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Liz Crain

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  • Dumplings Equal Love
  • 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
Zenger Farms seed packets with all Burgerville kids' meals through May!

Zenger Farms seed packets with all Burgerville kids' meals through May!

Kids' Meals with Seeds -- Zenger Farm & Burgerville

May 07, 2012 in Uncategorized

There's a great promo. going on at all Burgerville locations throughout Oregon and Washington that you should know about if you have kids in your life. Local, sustainable fast food chain Burgerville is offering seed packets in its kids' meals. They've partnered up with urban farm education center Zenger Farm and this spring through May -- until supplies last -- when you purchase a Burgerville kids' meal you get a packet of seeds, an illustrated plant stake and a Zenger Farm activity bag. So go get some burgers and fries and plant some seeds!

Straight from the press release...

“It all starts with a seed. When kids plant, tend and harvest vegetables, they are more inclined to eat them. We see it over and over again at Zenger Farm,” said Jill Kuehler, Executive Director of Zenger Farm. “We are proud to partner with Burgerville to encourage families to plant a garden this spring and cook with what they grow.”

About Zenger Farm

Founded in 1999, Zenger Farm is a working urban farm that models, promotes and educates about sustainable food systems, environmental stewardship, community development and access to good food for all. It now consists of 9.7 acres of farmland and wetland in outer southeast Portland. Learn more at zengerfarm.org or call (503) 282-4245.

About Burgerville

Burgerville is a restaurant company with 38 locations throughout Oregon and Southwest Washington, serving guests fresh, great tasting food from the mission “serve with love.” Burgerville’s values extend beyond locally grown berries, all-natural Country Natural Beef, Walla Walla onions and cage-free eggs. At Burgerville, the commitment to fresh, local and sustainable values is about helping people and communities thrive. The innovative company, established in 1961, is redefining industry norms by providing affordable health care for hourly employees and their dependents, purchasing wind power equal to their electricity use, converting used trans-fat free cooking oil to biodiesel and implementing comprehensive resource stewardship and recycling. For more information about Burgerville, please visit burgerville.com

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Congratulations lucky number 6 commenter! Email me so we can set aside two tickets for you at will call!

Congratulations lucky number 6 commenter! Email me so we can set aside two tickets for you at will call!

Winner of Taste of the Nation Portland 2012 Tickets!

April 30, 2012 in Portland Chefs, Portland Food Fundraiser, Portland Food/Drink Event, Portland Restaurants, Portland Seafood, Portland Wine, Specialty Foods, Taste of the Nation, Uncategorized

You know who you are lucky #6 commenter! You've won yourself two tickets to this year's Taste of the Nation next Tuesday, May 9th at Jeld-Wen Field. Drop me a line @ info at lizcrain dot com with your full name and contact info. and I'll pass that along to the organizers who are donating the tickets. Your two general admission tickets will be available the night of the event at will call. (Don't worry if it takes me a few days to respond -- I'm out of town for work and will be back mid-week.)

Thanks everyone for all of your tasty comments! I hope that some of these businesses come to fruition. If you build it they will come!

For those of you who didn't win tickets there are still tickets available for this year's 25th anniversary Taste of the Nation. It's one of the best food events in town and I highly recommend it. In addition to it being delicious and super fun 100% of proceeds go toward ending local child hunger. Gotta feel good about that.

Thanks everyone!

Share Our Strength's Taste of the Nation Tuesday, May 8th, 2012 6:30-9pm Jeld-Wen Field 1844 SW Morrison St. Portland, OR 97205 Tickets $85 and up (order by phone 877.26TASTE, online or at any New Seasons Market) www.strength.org/portland

Tags: Food Event, Portland Chefs, Portland Food Event, Portland Wine, Taste of the Nation
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Biwa kicked ass as usual with their braised pork lettuce wraps with pickled veggies.

Biwa kicked ass at last year's 2011 Portland Taste of the Nation as usual with their braised pork lettuce wraps with pickled veggies.

Taste of the Nation Portland 2012 -- Ticket Giveaway!

April 23, 2012 in Biwa, Portland Chefs, Portland Food Fundraiser, Portland Food/Drink Event, Portland Restaurants, Portland Wine, Taste of the Nation, Uncategorized

Share Our Strength's annual Taste of the Nation on Tuesday, May 8th at Jeld-Wen Field is just two weeks and a day away and it's the 25th anniversary of this fantastic event. In the interest of shouting it out loud and clear and getting as many people to come out for it and support it as possible I'm giving away a pair of tickets here on my blog.

I love this event because 100% of ticket sales go toward working to end child hunger via Oregon Food Bank, Klamath-Lake Counties Food Bank, St. Vincent de Paul Food Recovery Program and Partners for a Hunger-Free Oregon. Read about last year's Taste of the Nation here.

This year's TOTN will showcase food and drink from 50 restaurants, 25 wineries and 5 breweries -- these folks. The list is growing daily.

So it's a VERY worthwhile cause that I highly recommend buying tickets for. You can also try your luck for a pair of general admission tickets here on my blog. I've got a number in mind and I've written it down and taken a photo of it as proof. That numbered person to comment takes the cake. You get me your name and contact info. and there will be a pair of tickets waiting for you at this year's Taste of the Nation will call the night of May 8th. Please help me to spread the word about this ticket giveaway and Taste of the Nation on Twitter, Facebook etc. I'm foodloverPDX on Twitter.

So what to comment about? Let me know what sort of food/drink business you'd love to see launch in Portland. It could be a food or drink product, a market, a non-profit, coffeeshop, brewery. It could be something that already exists and you'd like to see replicated in another neighborhood or it could be a business you've just always wished existed here that you've never seen. Leave a comment and let me know -- just because I'm curious.

I'll announce the lucky winner early next week!

Share Our Strength's Taste of the Nation Tuesday, May 8th, 2012 6:30-9pm Jeld-Wen Field 1844 SW Morrison St. Portland, OR 97205 Tickets $85 and up (order by phone 877.26TASTE, online or at any New Seasons Market) www.strength.org/portland

Tags: Portland Chefs, Portland Food Event, Taste of the Nation
18 Comments
We had good friends over for this one -- Vij's lamb curry. It was really tasty and we will definitely be making it again.

We had good friends over for this one -- Vij's lamb curry. It was really tasty and we will definitely be making it again.

Vij's Cookbook Pt. 2

April 16, 2012 in Cookbooks, Homemade Food, Indian Food, Portland DIY, Uncategorized

I first wrote about Vij's cookbook -- Vij's Elegant and Inspired Indian Cuisine -- here in late December. At that point I'd cooked a few tasty dishes from it (love their Vancouver, B.C. restaurant so much) and just about licked the plate clean with every one. Since then I've cooked some more from it and I'm sharing some of that here with you.

I don't often cook so much from any one cookbook in such a short amount of time but this one never lets you down and I've learned so much. I also happen to love Indian cuisine and haven't found too much of it in Portland to be honest that hits the spot. (Although I'm really looking forward to checking out the newly opened Bollywood Theater.) If you love Indian food as much as I do I recommend checking out this book.

We served the Vij lamb curry with this quick cabbage curry with mustard seeds that still had a lot of crunch and flavor to it and was really tasty.

We served the Vij lamb curry with this quick cabbage curry with mustard seeds that still had a lot of crunch and flavor to it and was really tasty.

I went ahead and bought a twenty pound sack of basmati from Fiji Emporium on North Interstate Ave. since I cooked a lot of Indian food over the winter and early spring.

I went ahead and bought a twenty pound sack of basmati from Fiji Emporium on North Interstate Ave. since I cooked a lot of Indian food over the winter and early spring.

I've been bulking up on my Indian spices as well...

I've been bulking up on my Indian spices as well...

This simple vegetable curry was really tasty with raita and black chickpea curry.

This simple vegetable curry was really tasty with raita and black chickpea curry.

We make a lot of the Vij chai now too. It's a simple one with green cardamom and fennel.

We make a lot of the Vij chai now too. It's a simple one with green cardamom and fennel.

Vij's Cookbook Pt. 1

Vij's Elegant and Inspired Indian Cuisinewww.vijs.ca

Tags: Food Writing, Home Cooked, Indian Cooking, Portland DIY, Vij's Cookbook, Vij's Elegant and Inspired Indian Cuisine
2 Comments
Loved the art on the bag and the sandwich inside it. Simple ham sammy with seeded wheat hit the spot.

Loved the art on the bag and the sandwich inside it. Simple ham sammy with seeded wheat hit the spot.

Yard Fresh Pt. 21

April 09, 2012 in Homemade Food, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening, Uncategorized

Things are starting to get going in the garden -- right now I have tah-tsai (which I thought was a new green for me but it's actually another way to say tatsoi -- funny), flashy trout's back lettuce and borage are all sprouting and we've been eating some volunteer arugula as well. The rhubarb is getting very big and leafy and the snap peas have finally sprouted! The garlic is looking great although it still has a few months of growing -- I usually pick it in June or July. And I have all the vegetable seeds I'm going to plant this spring and summer and will probably start my indoor seed trays in a week or so to be transplanted out in several weeks.

That's all just a long-winded way of saying happy spring! Although not very much of the food photographed in this post came from the garden I still call it Yard Fresh as a catch-all for good things that I've been cooking and eating lately. Hope you are doing well. Growing anything interesting this season? Eat anything tasty lately?

The only thing really going in the yard right now that's ready to eat is the arugula that volunteered so we've been having a lot of salads with it and throwing it in scrambles and sandwiches.

The only thing really going in the yard right now that's ready to eat is the arugula that volunteered so we've been having a lot of salads with it and throwing it in scrambles and sandwiches.

The only thing really going in the yard right now that's ready to eat is the arugula that volunteered so we've been having a lot of salads with it and throwing it in scrambles and sandwiches.

The only thing really going in the yard right now that's ready to eat is the arugula that volunteered so we've been having a lot of salads with it and throwing it in scrambles and sandwiches.

I love Edelweiss Sausage & Delicatessen and their oregano-coated Nuremberger is one of my favorites. I sauteed it and served it with potatoes and kale with lemon butter. Really good.

I love Edelweiss Sausage & Delicatessen and their oregano-coated Nuremberger is one of my favorites. I sauteed it and served it with potatoes and kale with lemon butter. Really good.

And I can't make a trip to Edelweiss without getting some of their paprika loaf thinly sliced. If you haven't had it then please do yourself a favor and go buy some. You won't be disappointed.

And I can't make a trip to Edelweiss without getting some of their paprika loaf thinly sliced. If you haven't had it then please do yourself a favor and go buy some. You won't be disappointed.

My favorite way to eat it is stacked on lightly toasted bread with mayonnaise and sometimes slivered onion. That's it -- keep it simple.

My favorite way to eat it is stacked on lightly toasted bread with mayonnaise and sometimes slivered onion. That's it -- keep it simple.

Simple broiled cheese bread with egg. Mixed mozzarella, onion and mayonnaise for the cheese sauce.

Simple broiled cheese bread with egg. Mixed mozzarella, onion and mayonnaise for the cheese sauce.

Another tasty, savory breakfast -- this time with leftover spaghetti in red sauce.

Another tasty, savory breakfast -- this time with leftover spaghetti in red sauce.

Tags: Home Cooked, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening
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John and Tyler recipe testing the chicken with jamon and manchego for the Toro Bravo Cookbook, due out fall 2013 from McSweeney's.

John and Tyler recipe testing the chicken with jamon and manchego for the Toro Bravo Cookbook, due out fall 2013 from McSweeney's.

For Your Viewing Pleasure Pt. 2

April 02, 2012 in Book News, Homemade Food, John Gorham, McSweeney's, Portland Restaurants, Toro Bravo, Toro Bravo Cookbook, Uncategorized

Every once in awhile I get too busy work-wise to put together a blog post so I throw up a photo and call it a day. We've been busy working on the Toro Bravo Cookbook so that means a lot of recipe testing and essay writing. I love it all -- having so much fun with this project. I'm also doing all my other usual work and then some -- all of it involving words, food, or words + food. Good stuff. I hope that you're doing well and enjoying spring. Happy late April Fools' Day! Hope someone got you good this year. I fooled a few...

www.torobravopdx.com

For Your Viewing Pleasure Pt. 1

Tags: Home Cooked, Portland Chefs, Toro Bravo, Toro Bravo Cookbook
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I decided to cook up this blackened bluefish recipe in the second issue of Lucky Peach...

I decided to cook up this blackened bluefish recipe in the second issue of Lucky Peach...

Cooking from Lucky Peach

March 26, 2012 in Homemade Food, Lucky Peach, McSweeney's, Portland DIY, Portland Seafood, Uncategorized

I've been pretty loud and clear about my love of Lucky Peach magazine published by McSweeney's. I wrote about it here in late November but at that point I had yet to cook from it. (We also hadn't sealed the deal for the Toro Bravo Cookbook with McSweeney's, fall 2013, at that point...) Now that I've cooked from it -- and now that issue number three has hit the shelves -- I'm putting photos of a couple of the things I've made here. That's it. Oh, and go get yourself a copy if you don't have it already. It really just keeps getting better and better.

I got the fixings together -- homemade miso mayo made with my year-plus old homemade miso, pickles, spicy chips and thinly sliced iceberg.

I got the fixings together -- homemade miso mayo made with my year-plus old homemade miso, pickles, spicy chips and thinly sliced iceberg.

I blackened dover because that was what looked best at the market...

I blackened dover because that was what looked best at the market...

And then I put it all together in between buttered and broiled ciabatta. So fucking delicious. Cook this!

And then I put it all together in between buttered and broiled ciabatta. So fucking delicious. Cook this!

I made a custardy breakfast sandwich with the leftover blackening spices, miso mayo, iceberg and some cheddar on ciabatta.

I made a custardy breakfast sandwich with the leftover blackening spices, miso mayo, iceberg and some cheddar on ciabatta.

The third and latest issue of Lucky Peach, on shelves now, has this story by Rachel Khong...

The third and latest issue of Lucky Peach, on shelves now, has this story by Rachel Khong...

Including a recipe for this Two Minute Chocolate Mug Cake that I've made a couple times now. It's not so pretty but it is fun, quick and tasty.

Including a recipe for this Two Minute Chocolate Mug Cake that I've made a couple times now. It's not so pretty but it is fun, quick and tasty.

LUCKY PEACHSubscribe!

Tags: Food Writing, Home Cooked, Lucky Peach, McSweeney's, McSweeney's Books
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I've had this Nigel Slater's cookbook Tender for about a year now and I'm really looking forward to cooking more from it this summer.

I've had this Nigel Slater's cookbook Tender for about a year now and I'm really looking forward to cooking more from it this summer.

Tender by Nigel Slater

March 19, 2012 in Cookbooks, Portland Gardening, Portland Yard, Uncategorized
A peek inside...

A peek inside...

When I first started writing about food professionally in 2003 I turned to Nigel Slater and his writing in The Observer and I loved his voice. A lot of food writing can wax poetic and favor form over the content but Nigel Slater's writing never does. It's honest and I've really enjoyed reading him over the years. If you haven't read his memoir Toast I recommend it. It's a wonderful book and I had fun reviewing it for Culinate way back when. (While putting this post together I learned that a film based on it starring Freddie Highmore and Helena Bonham Carter aired this past Christmas on BBC1 and at the Berlin, Taipei and Warsaw Film Festivals. Can't wait to see it!)

I purchased one of Nigel Slater's newest cookbooks -- Tender -- pretty soon after it hit shelves last spring in America and I've enjoyed cooking from it ever since. (It was published in two volumes in the UK in 2009; in the US by Ten Speed Press in 2011, the second US volume Ripe comes out this April.) The book is part recipe and part narrative -- giving you background into Slater's London home garden that he broke ground for in early 2000 and maintains with his partner.

Chapters are based on ingredients sourced from Slater's garden and cooked in his kitchen so it's homespun and inspiring and feeds right into my Yard Fresh ways. I love this book and I hope that you will too. Here are some of the tasty foods that I've cooked from it lately...

Thinly sliced roasted potatoes with butter and thyme.

Thinly sliced roasted potatoes with butter and thyme.

Beer braised beef stew with homemade applesauce and roasted potatoes.

Beer braised beef stew with homemade applesauce and roasted potatoes.

Stew and potato leftovers with one over-easy for breakfast.

Stew and potato leftovers with one over-easy for breakfast.

This cauliflour cheese mustard soup is so good that I got a few friends to make it in the same week. Really.

This cauliflour cheese mustard soup is so good that I got a few friends to make it in the same week. Really.

Cabbage sausage soup with a few other bites on the side.

Cabbage sausage soup with a few other bites on the side.

Tender: A Cook and His Vegetable Patch by Nigel Slater pub. date April, 2011 620 pages $40, Ten Speed Press www.nigelslater.com

Tags: Cookbook, Food Writing, Home Cooked, Nigel Slater, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening, Tender, Tender by Nigel Slater
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Because Gruner was out of their's the last time I went I decided to try my hand at deviled pickled beet eggs. They turned out great.

Because Gruner was out of their's the last time I went I decided to try my hand at deviled pickled beet eggs. They turned out great.

Yard Fresh Pt. 20

March 12, 2012 in Edible Gardening, Homemade Food, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening, Uncategorized

I planted my peas over the weekend even though I usually wait until early April. It's been so warm that I thought I'd give it a shot. While planting them I noticed that the nettles are all coming up around the front porch along with the rhubarb and all the tiny oregano, peppermint, sorrel and lemon balm.

I bought a bale of straw last weekend at Urban Farm Store and weeded a few areas in the front and then covered them with it. Next weekend I'll do the same in the back and plant some borage and arugula. I'm so happy that spring is on its way. I'm really looking forward to gardening this summer especially now that we cut down the old apple tree in the backyard. It's bittersweet because we really loved that tree but it was old, hollowed out and threatening to do some structural damage. We'll also get a lot more backyard sun light now that it's gone.

Hope you've been getting outside more now that it's been so nice. Here are a few of the tasty things we've been cooking and eating lately...

Dungeness scramble with butter, Meyer lemon and yellow onion.

Dungeness scramble with butter, Meyer lemon and yellow onion.

Roasted chicken and brussels sprout sandwich on sourdough.

Roasted chicken and brussels sprout sandwich on sourdough.

Big and buttery Grand Central Bakery peanut butter cookies.

Big and buttery Grand Central Bakery peanut butter cookies.

Breakfast in bed with those PB cookies, tangerine and coffee and orange juice.

Breakfast in bed with those PB cookies, tangerine and coffee and orange juice.

Leftover beans and rice from the excellent Mi Mero Mole with Costa Rican Lizano. Gallo Pinto!

Leftover beans and rice from the excellent Mi Mero Mole with Costa Rican Lizano. Gallo Pinto!

Yard Fresh Pt. 19Yard Fresh Pt. 18Yard Fresh Pt. 17Yard Fresh Pt. 16Yard Fresh Pt. 15Yard Fresh Pt. 14Yard Fresh Pt. 13Yard Fresh Pt. 12Yard Fresh Pt. 11Yard Fresh Pt. 10Yard Fresh Pt. 9Yard Fresh Pt. 8Yard Fresh Pt. 7Yard Fresh Pt. 6Yard Fresh Pt. 5Yard Fresh Pt. 4Yard Fresh Pt. 3Yard Fresh Pt. 2Yard Fresh Pt. 1

Tags: Home Cooked, Portland DIY, Portland Gardening
2 Comments
Ethan Powell and Tobias Hogan are at it again -- their new Cajun/Creole restaurant The Parish is set to open this summer in The Pearl.

Ethan Powell and Tobias Hogan are at it again -- their new Cajun/Creole restaurant The Parish is set to open this summer in The Pearl.

The Parish: Q&A with Tobias Hogan and Ethan Powell

March 05, 2012 in Portland Chefs, Portland Restaurants, Portland Seafood, Uncategorized

If you haven't heard already these two fine looking fellows -- co-owners of EaT Oyster Bar on North Williams -- are set to open another Cajun/Creole restaurant in the Pearl this summer called The Parish in the space that used to house In Good Taste. According to a recent press release:

"The menu at The Parish blends urban New Orleans cuisine with the country-style Cajun cooking. Focusing on locally sourced ingredients, the menu will reach beyond seafood and oysters to local wild game birds, rabbit, and even a whole pig. The co-owners have strong ties to the oyster farmers in Oregon, CA and Washington and will continue to offer fresh raw oysters year-round with a shucking bar and a new retail oyster program. A section of the menu will include classic southern dishes that won’t change such as BBQ shrimp, Seafood gumbo, Shrimp Étouffée, and an assortment of po’boy sandwiches."

Here's what Tobias had to say to me recently about The Parish, which is set to open this summer...

Why the Pearl?

We like it because of it's central location for the Metro area. We'll have close proximity to the central business district providing access to business luncheons as well as after work meet-ups. We're also excited about the opportunity to expose our concept to people who live on the west side of the city and the suburbs to the west who don't generally head to the east side of the city.

So you'll be selling oysters wholesale and retail?

We will have an oyster wholesale center to service downtown restaurant customers as well as a retail oyster basin up front to sell directly to the public.

What are a couple menu items that you're really excited about?

Our Duck Confit Gumbo (served with a crispy Confit Leg on top) is really good, we're also going to be doing some great hot apps and oysters off the grill that will be visible up front by the oyster bar.

Can you give me some details about the space?

It will have a large visible oyster bar with other fresh seafood available. There will be some nice booth seating and a nice big bar where we'll have local wines on tap by the glass, several local beers on tap and serving some great cocktails from the pre-prohibition influence that Portland has become famous for. To reference this tradition we're referring to the bar as Bar Vieux Carre or "The Old Quarter" or a common name for the French Quarter in NOLA. It's also a Tennessee Williams play set in NOLA.

Will there be live music at The Parish?

We're planning on having a classic Jazz Brunch on Saturday and Sundays maybe music will happen other nights, but we don't have plans for that quite yet.

Number one thing that you're looking forward to with the new restaurant?

Getting open and presenting the space to our city as a showcase Creole restaurant and oyster bar. We've been strong proponents of oysters for many years with EaT and before. We're very excited to update the concept of an oyster bar using our Farm connections to showcase the best oysters from the NW and beyond. The Parish (and Vieux Carre Bar) opening summer 2012 231 NW 11th Street, Portland, Oregon

Tags: Portland Cajun, Portland Chefs, Portland Creole, Portland Oysters, Portland Restaurants, Portland Seafood
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