Pineapple Bread Pudding Recipe

This pineapple bread pudding recipe is easy to put together. I brought it to a hot dog potluck party in which I prepared it the evening before, and then left the house to travel to Selah, Washington to judge the Saturday categories at the Tree Top Skewered Apple BBQ competition. Then, this bread pudding dish came out at 7:30pm. So I needed a dish that was going to keep! Also, I specifically picked this because I figured with all the meat going on, it would be nice to have something sweet. This dish also can be served warm, room temperature, or cold.

Pineapple Bread Pudding Recipe

I paired it with an Abacela Grenache whose peachy strawberry flavor was a compliment to my piece of pineapple bread pudding. This can probably serve 12, and I cut mine small once it cooled so once it opened everyone just could help themselves to a sample, which was 24 small “2-3 bite” sized squares.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups of white bread cut up, crusts removed. I cut them into about 1 inch sized cubes
  • 2 large cans of crushed pineapple (40 ounces all together)
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup of melted butter or margarine
  • 8 eggs
  • 1 teaspooon + to taste of cinnamon

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a 13×9 casserole dish.
  2. In a large bowl, beat the 8 eggs, 1 cup sugar and mix together. Also combine in the melted butter/margarine and pineapple and the 1 teaspoon of cinnamon to the contents in the bowl. If you’d like to add some more texture to your bread pudding, you might consider adding in nuts here. Other options to consider- some shredded coconut, or adding some heat via diced jalapenos! I didn’t do any of these as I know my friend isn’t a coconut fan, and I didn’t want to worry about nut allergies at the potluck, and I figured after bbq fellow eaters of this dish might want a break from strong flavors like spiciness.
    Eggs, sugar, butter, bread for Pineapple Bread Pudding recipe
  3. Fold in the cut bread pieces, and then pour the pineapple bread pudding into the greased baking dish. Sprinkle the top with cinnamon. If I had been clever, I could have had a few slices of pineapple to top, although that would have made it harder to slice it into the small pieces that I did for my purposes.
    Pineapple Bread Pudding recipe, folding in the bread Pineapple Bread Pudding Recipe- about to go into the oven
  4. Bake for one hour, uncovered. A toothpick inserted should come out clean. This pineapple bread pudding can be served warm, room temperature, or cold. If you are going to serve it warm, let it cool at least for 15 minutes first- you know the difference between burning hot and warm!
    Pineapple Bread Pudding Recipe - out of the oven

easy Pineapple Bread Pudding recipe easy Pineapple Bread Pudding recipe easy Pineapple Bread Pudding recipe

Signature

Counting Down to Feast Portland: Cookbook Social

This post is part of my series “Counting Down to Feast Portland” where I talk about events I plan to attend as part of this 4 day food and drink festival September 19-22, 2013. Disclosure: I was granted a Bloggers Pass for Feast Portland 2013, and asked to help promote Feast but they did not require that I write this post and I am not otherwise being compensated.

Update – After attending the event, you can see my recap here of Feast Day 2

The Feast Cookbook Social is a free event with a suggested donation of $5 at the door. This is an event that takes place as part of Feast Portland on Friday, Sept 20th 2:00pm – 4:00pm at the Heathman Hotel, Broadway and Symphony Rooms.

Another Feast Free Event! Well, practically free. Consider attending the Cookbook Social to squee with me (my Bloggers Pass doesn’t get me anything special here, so I’ll be right in line with you trying not to be an awkward foodie dork). Get autographs on cookbooks and chat with some amazingly knowledgeable big names and niche experts of various facets of food, as well as support the Feast worthwhile charity partners focused on fighting hunger: Share Our Strength and Partners for a Hunger-Free Oregon. There will also be light food and drink from Heathman Executive Chef Michael Stanton at the social in case you are feeling faint from being starstruck or need nourishment as you soak up the knowledge.

To give you a little bit of context, I pulled out a review quote for each of the authors/books and added them to the Lineup list I got from the Feast website. Hopefully, by sharing my homework with you, it will encourage you to check them out by giving you an introductory blurb about what their book covers, and the passion and expertise they are sharing with their book!

Description from the Feast website: Join your favorite cookbook authors, local and national, for this walk-around cookbook signing at the Heathman Hotel. Twenty writers will be waiting to chat with you at tables around the room, while Heathman Executive Chef Michael Stanton will provide light food and drink to refresh the conversation. Cookbook subjects range from sauces to the roots they’d dress, crackers to the school lunches they’d go in, and lox to the salt blocks it’s cured on (to name just a few). All cookbooks will be available for purchase to round out your collection! A suggested donation of $5 at the door, to be donated to Feast partner charities: Share Our Strength and Partners for a Hunger-Free Oregon.

The Lineup

  • Mark Bitterman, Salt Block Cooking:: 70 Recipes for Grilling, Chilling, Searing, and Serving on Himalayan Salt Blocks and Salted: A Manifesto on the World’s Most Essential Mineral, with Recipes
    • On Salted, the James Beard Award-winning book: “As the FDA considers lower salt standards for Americans, salt has never been a hotter chef’s ingredient. This is part cookbook (Roasted Peaches in Bourbon Syrup with Smoked Salt), part salt tract (positing “Five Rules of Strategic Salting),” part reference tome.” — Cooking Light, Favorite Cookbooks, 2010l
    • Check out Mark and salt here, in this video which shows only some of the 90 artisan salts The Meadow carries and you can see how he delights in teaching  how various salts impart a unique addition and open up food in a new and different way – they can be a game changer in a dish’s taste profile.
  • Karen Brooks, The Mighty Gastropolis: Portland: A Journey Through the Center of America’s Food Revolution
    • “Street food capital of the world, home of ethical eaters, dreamers in a strange food landscape, Portland is the crucible of new American cooking. If you’re curious about why we’re eating the way we do – and how we’ll be eating tomorrow – you need to read this book. Passionate, powerful and filled with recipes that make you very, very hungry, The Mighty Gastropolis is a celebration of America’s most interesting food city.” – Ruth Reichl
    • I also embedded a video from her TED talk in my previous post on the Feast Speaker Series
  • Lucy Burningham and Ellee Thalheimer, Hop in the Saddle: A Guide to Portland’s Craft Beer Scene, by Bike
    • “In a town bursting with bikes and beer, no one knows more about both scenes than writer Lucy Burningham. With her vast knowledge and experience surrounding the artisan bike culture and booming beer scene, Lucy has sipped, supped, and cycled her way around Portland for years, noting her favorite meals, beers, and bike paths along the way. Ride with Lucy and Ellee as they navigate you through the city’s best of the best in this guide to Portland’s food, drink, and cycle culture.” — Megan Flynn, editor/publisher, Beer West magazine
  • Kyra Bussanich, Sweet Cravings: 50 Seductive Desserts for a Gluten-Free Lifestyle
    • The first gluten-free baker to win the Food Network’s Cupcake Wars (and she’s won twice!) shares her indulgent recipes for cakes, muffins, scones, cookies, brownies, cobblers, buckles, tarts, and more. “When Kyra won her episode of Cupcake Wars, she amazed me with her baking technique and flawless execution. I am now convinced that prepared the right way, gluten-free baking can produce a most delectable result, and Kyra’s book is a perfect introduction.” — Florian Bellanger, founder, Mad Mac NYC, and judge, Food Network’s Cupcake Wars
    • Check out Kyra making one of her gluten free cupcakes in this video! Note that although the video shows the name Crave Bakery,  she renamed it to Kyra’s Bake Shop earlier this year.
  • Sasha Davies, The Cheesemaker’s Apprentice: An Insider’s Guide to the Art and Craft of Homemade Artisan Cheese, Taught by the Masters
    • from the book description: Pick up the fundamentals of cheese making, and then gain behind-the-scenes insight from 19 interviews with industry experts. All the basics you need to get started, 16 illustrated, step-by-step recipes for fresh cheese, washed curd, grana-style, blue cheese, and more—that will build your skills. Tricks of the trade from experts on mozzarella, Cheddar, Comté, Parmigiano Reggiano, Stilton, and more. Also tips on selecting, handling, storing, tasting, and pairing cheese
  • Ken Forkish, Flour, Water, Salt, Yeast: The Fundamentals of Artisan Bread and Pizza
    • “Owner of Ken’s Artisan Pizza and Ken’s Artisan Bakery in Portland, Ore., Forkish begins by telling of the trials and tribulations of opening up shop (people didn’t want to pay $2.50 for a cup of herbal tea). Divided into four sections (“The Principles of Artisan Bread,” “Basic Bread Recipes,” “Levain Bread Recipes,” and “Pizza Recipes”), with recipes broken down by breads made with store-bought yeast, breads made with long-fermented simple doughs, and doughs made with pre-ferments, the book presents recipes accessible to novices, while providing a different approach for making dough to experienced bakers. Plenty of step-by-step photographs, along with a chapter outlining “Great Details for Bread and Pizza,” make this slim work a rival to any bread-baking tome. A variety of pizza recipes, including sweet potato and pear pizza and golden beets and duck breast “prosciutto” pizza, (along with an Oregon hazelnut butter cookie recipe), end the title and inspire readers to put on the apron and get out the flour.” — Publishers Weekly
    • Check out Ken providing an introduction to this book in this video
  • John Holl, The American Craft Beer Cookbook: 155 Recipes from Your Favorite Brewpubs and Breweries
    • “Not every recipe in the book is made with beer, but they all taste great when paired with beer — and isn’t that the important part? The American Craft Beer Cookbook: 155 Recipes from Your Favorite Brewpubs and Breweries offers up instructions on how to cook everything from appetizers to desserts, including some stuff you’d expect — like pub-friendly foods and barbecue — to some you wouldn’t — like cupcakes and ice cream floats. But hey, it’s all beer-friendly, so it’s all good.” – uncrate.com
  • Martha Holmberg, Modern Sauces: More than 150 Recipes for Every Cook, Every Day
    • “Modern Sauces is my favorite book this year. It is destined to be a classic reference for the rest of my cooking life, on one of the most valuable but least understood facets of cooking: sauces. Martha Holmberg brings great intelligence and lucid writing and instructions to the important craft of sauces. She is both respectful of and illuminating about classic sauces, innovative in her thinking about contemporary sauces, and practical in terms of everyday cooking. This is a great book.” – Michael Ruhlman
    • Martha in this video prepares  pork tenderloin with orange-rosemary balsamic butter sauce
  • Makini Howell, Plum: Gratifying Vegan Dishes from Seattle’s Plum Bistro
    • “The vegan chef makes it look easy, with chapters on replacements for conventional staples (egg foam, anyone?), a helpful dissection of meat substitutes, and even a few mostly raw dishes for those in transition. Highlights: tostadas with spicy strawberry avocado relish, and balsamic tofu with white bean sauce and agave pumpkins. Most recipes are soy and/or gluten free and definitely aren’t all broccoli and turnips; expect recipes for sinful—yet morally sound—treats like tiramisu pancakes and tempeh vermouth.” — Seattle Metropolitan
    • Check out an overview of Plum Bistro with Makini in this video:
  • Ellen Jackson, The Chefs Collaborative Cookbook and The Grand Central Baking Book
    • With over 115 original recipes from over 115 of America’s best chefs, Ellen worked with the 115 of America’s Best chefs offering 115 recipes in The Chefs Collaborative Cookbook celebrates that revolution and translates the tenets of sustainable food production into actual recipes that most any home cook can prepare. Meanwhile, she worked with Piper Davis to author the Grand Central Baking Book which offers 85 recipes from the great Grand Central Bakery but scaled for the home baker.
  • Leslie Mackie, More from Macrina: New Favorites from Seattle’s Popular Neighborhood Bakery
    • “More than a follow-up to the original Macrina cookbook, this inspiring hardcover features recipes for the artisan loaves, rich brioches, and enticing pastries that have been added to the bakery shelves in the years since the first cookbook was published, as well as profiles of the people, providers, and philosophies that make Macrina so beloved in Seattle. There are also savories like breakfast hash and BLTs.” – The Seattle Times
  • Ivy Manning, Crackers & Dips: More than 50 Handmade Snacks
    • “Happy Hour – brunch, snacks and picnics – will never be the same. Ivy Manning has given us a new reason to head to the kitchen and a new treat to love: homemade crackers and great dips. Move over chips, there’s a new kid on the block!” — Dorie Greenspan, author of Around My French Table
    • Here’s a video clip of Ivy demonstrating making homemade crackers and spread
  • Domenica Marchetti, The Glorious Vegetables of Italy
    • “The Glorious Vegetables of Italy–glorious indeed! Domenica Marchetti reveals the last, great secret of the Italian kitchen: the abundance and staggering variety of vegetable dishes that Italians enjoy on a daily basis. What’s secret? The recipes are not from limited restaurant menus, but from la cucina, the home kitchen. Tha”s where the chickpea, eggplant, fennel and radicchio reign. Domenica, at home in the tradition, reveals all: lore, history, tips, and, best of all, a thousand thrilling tastes from the garden that is Italy.” – Frances Mayes, author of seven books on Italy, including Under the Tuscan Sun”
  • Diane Morgan, Roots: The Definitive Compendium with More than 225 Recipes
    • ” . . . that is what a cookbook should be: a guidebook, a resource.. The kind of thing you can go to again and again and again. Not because you loved one recipe, but because no matter how many times you read it, you’ll always learn something new. That is what I discovered in Roots: The Definitive Compendium with more than 225 Recipes . . . it hit all of my cookbook expectations. It’s a resource (and a good one at that), the photos are beautiful but the recipes aren’t over dominated by them, the story is personal, and in reading it, you get a lesson in food. For example, I had no idea that carrots are believed to have originated in Afghanistan.” – Anna Brones, Huffington Post
    • Check out Diane working in this video with celery root
  • Gabe Rucker, Le Pigeon: Cooking at the Dirty Bird (book would have been just released a few days earlier/Sept 17!)
    • “The stories are engaging, the recipes are complicated enough to be fun but not so tricky as to be unattainable, and the photography is well done but not fussy. It is the only cookbook I can think of that contains photos of dishes being prepared on an electric stove… The book also puts a healthy emphasis on drink pairings, with GM Andy Fortgang offering ‘Pigeon Pours’ for many recipes. ” – Paula Jones, Eater.com
    • Hm, celery root is apparently popular- here is Gabe making BBQ celery root with mâche and Dulce de Bourgogne in the Le Pigeon kitchen (same recipe I witnessed him demo at Bite of Oregon!)
  • Allen Salkin, signing postcards for forthcoming title
    • Allen Salkin is a hilarious guy. I’m not sure why they are being coy on the Feast website about the forthcoming title, which is From Scratch: Inside the Food Network. The book comes out in October, and promises to be a dramatic inside look of the inception of the Food Network and the various adventures of trying to mix the creative freedom inherent in those creating food and the hard line of the business of a network channel.
  • Andrea Slonecker, Pretzel Making at Home
    • “Here’s a new twist on an old favorite: pretzels warm from the oven. DIY bakers can make their own crunchy, chewy, savory, or sweet artisan pretzels with this collection of 50 recipes that imagines every way to shape, fill, and top them. Here are the traditional versions as well as novel creations such as Philly cheesesteak pretzel pockets and fried pretzel with cinnamon sugar. More substantial dishes like wild mushroom and chestnut pretzel stuffing, and pretzel bread pudding with caramel sauce elevate the humble pretzel to dinner-table fare as this tantalizing cookbook takes a cherished everyday snack to the next level of culinary creativity.” – book description
    • Check out Andrea making classic fresh soft German  pretzels here in this video:
  • Joe YonanEat Your Vegetables, Bold Recipes for the Single Cook
    • A collection of eclectic vegetarian and vegan recipes for singles as well as lone vegetarians in meat-eating households, so note the recipes are all meatless. “As more and more people embrace vegetable-heavy diets, the need for a primer on these wildly varying foods is great. … Recipes are designed to feed one but are easily doubled or can serve nicely as a side dish if desired. The greatly appealing dishes in this collection open up a whole new culinary world for veggie lovers.” – Publishers Weekly
    • Check out Joe doing one of the dishes from his cookbook, sweet potato soup with orange and smoky pecans
  • Michael Zusman and Nick Zukin, The Artisan Jewish Deli at Home (book would was just released on Sept 3!)
    • “Nick Zukin and Michael C. Zusman have written a cookbook that allows delicatessen enthusiasts to make their favorite deli dishes at home. Making your own knishes? No problem. Rustle up your own pickles? Bring it on. Michael and Nick manage to make deli food simultaneously contemporary and timeless, which is no easy feat. If reading The Artisan Jewish Deli at Home doesn’t make you hungry, you’ve never rhapsodized over a pastrami sandwich or driven a hundred miles for a transcendent plate of latkes. If my grandmother, the greatest Jewish deli–style cook I’ve ever known, were alive she’d be kvelling over this book.” – Ed Levine, founder of Seriouseats.com

I hope to see you at the Cookbook Social. Who are you looking forward to meeting?

Previously: I highlighted the Oregon Bounty Grand Tasting food festival scheduled for Sept 20 and 21 and also of my excitement for the Sandwich Invitational on Sept 19. I also described the Best Butcher and Fishmonger Face Off free event, and how I am so looking forward to my big splurge of the festival, High Comfort at the Nines, both are on Sept 21. I also highlighted a few interesting panels from the Speaker Series.

Disclosure: I was granted a Bloggers Pass for Feast Portland 2013, and asked to help promote Feast but they did not require that I write this post and I am not otherwise being compensated. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own, and I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences regardless of whether they were complimentary or not.

Signature

Acai Bowls from Choice Health Bar, Maui

I was in Maui last week, and on the recommendation from our waiter our first night (then also verified by the consistently pleased reviews on Yelp), we checked out a place called Choice Health Bar in Lahaina. We came back two more times because if their amazing acai bowls! I mean, just take a look at these beautiful bowls!

The big menu: they have it spread across 8 chalkboards (there’s another one listing the specials of the day by the register just out of the shot)

Choice’s Green Buzz Bowl: acai, banana, berries, spirulina, caramel, topped with banana, bee pollen, goji berries. The acai is extra thick and topped with granola and fresh local fruits.

Choice Health Food's Green Buzz Bowl: acai, banana, berries, spirulina, caramel, banana, bee pollen, goji berries in Lahaina, Maui Choice Health Food's Green Buzz Bowl: acai, banana, berries, spirulina, caramel, banana, bee pollen, goji berries in Lahaina, Maui

Visit #2 got the one I had my eye on (the Green Buzz was F’s favorite, this was mine): the Dessert Sunrise Bowl with acai, banana, strawberries, macadamia, cacao, honey, almond milk, and topped with bananas, strawberries, coconut, hemp seeds, and cacao nibs. Wow right?

Choice Health Food's Dessert Sunrise Bowl with acai, banana, strawberries, macadamia, cacao, honey, almond milk, and topped with bananas, strawberries, coconut, hemp seeds, and cacao nibs in Lahaina, Maui Choice Health Food's Dessert Sunrise Bowl with acai, banana, strawberries, macadamia, cacao, honey, almond milk, and topped with bananas, strawberries, coconut, hemp seeds, and cacao nibs in Lahaina, Maui

F also tried a “healthy plate lunch”, which included a plentiful kale salad, one of 3 soups, and the quinoa of the day along with a little fruit bar as a sweet treat to end with. One day the soup was smokey split pea soup, another time it was a cream of kale soup, or a choice of red bean chili. The quinoa I loved (that they topped with the thick creamy kale soup as part of their option of Vegan Soup and Grain) was a coconut garlic quinoa.

Other options included a raw PB&J with almond butter, fresh berries, coconut and honey on banana date bread, a papaya bowl that was half a papaya stuffed with granola, goji berries, bee pollen, and coconut… and an intriguing item (which they were out of unfortunately) of “raw vegan oyster shootersz”. The waiter who recommended this place had convinced us as we were chatting at dinner by raving about the time he had a “cheese” plate here where it wasn’t really dairy cheese but still seemed like he was eating a blue cheese and cheddar cheese.

And then there’s this video showing a wrap!

Clearly owners Chefs Emily Kunz & Kathryn Dahm are really bringing it, putting together amazing flavors using the fresh local offerings of Maui, all vegan and vegetarian but with a focus on celebrating bright flavors rather than the often blander, earthier food I usually associate with a health food store. Ok, I will admit there are crystals in here and there is a pretty large fantasy mural on the walls, but the bright light streaming through the big windows made it seem like a local cafe rather than a hippie joint. This was F’s favorite food all week in Maui. Since I am not vegetarian, I reserve that crown for some fresh seafood I had during the week, sorry.

Choice Health Bar's Plate Lunch with kale salad, soup, and quinoa in Lahaina, Maui

I would heartily recommend this for a healthy option for breakfast or lunch if you are staying on that West part of Maui!!

Choice Health Food's Dessert Sunrise Bowl with acai, banana, strawberries, macadamia, cacao, honey, almond milk, and topped with bananas, strawberries, coconut, hemp seeds, and cacao nibs in Lahaina, Maui

Signature

Counting Down to Feast Portland: Feast Speaker Series

This post is part of my series “Counting Down to Feast Portland” where I talk about events I plan to attend as part of this 4 day food and drink festival September 19-22, 2013 to raise money for the two Feast Portland charity partners focused on fighting hunger: Share Our Strength and Partners for a Hunger-Free Oregon. 

Previously: I highlighted the Oregon Bounty Grand Tasting food festival scheduled for Sept 20 and 21. and also spoke of my excitement for the Sandwich Invitational on Sept 19 and the splurge gift to myself, the luxe High Comfort at The Nines on Sept 21. I also highlighted a free Feast event, the Best Butcher Contest and Fishmonger Face off on Sept 21.

Not every event is about eating and drinking. We can also just talk about eating and drinking without the action itself, such as with the Feast Portland Speaker Series. Each of these is is a $10 ticketed event that takes place as part of Feast Portland on Friday Sept 20th and Saturday, Sept 21st at the Portland Art Museum: Marion L. Miller Gallery.

Each speaking session is scheduled throughout the day, with each session lasting 1.5 hours, and with quite a pedigree of Feast speakers lined up! Although it is great to eat and drink the deliciousness, I think it is also our responsibility to have an open mind so we can learn and actively support the ecosystem that provides us both nourishment and comfort/joy in the form of cuisine.

There are SIX Feast Speaker Series events on the calendar- if you looked as recently as a few weeks ago there were only 5, but they added another!

  • Friday, September 20th
    • Hunger Bites, Let’s End It / 9:00am-10:30am
    • Food Will Define the Future of Healthcare/ 11:00am-12:00pm
    • The American Experience Through Food / 1:00pm – 2:30pm
    • Transparency and GMOS: The More You Know, The Better / 3:00pm – 4:30pm
  • Saturday, September 21st
    • Beat the Devil: Create an Awesome Food Business without Selling Your Soul  / 10:00am – 11:30am
    • Portland Matters  / 2:00pm – 3:30pm

I cannot attend them all since I plan to work (you know, at my regular full time job) half the day on Friday I took the day off! There’s too much goodness I don’t want to miss a thing,  one conflicts with time I will attending the Cookbook Social I will be covering next week in a post. That leaves to my hopeful schedule these particular ones that I will be trying to attend.

Hunger Bites, Let’s End It Friday, Sept 20th 9:00am – 10:30am

The first of the Feast Speaker Series, and the motivation of fighting hunger is the dear cause of Feast Portland.

Description from the Feast website: In his first term, President Obama made the ambitious pledge to end childhood hunger in America. What would it take to end child hunger in Oregon – a state with one of the highest hunger rates in the nation – but who is at the forefront of the anti-hunger movement? Join anti-hunger leaders as they share their vision, highlighting the power and effectiveness of partnership, advocacy and funding, and discuss how we can make childhood hunger a thing of the past in Oregon, and across the nation.

The Lineup

The American Experience Through Food Friday, Sept 20th 1:00pm – 2:30pm

This one has a lot of interest to me because American food is both specifically regional based on available ingredients and the area’s food culture from the reality of its history and climate, and yet is also a melting pot no only of various areas of the US but of the world. Formal training, if a chef has it, often involves experiences overseas. I’m curious to hear the takes of this blend of food writers and chefs, east and south and west coasts have to say. Also, Hugh and Naomi!

Description from the Feast website: What the heck is American food? Is it Southern chefs celebrating local ingredients and family recipes honed over centuries? Is it one of the youngest chefs on Earth ever to receive three Michelin stars? Answer: It is all of these and more. Listen to renowned chefs from around the country who approach food from many different backgrounds, experiences, and influences—and find out what makes American food exhilarating.

The Lineup

Beat the Devil: Create an Awesome Food Business without Selling Your Soul Saturday, Sept 21st 10:00am – 11:30am

I’m interested in this talk to hear how a food entrepreneurs balance the line between running a business but also representing their viewpoints and passions in their products and services that is part of the differentiating experience for its customers.

Description from the Feast website: What makes a coffee shop more than a morning ritual stopover? What makes a grocery store more than a place to buy groceries? Food can be a business where passion and conviction can win over customer hearts, but the new players in the food business game are proving this doesn’t come at the cost of losing market share. Meet some of the most influential players in changing the way America eats.

The Lineup

Portland Matters Saturday, Sept 21st 2:00pm – 3:30pm

I want to hear about what direction Portland as a food city might be going in- and how we contribute to the definition of American food. The food scene in the US now is full of passion for artisan ingredients and sourcing locally and seasonally, but yet Portland still stands out to me as unique. I am curious to hear the Portland Food Scene 201 (101 was the original Portland TED Talk by Karen Brooks) by hearing more from Karen as well as from other distinguished panel speakers. You’ve seen that TED talk right? Surely you have- it’s only 10 minutes, yet succinctly explains the Portland perspective on food (The Three C’s- Craft, Connection, Community).

Description from the Feast website: Portland, Oregon: Food media crush of the moment, or a city with serious culinary cred? Eavesdrop on the experts and hear their side. From the talented chefs changing the conversations locally and nationally, to the booming multi-billion dollar beverage and artisan products industries, to an agricultural bounty and natural beauty rivaled by few places on Earth, to the homegrown heroes—from David Lett to James Beard—learn why the Portland story is far from over.

The Lineup

Are you going to listen to any of the speaker series events? Which ones are you interested in?

Disclosure: I was granted a Bloggers Pass for Feast Portland 2013, and asked to help promote Feast but they did not require that I write this post and I am not otherwise being compensated. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own, and I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences regardless of whether they were complimentary or not.

Signature

Elote Pasta Salad

I had some leftover light sour cream from making the Chilled Vegetable Pizza, and it happened to be about 1/3 cup. Immediately I was able to rationalize making a version of another Pinterest recipe I had pinned in the same board, Mexican Street Corn Pasta Salad from the blog Cinnamon, Spice and Everything Nice. Mmmm Elote Pasta Salad.

I am a huge fan of elote- I first had it when I lived in Chicago, from the New Maxwell Street Market which actually is not on Maxwell street anymore since being relocated (twice!), but still offers an international array of goods in an open market on summer Sundays that is a mix of flea market with Asian and Hispanic vendors and also Mexican street food fair.

Examples of Elote from my past… the first set of 4 are actually from the New Maxwell Street Market in Chicago, the next two from the farmers market at Pike Place Market in Seattle, and the last from Elote Cafe in Sedona. I wanted to combine the stronger bursts of flavor from those two market experiences with the less scary visual presentation of the last one.
5/18/2008 New Maxwell Street Market, where I saw a few people ordering this roasted corn. You could have it two ways- with the stuff rolled on the cob, or they could cut the corn from the cob and serve it to you in a cup. I chose the latter. You could choose which corn you wanted, lots of black or not so much... 5/18/2008 New Maxwell Street Market what the corn looks like rolled in the butter cheese and chile when still on the cob. 5/18/2008 New Maxwell Street, my roasted corn in a cup, topped with everything: mayo, cheese, parkay butter and chile, for $2 5/18/2008 New Maxwell Street Market, don't know why they were surprised I asked for the chili- what, I can't take it? I totally can, no sweat. It was the mayo and butter that I paused at but since that's how the other people in line had it, so did I.  Elote in progress at the Pike Place Market in Seattle in 2009 Elote at the Pike Place Market in Seattle in 2009 Sedona's Elote Cafe's Elote= Fire roasted corn with spicy mayo, lime and Cotija cheese

Elote is a popular street food in Mexico that consists of corn on the cob that is grilled and then slathered with mayonnaise, sour cream, Cotija cheese, lime juice, salt and spices, and sometimes liquid margarine. F rolls his eyes when he sees me making a beeline for this because of the ingredients, but the flavors are irresistible. You can eat this messily from the cob, or also ask them to cut the kernels into a cup to eat with a spoon for a little less messy face.

It’s hot and smoky from the grill, but creamy from the mayo sour cream mix, a bit of salt from the well salt and cheese, and has a brightness from the lime juice and maybe a bit of spice depending on the amount of chili. For my version I upgraded the call for chili powder or cayenne pepper with ground chipotle chili for more spice and smoke in the flavor profile. And, at least there is no liquid margarine. I adapted the recipe also because didn’t have corn on the cob, but I had some frozen corn kernels and took a cue from Esquites which is similar to elote but using pan roasted corn.

Elote Pasta Salad

Elote Pasta Salad - mixing pasta, pan roasted corn, cotija cheese and avocado Elote Pasta Salad - mixing pasta, pan roasted corn, cotija cheese and avocado

Ingredients:

  • 8 ounces pasta
  • 1/3 cup mayonnaise
  • 1/3 cup sour cream
  • 1 tablespoon chile powder or cayenne pepper, or 2 teaspoons of ground chipotle chili
  • The juice from one lime and the zest, or about 2 tablespoons and 2 teaspoons of lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 3 cups corn kernels
  • 1 diced avocado
  • 1 cup Cotija cheese, crumbled. You can also use Parmesan, Asiago, or Feta but may want to reduce the amount since the cheese flavor is more intense.

Directions:

  1. First, the pasta. Cook it the normal way in your favorite pot with boiling salted water.You can use any type of pasta you would like, but get one that has a lot of ridges that can hold the dressing- rotini, radiatore, fusilli, and I like little scoopy conchiglie shells or ditalini small tube too
  2. While the water is boiling/pasta cooking, create the elote dressing. Mix together the mayonnaise, sour cream, chili, lime until smooth. Once the pasta is al dente and rained, put one tablespoon of this dressing into the pasta and stir so all the pasta is coated and won’t stick to each other. Then I put the pasta, as well as the rest of the dressing, into the refrigerator to chill.
    Elote Pasta Salad - elote dressing with the  mayonnaise, sour cream, chili, lime Elote Pasta Salad - elote dressing with the  mayonnaise, sour cream, chili, lime
  3. Now, the corn. Heat the olive oil in large nonstick skillet over high heat. Once the oil is hot, add the corn. Cook 5 to 6 minutes without moving or until corn starts to char. Then toss corn, stir, and repeat to let the corn brown on both sides.
    Elote Pasta Salad - pan roasted corn kernels in process
  4. The easy part is now just bringing all these together. Add the pasta and corn together. Add the dressing a little at a time, mixing gently to coat as you go, until you achieve  your desired flavor mix. Gently toss in the avocado and cheese. If you’d like, top with a dusting of the chili powder and bit more of the crumbled Cotija cheese, and garnish upon serving with a lime wedge.
    Elote Pasta Salad - mixing pasta and corn in elote dressing, cheese and avocado are next Elote Pasta Salad - mixing pasta and corn cheese and avocado in elote dressing

You can make this without the pasta of course, but this made for a nice summer lunch dish for F and I.


Elote Pasta Salad recipe, vegetarian, summer recipe, easy recipe, pasta salad, picnic recipe, avocado, corn salad Elote Pasta Salad recipe, vegetarian, summer recipe, easy recipe, pasta salad, picnic recipe, avocado, corn salad

Signature