move shop to Northeast Alberta.

The fabulous Dovetail Bakery ladies move shop to Northeast Alberta.

Dovetail Bakery 3039 NE Alberta St. Portland, Oregon 503.288.8839 Hours: Tue.-Sun. 8am-8pm dovetailbakery.blogspot.com

Tags: Bread and pastries, Coffee, Portland Dessert
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