I want to share what I've been cooking lately because in upcoming weeks we're planning to do some work on our kitchen (not a complete overhaul but drywall, paint and lighting are all in the mix) and that means I won't be able to cook as much at home. Don't feel sorry for me though because this is some of the tasty stuff I've been happily eating lately...
Thank You For Everything!
Maybe you read this blog every week, every once in awhile, or maybe this is your first time here. Regardless thank you for being here now, perhaps often, and thank you for caring about Portland food and food culture.
Ever since my book Food Lover's Guide to Portland came out -- about six months ago now -- I've been overwhelmed by all the personal and professional support you all have given me by reading my blog, coming to my book events, buying my book and helping to spread the word about this delicious city. I feel loved and want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for contributing in small, big and mysterious ways.
Right now I'm back to my gig as editor at Hawthorne Books, I'm working on various freelance and fiction projects AND I'm working on a big, beautiful, new book proposal. Yep, that's right. I can't tell you much more about it at the moment beyond that it's a very exciting collaboration, it's Portland-based and I can't wait to get out of proposal land and back into writing-a-book-land again. I'll be sure to keep you posted. I think you're going to like this one.
Due to this and other projects I'll be posting one-to-two blog posts a week rather than the always two a week in order to stay sane. As always, if you want a signed copy of my book you can get that from me or you can also buy from my favorite bookstore in the world. And if you own or work at a business that wants to carry my book please call 800.775.0817 and you'll get a sweet wholesale deal. Below is a list of some recent reviews that make me smile. Thanks for all of your support!
Latest coverage:
Pacific Northwest Cheese ProjectNeighborhood NotesJustOutMusic To My MouthBroadway BooksVassar Quarterly
Oregon Tilth's Urban Growth Bounty Classes
Spring will be here before you know it and Oregon Tilth has a great line up of spring Urban Growth Bounty classes in partnership with the City of Portland that center around organic food gardening techniques from February through April.
Registration just opened up so visit the Tilth website to enroll. Individual classes are $35, three for $90 or four for $120. Here's some info. about the February classes below from the press release. Also, keep in mind that registration is about to open for Oregon Tilth's March Comprehensive Organic Gardener Program. Dig in!
Visit the Oregon Tilth website for more information.
Plan your Garden Tilth Toolshed Series: Class 1 Wednesday February 2, 2011 6-8pm
Spring is right around the corner and what will you grow, how much should you plant and what varieties will perform best? Learn practical planning techniques for selecting seeds, optimizing space, increasing harvests, and rotating crops. Maximize your bounty by applying new spacesaving strategies in your home garden. Participants receive free seeds and a “Tilth Garden Planning Packet” full of useful planning tools and worksheets that can be used at home! Faubion School, 3039 NE Rosa Parks Way
Garden Fresh Greens Year Round Tilth Cornucopia Series: Class 1 Wednesday, February 9, 2011 6-8pm
With a little planning and added frost protection, it’s easy to grow a variety of fresh greens all year round. Join us for this fun class and learn how to grow your own salad and stir fry mixes, and discover new varieties of tasty hardy greens. Crop timing, season extension, organic pest and disease management and soil fertility will be covered. Attend this class and take home a salad mix to get greens growing in your own garden! Faubion School, 3039 NE Rosa Parks Way
Plan Your Garden Wednesday, February 16, 2011 6-8pm
Spring is right around the corner and what will you grow? How much will you plant and what varieties will perform best? Attend this class to learn practical planning techniques for selecting seeds, optimizing space, increasing harvests and rotating crops. Maximize your bounty by applying new space‐saving strategies at home. Participants receive free seeds and a “Tilth Garden Planning Packet” full of useful planning tools and worksheets for home! Luscher Farm in Lake Oswego, OR
Growing Tomatoes and other Summer Fruits from Seed Tilth Cornucopia Series: Class 2 Wednesday, February 23, 2011 6-8pm
Do you enjoy eating homegrown tomatoes, peppers and eggplant? Attend this class to learn practical techniques for indoor seed propagation so you can grow all your favorite summer fruits from seed to harvest. Pruning and vertical gardening for vining crops will be covered. You’ll also discover methods for extending your growing season to encourage an earlier and more productive harvest for your heat‐loving crops. Participants will take home newly sown tomatoes and peppers! Faubion School, 3039 NE Rosa Parks Way
Oregon Tilth www.tilth.org
Portland Italian Food Panel @ Elephants Delicatessen Tuesday Night
A few months back Jesse Locker of the Portland Bologna Sister City Association (PBSCA) asked me to be a part of PBSCA's January Know Bo event at Elephants Delicatessen. I was honored and now here it is mid-January and the event is tomorrow night.
I'll be hosting the Mangia, Mangia! panel for PBSCA's monthly Know Bo tomorrow night at Elephants on NW 22nd Ave. from 6-8pm. The event is free and open to the public. There will be minimal food/drink samples but plenty for purchase to eat/drink during from Elephants Delicatessen. I'm the event moderator so I'll strive to sound smarter than I am about Italian food while asking local experts about everything from red sauce to Italian ristretto style espresso.
Joining me on this Italian food folk panel will be folks featured in my book Food Lover's Guide to Portland -- Cathy Whims of Nostrana, Andrea Spella of Spella Caffe, Patricia DiPrima LeConche of DiPrima Dolci Bakery and Darryl Joannides of Cork: A Bottle Shop. I'm really looking forward to it. The more the merrier. Come on out and mangia, mangia with us.
Portland Bologna Sister City Association (PBSCA) January Know Bo Mangia, Mangia!: A food panel about Portland/Italian food hosted by me @ Elephants Delicatessen 115 NW 22nd Ave., Portland Tuesday, January 11th 6-8pm Free and open to the publicwww.elephantsdeli.comFacebook Mangia, Mangia! event page
Homemade Dim Sum
We had a home on the range, quiet Christmas this year. It was just my boyfriend and I so we decided to cook up two of our favorite things -- seafood and dim sum. For supplies we went to Uwajimaya in Beaverton. We filled the cart with shao mai ingredients, two Dungeness crabs (live when we chose them but killed and eviscerated before handed over the counter), a couple pounds of prawns, nice sake, Kirin Ichiban, and more.
On Christmas Eve for dinner we started with Dungeness in drawn butter mixed with a generous squeeze of lime. One of my favorite things in the world to eat. Then we set to making our traditional shao mai, skins and all, from the cookbook below. The next day we used the same techniques but changed the filling to mostly shrimp with lots of serrano, ginger and shitakes. Awesome.
I've had Mai Leung's book for years and finally got around to using it. I love potstickers and have pretty much used the same Florence Lin recipe, and variations of it of course, for years. I've finally taken a bite out of this book now and I'm looking forward to trying other recipes. I love Leung's stories peppered throughout. The illustrations are pretty great too. Here's what we made. Happy New Year!
Uwajimaya 10500 SW Beaverton-Hillsdale Hwy. Beaverton, Oregon 503.643.4512 www.uwajimaya.com
Hard Cider Pressing with Nat
In early December I got to help out a friend with the last cider press of the apple season. Our friend Nat West has been crafting his own cider and hard cider for a few years now from gleaned, traded and orchard picked local apples and this year was the biggest. He thinks his total apple haul this year clocks in at about 5,800 pounds, which translates to roughly 500 gallons of cider.
This year's apples included a mix of Newtown Pippins, Lady, Jonagold, Kingston Black, Yarlington Mill, Brown's Apple, Hereford Redstreak plus about 1,000 pounds of mixed varieties gleaned from various local spots. I helped out with the last of the Newtown Pippins -- about 250-300 pounds.
The agreement was (and is with a lot of Nat's friends) that in exchange for helping out for a shift of apple milling and pressing I'd get to take home a carboy of that day's cider. I thought that sounded great and I was really happy to get to work with and learn more about Nat's awesome set-up.
Basically, Nat mills his apples with a retrofitted garbage disposal and presses them with a hydraulic press in his garage. Apples are stored and rinsed in bins and buckets in the driveway and once the juice is pressed it's kept in 55-gallon drums in the basement during fermentation and then stored largely in kegs. Nat lets his cider go anywhere from six to eight months.
Nat doesn't sell his cider he just drinks it and trades with it. Really good stuff. Here are some photos...
Vij's Cookbook
My boyfriend and I went to Vij's Restaurant in Vancouver, B.C. for the first time several years ago and we've been dreaming of going back ever since. We remember just about everything we ate there that night including the wild boar curry and the lamb popsickles in fenugreek cream curry. Now we can do our best to recreate both at home thanks to Vij's cookbook.
We've been cooking our way through Vij's Elegant and Inspired Indian Cuisine the past several weeks (I hear that Vij's at Home is good too) cooking everything from ground beef curry and Vikram's mom's chicken curry to warm fennel salad and garam masala roasted almonds. Our house smells great and we feel so loved by this book and its recipes. If you're a fan of Indian food too I highly recommend it. (And if you need a last minute gift for someone who loves to cook, consider this book.) Here's some of what we've made so far...
Fiji Emporiumwww.fijiemporium.com 7814 North Interstate Ave. Portland, Oregon
Vij's Elegant and Inspired Indian Cuisinewww.vijs.ca
Yard Fresh Pt. 8
There's been a lot to report here on the blog lately so posts like this tend to get put on the back-burner. Even though I made most of these foods weeks-to-months ago I still hope you find something here to inspire you or at the very least just make you hungry. I promise that the next Yard Fresh installment won't be so delayed and will actually reflect the season. Happy eating!
One more thing, if you want to purchase signed copies of my book you can get them straight from the source with shipping included here.
DIY Galley Cooking (And not cooking...) On A Small Sailboat Pt. 3
This is my last installment for small boat cooking. Our sailing trip to the San Juan Islands late September/early October seems so far away now so it's nice to go through the photos again and share some of the food and drink ones with you. In my last post I left off at our arrival on Lopez Island. I'll keep it chronological and start at Lopez here.
Please let me know if you have any special boat foods you like to make -- either before the trip or while underway...
THREE for Tuesday!
I don't usually have multiple plans on a weekday night but next Tuesday , December 14th there are three fantastic food events that I'm not going to miss and all of them are free and open to the public. I don't know how I'm going to pack them all in but I will. Here's the scoop...
Tuesday, Tuesday, Tuesday!
Breakfast in Bridgetown Party 5:30-8pm @ Cafe Nell
My friend and fellow PDX writer Paul Gerald is throwing a killer breakfast-for-dinner launch party for the second edition of his Breakfast in Bridgetown book at Cafe Nell. There's no charge to attend but you do need to RSVP here.
Here are the details straight from the source:
* Cafe Nell is at the corner of NW 20th and Kearney, and they do have a parking lot. * “Breakfast for dinner” provided by Cafe Nell, including cups of hash, quartered Monte cristo sandwiches, house made pork sausages, Pumpkin breads, shrimp and grits, silver dollar pumpkin pancakes. Mmm! * Signed breakfast books for $16 each, or two for $30. * $2 from every sale will be donated to the Oregon Food Bank. * Full bar available with amazing cocktails * Short program around 6:30, with comments from the author, contributors Nick Zukin of ExtraMSG.com and Brett Burmeister of FoodCartsPortland.com, and perhaps a little snippet from Portland’s appearance in the PBS documentary Breakfast Special.
Friends of Family Farmers End of the Year Celebration and InFARMation 5:30-10pm @ Holocene
Come out and celebrate the end of the year with one of my favorite local organizations -- Friends of Family Farmers. One of the best part of the night is the silent auction that will benefit FOFF programs and initiatives. Here's the schedule followed by a list of some of the awesome items that will be on auction...
5:30 Door to Holocene Open – come early to order food, get drinks (food and drink is not paid for so bring your $) and socialize
6:15 Friends of Family Farmers – don’t miss this short presentation of our programs and successes over the last year, pretty impressive for such a small group if we say so ourselves.
6:30 Silent Auction Starts, Live Acoustic Music & MC
8:00 Silent Auction Ends, Live Auction Starts – some of the bigger auction items will be dealt with by our auctioneer
8:15/30 Greasy Chain String Band – dancing and celebrating! Winners get to cash out and take home their items!
This InFARMation (and Beer!) is 21+, so don’t forget your ID.
Some of the many amazing items on the silent auction list... * Pig Butchery Class Gift Certificate - Portland Meat Collective & Camas Davis * Private Breadmaking Class with Professional Baker from Nostrana – Giana Bernardini * Raw Honey-White Clover, Raspberry Blossom & Forest Wildflower- Mountain Meadow Honey Co. * Loaf of Rustic Bread per Month for One Year – Grand Central Bakery * Pizza Gift Certificate - Hot Lips Pizza * Fruit Trees from Local Sustainable Nursery – One Green World Nursery * Three Night Romantic Getaway in Yachats Cabin – Sue Tate & Dave Morgan * Widmer Party Pack (1/4 Barrell, Tap & Tub, Sleeve of Cups and Ice) – Widmer Brewing * Basket of Rogue goodies and Rogue Beer – Rogue Ales * Magnum of Bethel Heights Justice Vineyards 2007 Estate Pinot Noir - Bethel Heights Vineyard * Handcrafted Wood Cutting Board – The Joinery * One-Year Family Membership to OMSI * $75 Gift Certificate to to 50 Plates in the Pearl – Ginger Rapport of 50 Plates * $50 Gift Certificate for Feed Concentrates – Concentrates NW * Laptop Lunch Box – Mirador Community Store * $75 Gift Certificate to Meriwether’s Restaurant. Specializing in Farm to Table Meals * $50 Gift Certificate Higgins Restaurant & Bar. Cuisine rooted in our Northwest Soil * $20 Gift Certificate from the Urban Farm Store, a Family-Owned and Operated Local Business * Farmer Love Basket – A Collection of Goodies from Naomi’s Organic Farm Supply * 2 Tickets to to the September 24th Farm to Fork Farm Dinner at Kiyokawa Family Orchards * Holiday Wreath Lovingly Handcrafted with Local Greens by Kelly Ingram
Food Innovation Center's Time to Market Showcase 6-9pm @ the Food Innovation Center
I already wrote about this fantastic event in this week's Willamette Week so I'll just point you in their direction for the scoop.