Coming this weekend: Michael Smith’s Potato Bacon Cheddar Tart and more…

On Friday, after I get home from work, I will be excited to do some early-birthday-party-for-F/bacon hangout prep. I plan to make fresh ricotta which I am going to stuff into plum tomatoes baked in the oven, a recipe I learned from my cheesemaking class at HipCooks. I've made goat cheese chevre a few times now, but I really only like it with the culture and I don't have any right now, and I wanted to try a new kind of cheese. But, making ricotta calls for buttermilk which I found in the quart size which then equals a gallon of milk… equals a lot of ricotta, so a group get together can help me use it in the few days it is good for.

As a semi-tribute to F, there's a spinach ball finger food recipe (basically spinach, cheese and egg with breadcrumbs and seasoning) but I would like to try substitute stinging nettles for the spinach, thus making… Stinging Balls. Awesome right? Also, I'll prep and chill a spicy (habanero) creamy dip made with greek yogurt to have with the stinging balls, let's see what it will be like using the yogurt instead of the cream cheese and sour cream the recipe calls for. I often liberally add chopped peppers or sriracha or liberally sprinkle red pepper flakes when I cook to taste because both of us like a little kick, but one of the potential guests is very spice-sensitive so I figure at least the dip is an optional side. Stinging balls with spicy cream cracks me up.

And… I will try making Michael Smith's Potato Bacon Cheddar Tart. I will make mine extra cheesy with addition of monterey jack cheese to the cheddar. I thought the use of monterey jack would tie it in better with Santeria tacos we are also having as tinga tacos were F's choice for his pre-birthday party (as well as biscuits and cookies from Kettle Kitchen), since he can't have the bacon. The bacon is more for me as my pre-birthday.

 

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Recent cooking: Bui Tofu, Interesting Spring Greens

Bui Natural Tofu is an unassuming storefront that sells fresh tofu, and products using their fresh tofu, to consumers. You may be slightly taken aback by the very simple interior and the lack of say, clear labeling, and packaging that mostly consists of saran wrap, but the people behind the counter are very friendly. Be adventureous and pick a few things even if you don't know exactly what's inside- after all it was just made that day, it's only a few bucks (or less), how bad can it be? And, look at some of the goodies we walked out with:

Addictive Vietnamese fried egg rolls… like potato chips, you just can't have one. Or two. I ate two before I started the car and had to go back in to get more… just like the lady had warned me.

We also got their fried lemongrass tofu to snack on, which didn't last more then the weekend

Also from Bui and ready to eat: shrimp tofu veg salad roll, or vegetarian tofu salad rolls. In this case, Pho PDX (which uses Bui tofu in their veggie rolls as well) beats out Bui's version. Though, I do really like Bui's dipping sauce. And, you can also get tofu which has been improved by being stuffed with meat.

The entire goal of visiting Bui however, was to get fresh tofu. We got two kinds: the plain original, and also green onion/mushroom tofu (the one with flecks). Both of these pan-fried well and had a wonderful fresh soy flavor to them that is much better then the packaged tofu you can usually get.

With one of the tofus, I sliced them up and ate them with baby bok choy with a sauce that had  sesame oil, garlic, vegetable stock, vegetarian oyster sauce and sriracha. Turns out that the vegetarian oyster sauce is much saltier then real oyster sauce. The tofu was sauteed in hot chili oil.

I have recently had lots of interesting greens I have been preparing. For the past two weeks, I've been trying fiddlehead ferns, which taste like a mix of asparagus and woody like mushroom, though others say artichoke. Don't eat these raw as they are bitter and can cause lots of digestion problems up to food poisoning. I usually clean them carefully, a quick blanch, and then sauteed and eaten on their own with rice or pasta to really enjoy the delicate flavors. The first picture is just the fiddlehead ferns in olive oil with a touch of minced garlic. The second is from the following week, when I made sure that the fiddleheads got to al dente during the blanch process and then mixed them with pasta, Sicilian olive oil, a touch of red pepper flakes and grated Causse Noir cheese- I thought the play with the shapes would be fun on the tongue and it could be a plate of spirals.

Nettles are similar in that they are also foraged, and best prepared with a bit of washing to make sure all the dirt is gone, then blanch or you can steam them or parboil if you are cooking them a second time like I did. I did these sauteed with shitakes, just like what I had tasted at Springwater Farm's booth on Saturday (both the nettles and mushrooms were from that stand)- and Kathryn provides even more recipes here. Nettles taste and have the texture that is a bit like spinach, but healthier with superfood benefits such as aiding allergies, arthritis and joint pain, it's a diuretic, can help treat anemia and decrease risk of skin disorders, can have effects of lowering blood pressure and blood sugar, and more. And that's not even the list of vitamins and elements it contains.

Of course, spinach also doesn't need to be prepared so that it doesn't sting you- which nettles can, so when washing them instead of being able to handle them like the fiddleheads, it's a lot of shaking and panning with a sieve to sift out the dirt. I don't touch them until after the parboil. But, if you get a sting, take comfort possibly in the story that Caesar’s Roman troops supposedly used nettle from England and used the spines for warmth. Touching the stingers on the nettle plant causes an allergic reaction that is probably like a localized histamine release, thus producing a burning sensation that you feel from the sting and keeping you warm (that can last minutes or a day depending on individual sensitivity) if you decided to whip yourself with nettle I guess! Just because a plant is full of little spikes that act like like tiny hypodermic needles that break off when you brush against it and release toxins doesn't mean someone, somewhere, didn't find a way to eat it anyway.

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Portland Farmers Market at PSU Cheese Edition

When you want to check out cheeses at the Portland Farmers Market, you first need to think about what you end goal is. Is it to try a lot of new and different flavors of cheese? To come back with a cheese or two that you can have at home with part of a personal meal like with pasta or a sandwich? Are you looking for a hard cheese to grate? Soft cheese to spread on bread? Or do you want to make a cheese plate? What kind of milk cheese are you looking for? What kind of profiles do you want to have, based on what else you are pairing the cheese with? There are lots of great cheeses available, so having some sort of frame is important. The second thing you need to do is visit everyone you are interested in, taste everything you can and don’t feel bad about taking notes about taste and price- and then make your choice. Let me cover some of your options on Saturday’s market at PSU.

Let’s start with goat milk cheese, and Juniper Grove Farm. They are a goat dairy so their cheese is all from goat milk, and they offer usually 9-12 cheeses at their stand. Getting a tomme here would be great for a cheese plate. I love getting their cumin tomme, but they offer several other cheeses too. Besides, the Cumin Tomme I favor, they also have Tumalo Tomme, both have an earthy flavor. They also have a farmer’s cheese (regular or lavender infused) or goat gruyere that you can make grilled cheeses or other sandwiches with- they always have the farmer’s, the goat gruyere varies. In terms of their chevre, you might like Thor’s, which is a smoked over wood chevre, if they have it. They also have a few mold ripened cheeses, which vary depending on the day.

If you are looking to try a lot of ways goat milk can be used for cheese, this is the stand for you as they personally will slice a sample at your request if you want to try something other then the two they may already have cut on plates for sampling, and they can often cut a piece to your order with their scale. The other cheese booths have cheeses that are already packaged, so with them you get the amount that they have already pre-decided.

When I am looking for chevre for personal use, I often go with Fraga Farms. I get the plain one so I can taste the freshness on its own or use that as a versatile base for what I need. But they also chevres that have flavorings, like oil and herbs, or a tapenade. With these chevres, I like to spread it simply on anything you could put butter or cream cheese on, or you can have it with some fresh berry jam to make the chevre spread to your taste. They also have a few other simple farmhouse cheeses. Larry is always there to talk about his cheeses with the obvious care he has for them. On grand opening day of the market, we talked about his favorite ways to have the original flavor cheese. He recommended I try it with berries to bring out the fruit, and told me about how the week before during the surprise windstorms the power to the farm went out and the generator was out, so his family and a few other helping hands were hand-milking all their goats in the dark! Stories like these re-emphasize why you want to buy direct from the people who are working so hard to make these products and reward their passion in person, let them know you appreciate their efforts (and in this case, I can eat their product in like 2-3 days just by myself).

Dee Creek Farm also offers goat cheese, but in very small sizes compared to what Fraga has. What they excel at however is flavored chevres, such as in garlic and chives flavor (last year the chive flowers gave it a visual of purple flecks) and the herbes de provence flavored chevre, which makes it more on the dip side. They also make some cheese that taste like other cheese, such as like a cheddar style, or tomme style caerphilly. I do like them, but price-wise they are a bit more on the more costly side for the amount of cheese you get, but might work well if you only want a little bit of chevre such as enough only for two or three servings.

On to the cow cheeses. Jacob’s Creamery has a very small selection of cheeses- but they offer a variety of dairy products. Lisa Jacobs (in the orange hat) makes a small variety of cow milk cheeses so it varies depending on what she wanted to make, but the best thing are her flavored cream cheeses, flavored butter, creme fraiche or mascarpone or ricotta sometimes, pudding and you can also get fresh milk if you are early enough. I usually go for the salmon cream cheese- better then the flavored cream cheese you can get at the store prepackaged. I also love her flavored butters- once I was lucky to grab a honey walnut one and it was a wonderful mingling of sweet cream with nuttiness. I often will pair one of her cream cheeses with bagels I get from Tastebud for breakfast for the week.

Willamette Valley Cheese has a lot of really great cheeses. At the Cheese Bar Spectacular, F would often pick out Willamette Valley cheeses from platefuls of cheese tastings. They sell more cheese then they offer samples for- usually there are 2-3 that are cut into small tastes, and because they are by the entrance of the market on the northwest side sometimes it can get crowded and a small line of tasters training through, person by person. We particularly like their Brindisi, Perrydale, or Boerenkaas on a cheese plate- they usually have the Brindisi, and also the other award winning ones such as Horseradish Havarti, Smoked Peppered and Chive Jack, some Aged Gouda, and variations of the havarti and gouda. As mentioned though, they don’t have samples of all of them, so you might have to take the plunge sometimes.

Taking a different approach with all the cheeses they offer is Rogue Creamery, located more towards the middle of the market, which offers samples of all their cheeses from little self serve lidded containers. They are similarly well regarded and won awards for their cheeses, particularly their blue cheeses, and they have interesting flavored cheeses such as lavender or chipotle, and with Rogue Beer (the Rogues are not the same company) such as Morimoto Soba and Chocolate Stout. So if you like blue cheeses or unusual flavorings with the cheese, stop here. Oh, and they have cheese curds.Their offerings are pretty consistent throughout the market season except for a seasonal here or there, but it’s very convenient to have access to all the Rogue Creamery offerings here in one booth.

Usually only a booth or so down from Rogue and specializing in Sheep and Cow’s milk cheeses is Ancient Heritage Dairy. These are good cheeses- I especially like their bloomy cheeses like Adelle and Valentine- you can see the rich decadence from the sample plate, oozing that creamy cheeseness.

I rarely but once in a while stop at Monteillet Fromagerie, which offers goat, sheep, and a mix of the two milks in their French style cheeses, but perhaps they are in line with your taste for cheese. They have a mixed goat/sheep cheese Causse Noir I like, another sheep cheese, and several chevres and soft sheep or goat milk cheese. He also often has some fresh very chubby raviolis which he has already added those chevres and probably using the eggs from the chickens (which he also sells… and also duck eggs.) And butter.

As you can see, there’s enough variety to get the cheese you need here if you wanted to keep it local with no problem. I remember when I visited with my sister in Vermont (she was living in New Hampshire I think at the time), and I was still a Chicago citizen, how jealous I was of all these cheeses being so available to visit and get from the East coast markets, and how different the milk was when it was freshly purchased in a little 8-12 oz at the farmers market (come to think of it, wish they had that at Portland Farmers Market, then I can have it with the baked goods at the market… though I understand the difficulty of a earth-friendly container in that size).

Well, you can get a fabulous variety of cheeses here in Portland too. It doesn’t mean I won’t still be visiting my friendly cheese mongers, but I love supporting the local cheese artisans and hearing their stories of making the cheese and milking their goats and a moody cow. You can put together a totally locally produced cheese platter to rival any cheese platter that has cheeses from the American East coast artisan farms or even France in one stop shopping here at the Portland Farmers Market (and don’t forget the charcuterie from the meat vendors in the previous post). And with all the wonderful wines in the area, and beer, why wouldn’t you want a cheese plate accompaniment?

There’s something about sitting down with cheese with guests that allows you to sit and talk together because something about a cheese plate signals you to slow your pace down- taking a little bit of each cheese, adding a touch of honey or vinegar, a bite of fruit or nut, a cracker or piece of bread. Even on a regular weekday night, eating cheese and bread with a glass of wine while watching TV or streaming a movie makes you take it slower then a mindless bowl of chips or popcorn. That’s part of the spirit of the Portland Farmer’s Market too- not only local ingredients from the farmers, but taking the time to enjoy and dine instead of just eating.

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Sunday Snackies at my house

Putting together a cheese plate- not pictured is the Brillat Savarin (but you saw a photo of it in an earlier post in the box), and also a guest brought a Fra Roussel Cantalet, the ancestor of British cheddars and one of the oldest cheese in France. The cheese in the back is a mixed goat/sheep cheese Causse Noir from the Portland Farmers Market vendor Monteillet Fromagerie which I can remember the location at the market and their cheese and what the guy looks like… but I always seem to mess up their name and substitute other random syllables after “Mont”.

These are also all from the Portland Farmers Market: the seedy bread from Fressen, specifically Vollkornbrot, made of Dark Rye and Whole Wheat flours with cracked rye, Sunflower, Flax and Sesame Seeds; a duck truffle pate from Chop; and kielbasa from Olympic Provisions. I often cut up bread into cracker size pieces rather then serve crackers (although a guest also brought a nice baguette from Grand Central)

I prepared the kielbasa two ways. First I sliced them. Then, on the left I just put it on a pan and let it cook in its own juices til it got a bit crispy on the edges. On the right, I simmered a bottle of beer with I think 1/3 cup of brown sugar until it was bubbly, added the kielbasa and simmered for 30 minutes with an additional 4-6 teaspoons of bbq sauce I think- I did it mostly to taste, and depending on what beer profile you use it will vary. The simmer mixture adds a bit of sweetness to the outside of the sausage- you can add cornstarch to make the sauce stick to the meat like a glaze, but I didn’t want to cover up the already well smoked and flavorful meat too much.

I can never get tired of having cheese, bread, and a little meat with wine. It’s nicer to throw in a little pickled something and fruit as well to round out casual snacks- but since the day before I had gone to the market on my own and brought back several bottles of beverages, there’s only so much I can carry on my own, and uphill to boot. Someone needs to buy me a little cart- not so big that it gets in the way of others at the market, but that way I don’t have to have all the weight in my arms and shoulders. On the other hand, knowing I need to carry everything does keep me in check as I walk around the market on how much I get as well- sometimes I get a little overexcited about what I see without thinking about how quickly I need to eat it to really enjoy it at its peak and take advantage of freshness.  Next Saturday is a special “Bacon Time” edition where I’ll be fancying snacks up with a bacon theme, hopefully the bacon tart will be photogenic.

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Boke Bowl

Boke Bowl is a pop-up restaurant in Portland that bills itself as a raving ramen party. They appear just once a month, on the last Monday of the month, for one meal (lunch or dinner) as they take over another restaurant’s space temporarily like a secret private party. I was able to go to a lunch they were having at host restaurant/kitchen space  Oba this past week, and got to experience myself that the food is as delicious as it looks.

Unfortunately since it was lunch, and we had to account for travel time, we had to eat quickly- but the service helped us get in and out quickly. As a side benefit, at this particular lunch 5% of the sales would go to the Mercy Corp fundraiser for Japan… so I felt less greedy about ordering so much.

We started out with steam buns. I had wanted these as soon as I had seen them in the blogosphere- and despite showing them to F, he was still surprised to see these are not the usual round buns you see in Chinese bakeries. Instead, these are a bit like tacos in that they are folded to envelope the filling, but they are thick and doughy and spongy. His steam buns were with grilled eggplant, cucumber, pickled mustard sauce while mine were with char sui pork, cucumber, green onion. After tasting both of these, mine were better- but he liked his buns as the best part of the lunch.

Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon

Meanwhile, the salad Boke Bowl offered this month as a salad with warm brussels sprouts, cauliflower, blood orange, house tofu, croutons with Thai vinaigrette. We liked having the crunch texture but wanted a lot more brussels sprouts for it to live up to its “salad” billing.

Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon

And finally, the mains. For this month, the seasonal additions to the ramen choices that along with the usual hand made noodles, every dish also had greens, mushrooms, butternut squash and roasted fresh water chestnuts. He tried the ramen in caramelized fennel broth, Japanese eggplant, butternut squash rice cakes. Because of the fennel broth, it was a sweeter broth then you might expect with ramen so he liked it at first but the sweetness started to get to him as he continued in the bowl- he would have preferred something spicier instead, and I agree that after a while that caramelized sweetness gets too cloying. Some of the homemade hot boke sauce probably would have helped here, but it wasn’t mentioned or offered, the only glitch in the service.

Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon

Mine was soooo good. Ramen with hand made noodles, greens, mushrooms, butternut squash, roasted fresh water chestnuts, pork and chicken broth, slow smoked pulled pork, buttermilk fried chicken.

Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon

Just look at it. It tastes even better then it looks.

Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon

See that chicken closeup? That chicken was still crunchy as I got towards the bottom as I tried to distribute that chicken taste between everything else. The sauce on top is a pickled mustard that I swirled into my noodles and soup a bit to distribute the kick. The only thing I could ask for is to be able to get this deliciousness more often. I love you Boke Bowl. When can you grow up from pop up restaurant into addictive permanent ramen party place that can make everyone love ramen like it deserves? Because Boke Bowl will make you realize what Tampopo is about. Maybe the broth isn’t as good as Daikokuya’s Tonkotsu, but the entire experience of everything in the bowl made me enjoy it more then any other ramen I’ve had thus far.

It’s not traditional ramen- from the list of components you can see there is a lot going on in that big bowl. And I didn’t even add everything that I could have, including a slow poached egg which sounded so tempting (but my ego told me buttermilk chicken was enough) or pork belly or miso black cod rice cakes. But Boke’s take seems like a natural modern adaption- traditional ramen still has its place, just like a cheeseburger that is just good meat with a fresh bun and a slice of cheese. But, adding bacon and homemade pickles and spicy ketchup and grilled onions and mushrooms and jalepenos and a side of truffle parmesan fries washed down with a local microbrew can be a good additions too.

Boke Bowl can really be the opening move to bring the cult of ramen to Portland, let’s move on to addictive deep soups and fresh noodles… because this is seriously amazing, and Boke has the stuff that is worthy and too easy to enthrall anyone and be food to obsess about. Just looking at the photos, don’t you want to be converted?

Boke Bowl, ramen, Portland Oregon

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