Eat Mobile does Forktown Tours – Friday version

You might think that after last Saturday, I would be satisfied with my food cart sampler. But, Forktown Tours was offering a tour on Friday and one on Saturday that would visit various participants of Eat Mobile at their regular place, and promised more food samples and more time to chat since we would be just enough people to fit in a shuttle bus (14 of us)… not the 250 VIP tickets or 3000 overall Eat Mobile eaters of Saturday, so definitely a bit more intimate atmosphere of cart sampling. Of course I am there. I think of it as a birthday present to myself.

I started off with the Friday tour, which took us from downtown to the Crystal Gardens pod, North Station, and then Mississippi Marketplace. As I was coming from work in Beaverton, I am embarrassed to say I was 10 minutes or so late to the tour. However, I caught up before our first samplings, and we didn’t board our shuttle bus until 40 minutes in, phew. We would end up visiting 9 carts, and since the sampling offerings were coming directly from the kitchen, and the fact they were not having to be as mass produced as Eat Mobile, meant that each bite I had was much better then even what I had last week if I had visited that cart at Eat Mobile. What I also really enjoyed was hearing the additional information about Portland and the formation of the food cart culture in Portland, the ease yet challenges of operating a food cart, information courtesy of our tour guide, and at each cart hearing how the food cart chefs were inspired to create their food offerings and start their entrepreneurship, and their future plans for their small business.

We started out with gathering downtown, and visiting The Dump Truck. At Eat Mobile I had tried the Bacon Cheeseburger dumpling, which was a little too greasy for me. He told us about his inspiration of doing dumplings from travelling within Beijing (home of the real Mr Ma), and that the Bacon Cheeseburger dumpling was a request to offer something akin to “pub food” – which is still a bit of a mystery to me because this would make good “late night” food, but they are only open during the day. This time, I had the choice of two, and I went with a “Mr. Ma’s Special” which was my favorite, which had a burst of pork and ginger with scallions, and a “Potato Curry” which essentially has a Malaysian yellow curry with potato inside the dumpling wrapper. I still like their icon of the dump truck with a dumpling.

Eat This! was the next stop- and the flatbread was much fresher then what I had at Eat Mobile. This came topped with spinach, roasted scallions, smoked chicken and bacon and an aioli- a great sandwich that you can pretend is healthy and filled with offerings better then most any other flatbread.

Next, we stopped at Emame’s Ethiopian, where we sampled both the lentil version on top of the injera which had a nice mild spice to it, and the much spicier chicken in berbere which is the Ethiopian national dish. This would be the favorite even by the end of the tour of several of the tour participants. The name Emame comes from what her son called her, aw. We got a great introduction to what is in Ethiopian cuisine as well thanks to our knowledgable guide, and got to see a representive of a food cart owner who is dishing home cooking

We then piled into the Ecoshuttle and were driven to Baowry. Here we had a chance to hear about how Ross built the cart from scratch, their attempt to handmake and struggle to get the dough for their bao to rise in the winter, and the possibility that the house next door to their cart might be something they could expand into so they can begin to offer many more ideas he has for Asian inspired dishes, a la Pok Pok. The sample here was missing the spicy kimchee I had liked at Eat Mobile, but the meat here with their steamed Chinese bun was more tender and moist, and came with the same little scoop of white ginger scallion rice but also a spicy noodle

We then walked to the Crystal Garden pod. Here we learned about cooperative cart communities of pods, about Portland’s DIY (do it yourself) and DIT (do it together) culture. We learned that Pizza Contadina’s starter dough for their sourdough pizza came from Alaska and supposedly has heritage that can be traced to the Gold Rush, and how he has mutual agreement to supply food with Leisure Public House so that you can enjoy the natural combination of pizza and beer (more DIT). I hadn’t sampled them at Eat Mobile- and we heard how during the festival how crazy it was for him as his oven kept going out so it was taking 3x as long to cool the pizza as normal so he didn’t feel like it was representative of his pizza at all. What I found outstanding was the hand cut huge pepporoni, and he makes his own hot sauce and the chipotle habanero was spicy and kickass.

We returned to the shuttle bus and headed next to the pod on North Killingsworth, at North Station for more food carts at another pod. This was also my first visit to this pod. Here, we visited two that I had appreciated being introduced to at Eat Mobile 2011, PDX 671 and The Rolling Stoves Gimme Sandwich.

I still have the baby spork that PDX 671 gave me that you can see in the picture. I’m going to save it in my scrapbook, dammit, because it’s awesome. Also great was the sampler here. It has a bit of several things they offer- the chamarro flatbread, the red rice flavored with achotte, the chopped grilled chicken I had loved at Eat Mobile, a fritter, the choice to add a Finadene sauce to infuse more flavor of soy sauce-lemon-chili-onion (added in the last pic). Everything he offers is great, you can’t go wrong here. Try Guamanian food!

Rolling Stoves Gimme Sandwich- I had loved her roast beef with horseradish mustard mayo au jus at the festival, but this time I got the extra bonus of trying her loaded potato salad with the genius topping of crunchy bacon, why doesn’t everyone do this… Maybe I had two samples of the meeat with mayo, I can’t wait to have the whole sandwich one day with the drippings and melted cheese and onions. I’ve never really understood why people would want a french dip sandwich until now, but now I see (look at how good even that little slice of beef looks). If I worked at the Adidas campus I would definitely be at this pod for lunch, I wish there was something like this around the Tektronix/Nike campus I work at.

Back into the Ecoshuttle, and then to Mississippi Marketplace at N Mississippi. This was my first visit to this pod anchored by Prost. Our focus here was Garden State, which just like last year and at the Eat Mobile, continues to plate food like they are a fine dining establishment instead of a food cart . It’s almost as if the shiny silver-ness of their cart makes up for the lack of silverware and tablecloth because hey, we’re doing casual New Jersey take on Sicilian food, so that equals a laid back attitude but with all the charm, care, and flavor that you might expect back in the old country. I had passed up this cart at Eat Mobile because their vittello tonnato sample has veal which tugged a bit at my animal rights heartstrings, but I gave in and had it anyway here- and it was guiltily good.

We took a nice walk, window shopping as we went on our stroll to Flavourspot. The highlight as we took in the neighborhood was encountering by chance, the “neighborhood goat” tied to a tree on the way. We had to cross the street. This goat was so sweet and I didn’t know goats came in a shade of cream with a tinge of pink.

I definitely got enough sweetness for dessert at Flavourspot as we heard the story of how he started this cart- a combination of misadventure, coincidence and luck, and drunken destiny. I had three desserts, Lemon Pie (lemon curd and whipped cream), Peanut Butter & Jelly, and S’more Waffle with Nutella and Mallow fluff, all types I had not tried before. I obviously finished off this tour quite satiated.


Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Lemon Pie Waffle Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Lemon Pie Waffle
Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Peanut Butter & Jelly Waffle with your choice of <strong>creamy or chunky peanut butter? grape jelly, organic strawberry or raspberry jamFlavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Peanut Butter & Jelly Waffle with your choice of <strong>creamy or chunky peanut butter? grape jelly, organic strawberry or raspberry jam
Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle. This is the Nutella and Mallow fluff (it's homemade egg based & gelatin-free Mallow fluff, or you can also substitute rice fluff)Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle. This is the Nutella and Mallow fluff (it's homemade egg based & gelatin-free Mallow fluff, or you can also substitute rice fluff)

I’m also going on the tour tommorrow night, but because it’s from 6-9pm I’m not sure the photos will come out. However, I’m excited to be shuttled to 10 carts on a progressive dinner.

The original photos in this post have been added to the end of my Eat Mobile 2011 album on picasa

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Eat Mobile 2011

Ridiculously full, I reflect back on tonight's dinner of samples (actually my only meal for today) at Eat Mobile 2011, a food cart festival benefiting Mercy Corp Northwest. You pay admission weeks beforehand to get tickets, and then once you are through the gate you are on your own to sample at any and every cart you wish (each cart decides what samples it wants to offer, most carts offer multiple kinds of samples). So Ready, Set, go EAT

From Eat Mobile 2011

Over the Top Wild Game Burgers offered an elk sloppy joe in mini me fashion… adorable to see, though the bread to meat ratio became too much carb and came oddly in little paper cups with gigantic skewers, which were no help to me in eating them at all.

Shut up and Eat offered open faced, thin sliced beef wtih caramalized onions served with a parmesan herb biscuit with a horseradish mashed potato cake on top- another one that looked great but was messy to eat

PDX 671 offered a little taste of Guam in this spicy interesting dish of Kelaguen Mannok with chopped grilled chicken (they also offered pickled papaya). Kettle Kitchen's rich and creamy mushroom gravy over gorgonzola biscuit brought my palatte back. I liked both of these a lot.

My favorite part of Leroy's Familiar Vittles was their pig mascot; the barbecue, at least mass produced like this, didn't stick in my memory. Nuevo Mexico's sadly did not offer sopapillas like last year- instead, they seemed to offer what would normally be inside of them?

Happy Grillmore offered a sample of one of their latest creations, a Chicken Salad Sammy with housemade garlic aioli, applewood smoked bacon and havarti on ciabatta bread, as well as the Larry, pastrami and herb roasted turkey with Tillamook pepperjack. Fon-due-it gave a small dip of cheese with bread, which was ok. I thought they really would have garned more excitement and a memorable impression with the people (who do love pork) if they had mentioned the chocolate covered bacon. After all, although the proceeds do go to Mercy Corps Northwest, what better customers to market and leverage word of mouth than those foodie enough to go to a Food Cart festival and wait in ridiculous lines (if you hadn't been in the first hour) just for a little sample? I've had and made a lot of cheese fondue, and the cheese sauce in this case didn't stand out to me.


    

Creme de la Creme offered escargot along wtih some bread to soak up the briny butter. I love escargot, but after already eating what you've seen so far, I had been hoping a bit that they would be offering their roasted beet salad with a little bit of their cucumber brie to offer something fresh instead of so heavy. Their escargot was good though, and thanks to being introduced to them at this festival, similar to last year's, I now have a desire to seek them out in the future. Thankfully, Oregon Ice Works was there to cleanse my palatte of the richness I had so far- and they had my vote for the People's Choice at Eat Mobile this year. I couldn't just have one sample- I had to go have Marionberry, and then Mango, and Strawberry… I tried their Philly Roast Pork also, but clearly Ice is their strength.

Yogio offered one of the components of their "Rock Paper Scissors Dish" dish- the Rock is bibimbap vegetables stuffed inside seasoned rice seared and wrapped in gochujang (Korean chili paste) and seaweed. These rice cakes were incredibly hard- maybe I got a terrible sample and they aren't supposed to be like a stale rice cake. Their Korean Frito pie fared better, created using fritos topped with cheddar, house pork, and chili lime sour cream.

A romantic look at the Rolling Stoves Gimme Sandwich sample… and an up close look at Flavourspot's waffle taco (a savory one- they also had sweet strawberry ones). Meanwhile EuroTrash's fried anchovy (an example of their Fishy Chips menu item) brought back memories of my childhood in Chicago with fried smelt. All of these were decent sample bites that also told you what the cart was all about. As a surprise to me, Pyro Pizza was focused more on giving out samples of their in-house sodas and the sarsaparilla was awesome- I already knew about their pizzas thanks to last year's Eat Mobile, but any trip to Cartopia will include a soda from them too in the future. All great sample bites.

808 Grinds offered shredded tender kalua pork and macaroni salad. I gave Ethiopian food a chance at Emame's Ethiopian cart, and gave a nod to hardworking parents of Vietnamese Banh Mi Sanwiches dutifully keeping their sample trays filled as their two sons occupied themselves playing at the back of the booth. The highlight of El Gallo Taqueria with their mini tacos were their great sauces- I was really hoping they would have their fry bread, but I can see how the tacos were easier to produce in large quantities (though not as memorable against all the other truck offerings). I also had the bacon cheeseburger dumpling from the Dump Truck, a food cart truck specializing in, well  dumplings. Brown Chicken Brown Cow offered steamed cheeseburger in meatball form – their last offering ever, as they are closing down and selling their carts.

Ooof… ok, trying to finish off most of the carts now, but getting full… I know I can't visit them all, so some which I've had before or who may be offering sample items I am not particularly interested in now will have to be passed up…  Wet Hot Beef had awesome temporary tattoo proclaiming "Wet Hot Beef" that I cannot wait to put on packaged with their Piedmontese roast beef au jus sandwich samples with juniper smoked cabbage, anise brined pork belly, and thyme aioli. The sandwich also came with a few of their homemade lavendar black pepper chips. Artigiano showcased their homemade pasta offering of handmade gnocchi with pork ragu of yukon gold tomatoes, san marzano tomatoes, and sweet brair farms pork.

Eat This had several offerings on their flatbread, varying from thick skin on house cured bacon with grilled asparagus and mustard garlic aioli, black angus brisket with caramelized onions and parmesan creamed spinach, the pork shoulder confit with apple and cranberry compote and homemade slaw, and the herb marinated chicken with sundried tomato gorgonzola brocolli sauce (which I somehow forgot to take a photo of). My favorite was the pork shoulder, thanks to the brightness from the apple cranberry compote. 

Lardo– and Koi Fusion – the pictures say it all. Actually, these next set of photos from the next few carts say a lot, so I'll let them speak for themselves, except that that arugula from Slice Brick Oven Pizza tasted so good after all I had eaten… and I like the option of with or without melted ice cream from Whiffies.


The Baowry– the only cart that with our VIP admission, had a line. Bao with soy curls (vegetarian). Bao with meat (pork of course). Actually, we thought the kimchee was the highlight, nice and spicy!

And… the best dressed ice cream man I have ever seen… handing out itty bitty cones for Fifty Licks, yaaayyy…

Thanks to the organizers this year who offered VIP admission so that for a higher price I could enjoy the carts without so many people- yes you're right I am willing to pay a premium price for that (although the 15 minute delay in letting everyone in the line was getting incredibly restless…). Also, there were a lot more garbage cans around so trash did not build up, unlike last year… and after all this food, there was plenty of beverage to be found, Thanks for Improving! Thanks to Vitamin Water and Smartwater for hydrating everyone- I appreciated the easy access to wash down food from their booth setup. Once general admission time came, the lines were too soon backing up to the wall opposite where the cart was parked- which just shows how high the demand is and the interest is, and the dilemna in that they really do need to find a bigger space.

Eat Mobile 2011
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Recently: Boke Bowl Experience #2, Spring Beer and Wine Fest

Boke Bowl, 2nd time (they were at Decarli this month). For this visit, I had everything- pork and chicken broth ramen with slow smoked pulled pork (you can see it to the right of the bowl) which is the usual meat for the ramen dish, but then additionally topped with pork belly, and then a slow poached egg and then finally buttermilk fried chicken.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

Just as before, insanely delicious, it does taste as incredible as it looks.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

To make sure you don’t fall asleep at your desk after that ramen bowl, give yourself a bit of sugar high with a Boke Bowl twinkie – this one is vanilla with miso butterscotch.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

I had originally thought I would be visiting the Spring Beer and Wine Festival and the Eat Mobile Festival one after the other today (Saturday), but as I thought more about it, I wanted to enjoy some of the cheese offerings at the Spring Beer and Wine Fest and bring back some bottles from Gouger Cellars, as I always like Gary’s taste as he mixes his wine like a wonderful scientist. His 903 blend was well rounded burst of boldness, and even more unique and amazing was his Mine Mine Mine which he added chocolate to. These went perfectly with the Brownies from Heaven chocolate treasures (which are monster size! Yet once you take a bite, they are the right size… how tricky) by his wife Bonnie… The combination of his wines and her chocolates are truly a perfect pair.

Brownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland Oregon

I got some great samples of cheese from Abbie and Oliver’s, where I had the difficult choice of picking my cheese plate of 6 choices from a wonderful offering at their booth. On the way to a table I also discovered Brazi Bites. I have always adored pao de queijo, but have not been able to find manioc starch which is the true base (I am forced to substitute tapioca flour). Now it looks like I’ll be able to buy them as guilty puffs of chewy snacks at retail locations.

Brazi Bites, Portland Oregon

I also discovered the amazing cheese of Mt Townsend Creamery, in the photo you can see their samples of Trufflestack (infused with black truffle) and a Off Kilter (washed with Pike Brewing Company’s Kilt Lifter Scotch Ale). I’ll definitely keep my eye out for more offerings from them when I browse for cheese.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

I need to prepare now though for one of my top 3 favorite events in Portland of the year, the Food Cart extravaganza that is Eat Mobile. Starting at 4:30 (I bought the pretasting tickets)  and for four hours, you can enjoy sampling from 40 various food carts. Proceeds from the event goes to Mercy Corps Northwest. So Excited.

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Pics from Yesterday: Bailey’s Taproom Germanfest, Cartopia for FourSquare Day

We started out with the Germanfest at Bailey’s Taproom. Our group of 7 were fortunate enough to get a great seat by the front so that we could watch Rob Widmer deliver the Widmer Alt in his red pickup truck thanks to our pre-sale tickets  that for a $10 more allowed us in 2 hours earlier in a more leisurely drinking environment since it was limited admission. Usually we have a small cheese plate with a little bread to help absorb the alcohol since we seem to insist each time at these festivals on trying every single beer. This time with 7 of us and because we wanted a German theme to the food given it was Bailey’s Taproom Germanfest, it got a little crazier.

As a plus though, I was introduced to Edelweiss Deli, which is where all the cut up cheeses, the Champion bread with its seedy goodness, and the hungarian, paprika, and pepper salami came from, as well as some European chocolate and gummy candy.

The cheese board you see is what I usually bring and fits the wedge for the table, but since I thought we might have more cheese then we could fit on the plate this time based on snack roll call the day before, I cut mine into cubes. In the left, largest compartment was a favorite of many, the havarti with caraway. To the right of that was a traditional German brick cheese- which tasted creamy but also had a bit of a smell that necessitated using a toothpick unless you wanted to smell it all day. In the smaller compartments, from left to right, was the butterkase, a smoked cheese, and then I cut up pieces of a Bees and Beans honey bar.

More pictures of various brews. My personal favorites were the Vertigo Zen Dunkelweizen with its touch of banana; Berlinerweiss in various combinations with the syrups they had ranging from raspberry and huckleberry to the mysterious woodruff (the raspberry accounts for the pink beer you see); the Cascade 10 Autumn Gose offered Cascade’s signature tartness but not too sour; the Oakshire Schwarz Black Wolf offered some roasty malt; and Rauchbier, at least the first time around- I liked the smokiness, but it was overwhelming on my second 6oz pour- but great with the salami. Others also liked the Heater Allen Hugo Bock and the Hopworks “What the Helles” Helles Bock. Thanks for the 19 beers Bailey’s!

We then went to Cartopia to help celebrate Four Square Day with a Swarm Party. Every checkin at Whiffies that night would garner a $1 donation to the Red Cross for Japan- and we got to eat some delicious cart food from Whiffies (fried pie, with here a filler of BBQ Beef Brisket with Mozzarella), Potato Champion  (fresh cut, twice fried, Belgian-style pomme frites, served in a paper cone. They are just as crispy as they look) and from Pyro Pizza (Italian style wood oven fired White Truffle pizza that has white truffle oil brushed on the dough and then is topped with romano cheese and a dash of black pepper. Next time, I’ll try to remember to ask to add as an additional topping basil or sundried tomatoes).

Whiffies fried pie with bbq beef brisket with mozzarella Pyro Pizza White Truffle Pizza

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Celebrating Bacon… the food spread

It started with a delivery of 2 pounds of bacon in my grocery order. Just a few weeks before on Reddit, there had been a post of someone's grandmother making an insane looking pie using bacon as the pie crust, which then was followed up with other posters noting that it was a recipe from Michael Smith (as covered in my previous post). Obviously, the universe was telling me to make bacon potato cheese tart, right? At the time, I froze the bacon, and found a date when I could have other bacon-loving guests appreciate the bacon with me.

Although the bacon tart was the point, it was also F's birthday, and it also gave me a chance to try a few other recipes. F is not a big soft cheese fan but I wanted to make ricotta, which is very easy (all it takes is milk and buttermilk, heating it up until the curds and whey form, and then scooping the curds using a sieve into a cheesecloth). As a vehicle for the ricotta at the little bacon party, I slow roasted some Roma tomatoes for 3 hours at 250 with a bit of olive oil and rosemary, and once it cooled stuffed them with the ricotta, a little bit of Spanish olive oil, and aged balsamic.

After that I made the bacon tart. I turned up the oven to 350, which is the temperature that would be needed for both the bacon tart and the stinging nettle balls- though the stinging nettles would be done last because it had the smallest cooking time, while the bacon tart would take 2.5 to 3 hours (I did 2.5). That's right, I had the oven going from 9 in the morning and barely finished when guests arrived around 4. But, while the tomatoes were roasting, I went to the Portland Farmers Market to get the stinging nettles so I'll cover that next.

After speaking with Kathryn I lowered my parboil time to only 2 minutes and she helped translate the recipe that originally called for 20 oz of frozen spinach into a pound of fresh nettles. After the quick parboil and scooping them up with a slotted spoon (I discovered later I do have tongs but they were in the very back of the drawer, go figure) and lots of patting dry, we removed the leaves from the stems, squeezed more liquid, and then chopped. In the end it does look a lot like spinach, but more interesting and a little twist on the taste which is more grassy and a tinge of herby bitterness. On the side was the spicy cream, with habanero onion garlic and a few other spices in greek yogurt

The rest of the recipe is the same as if you were using spinach rather then nettles- adding the 4 beaten eggs, cup of grated parmesan asiago cheese, 3/4 stick melted butter and 1 cup of Italian breadcrumbs and a 1/4 cup of panko- in retrospect maybe I should have used a bit more but reviews of the recipe commented on its dryness and recommended cuttting back on the breadcrumbs, so I did. Reviews also said it would take longer then 15 minutes to bake- which they were spot on, it was closer to 25-30 minutes.

The bacon potato cheese tart… the in progress photos. The last one is a bit of a cheat, because I had to pull them back out to put the parchment paper and a lid on top of each tart to keep the bacon from shrinking back where it met on top.

The bacon potato cheese tart… final product. The very first piece of tart I cut was a bit of a mess so I took it for myself, but it held together better when I cut the second tart because it had cooled more.

And the final spread. Add to the above

  • the 24 tacos (8 pastor, 8 tinga, and 8 vegan tinga) from Santeria, plus chips and guacamole
  • the dozen gorgonzola biscuits and dozen chocolate peanut butter cookies from Kettle Kitchen,
  • a cheese plate with crackers and bread (the most popular was Beecher's Smoked Flagship brought by a guest followed by Willamette Valley's Brindisi, Fraga Farm's chevre, Jacob's Creamery's cow milk version of a goat cheese that slips my mind…),
  • red seedless grapes,
  • Kettle chips, 
  • bacon pickles from Unbound Pickling, 
  • watermelon rinds from Sassafras Catering,
  • and the assorted donuts from Voodoo Donuts,

we barely had room to put our plates that we were eating onto the table. When we bought that table I was insistent that we get one that can fit 8 people, I guess that was not enough. I wasn't sure whether we were having 14 guests (we ended up with 8) since F was not all that clear to me on some of the replies he had extended and a few were maybes as guests of guests, but of course what kind of hostess doesn't have enough food? I don't want anyone to go home hungry- you have to waddle home you're so full. I think I get this from my mom's side of the family who also fills the table like that when we visit them in Thailand- which may be followed by digestion/naptime. This is only a slight variation from my dad's side, who totally overorders so we fill the whole table, but does so while dining out at a restaurant rather than eating at home, which I also like because there's no cleanup afterward.

 

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