B&G Club of Portland’s Showcase of Wine and Cheese 2010

At $40, the price tag to attend might seem steep to the Showcase of Wine and Cheese Event… until you do a little research and find out that it goes to the Boys and Girls club, and there are no additional tasting fees for any of the wine or cheese. When we entered, there was a long aisle of silent auction items that we got to peruse, and then when we walked into the Portland Ballroom we greeted by Sinatra-era music (with a singer on stage crooning- perhaps the same guy I have seen at Olive or Twist) and tables of 10 numbers each arranged in a big square or line, with each number being a wine station for 3-6 wines. The tables numbered from 1-83. Holy crap.

We picked up our 2 tasting glasses and also a big bound book which described the offerings of each station and had a lil space for tasting notes. The front section was all cheese… 60 some cheeses. Ok, maybe a handful of those were actually cheese mix spreads, or chocolate, or cheese crackers, or pears with advice on how to match it with cheese… but seriously. Most of my photos are of the cheese, because it was just put together so well.

And there were two buffet stations of antipasto and toasts topped with diced tomato or eggplant spread, vegetarian sushi, lil crabcakes, breadsticks… and 4 carving stations of beef round with horseradish and au jus. The site had mentioned hors d’oeuvres and there were some passed by servers that first hour, but having the 4 stations of food (along with all the cheese) was a great combination of wine pairings.

It started at 6:30, and by 10 when it ended I was so full and exhausted I tell you! The atmosphere was very classy- I kept shaking my head in wonder at some of the lovely ladies I saw wearing 3-4 inch heels with their lovely dresses because there were only 20 something tables seating 10 by the stage, but otherwise everyone was on their feet tasting away. They were probably more comfortable temperature wise then I though- even in just a tank top and long sleeved shirt with jeans, I was really warm. I appreciated during that they had big iced containers of soda and bottled water by the exits.

Volunteers were hard at work at all the cheese stations, prepping trays of cubed cheese or lil containers of cracker/cheese combinations so you could help yourself to a tasting. One of the tastings actually cemented by purchase of what brand of marscapone to purchase today to make a tiramisu fondue. At the very end during clean-up, some of the trays of already prepped cheese ended up in ziploc doggy bags- we took probably 20 small cubes of a swiss cave aged gruyere, yum!

The atmosphere was super classy- besides the music and the auctions at 8:30 (there was also a live voice auction), beautiful decorations of red cloth and arrangements with red roses made it much more of a cocktail event then a bunch of tables with tastings at the convention center a la the Beer and Wine festival (which I have already marked on my calendar!). There was never a line of more then maybe 1-2 people for wine, and it could be a bit slower then cheese, but somehow people naturally did a clockwise rotation 🙂 I plan to mark this showcase for next year as well: I will be happy to return many times.

Below, the “unwrap and roll fresh mozzarella” from BelGioioso was layered with meat for a very tasty bite, and seemed great for a party tray.

Just a spoonful of the marscarpone was already so delicious- I can’t wait to try it out with the recipe cards they have next to it for tiramisu!

 

 

 

Signature

Other Cheese Sandwiches

As a followup of my other post, here's some food pron of other great cheese sandwiches, which is why Paragon's didn't make the top cut…

RIP Dreamer's Cafe vegetarian cart incredible pan fried cheese sandwich. Actually, the veggies varied depending on what he had on hand, so I've also had overly greasy/not balanced versions of this, but this first time I had it was grossly good. I mean, just look at it.

Tabor's muenster cheese is SUPER cheese as you can see. I love how it's swaddled so lovingly.

The original Grilled Cheese offered by Orange in Chicago (since has been re-worked):  roasted tomato slices, aged Cheddar cheese and caramelized onions on multigrain bread with the house potatoes. Gooey and delicious and I never got tired of it for several years it was a brunch staple. Notice the key execution needed here: browned burned crispy cheese edges.

And also here, at (back to Portland OR), the grilled cheese is surrounded by frico at the edges in Savor's execution of their grilled cheese bar.

 

I am anxiously awaiting a day to visit the Grilled Cheese Grill- look at all the possibilities! Even Rachel Ray knows that grilled cheese has many dreamily perfect possibilities in this grilled cheese highlights of the USA. After you've had a grown up grilled cheese, American cheese or any cheese that disappears in the middle just gets a passing grade, no matter how good the rest of the ingredients. 

 

Signature

An evening at Urban Fondue

Urban Fondue/Bartini's Spicy Mango Martini, using their house infused chili pepper vodka muddled with fresh cucumber, and shaken with mango and lime juice, was a nice drink while perusing the menu and waiting, but I'm not sure how any of their martinis on their regular menu go with the food. I suppose that's what their happy hour menu is for… it seemed to fit in more with their Bartini front (connected, and just next door to this fondue restaurant part but with a bar feel rather then plushy booths).

I picked the starter of Ruby Port Fondue of white cheddar, Swiss and Gruyere cheese finished with caramelized sweet onions and port wine. Served with local hearth baked bread to dip in the cheese, and we also ordered (for additional prices) the sauteed button mushrooms and fruit plate (willamette valley fresh pears, apples and ruby grapes). This is always my favorite part of the fondue experience, cheese! I make a pretty good fondue myself, but the flavor of this port and onion and cheese simmered together was complex and very enjoyable, more then the typical fondue recipe would give you- now something else to think about adding to enhance cheese fondue besides upgrading the cheese or wine or beer (Guiness or interesting microbrews). The fruit and doughy bread were good accompaniments, and the sauteed mushrooms were great though a bit on the small side.

When Urban Fondue begins to prepare the table for the entree, they hand you this cute lil timer. Behind, you can see how plush this booth for 2 is!

Since it takes a while to cook your food (as evidenced by the times on the timer) and you only have 2 fondue forks a piece, you really need a side to share to eat while you are waiting. The side we ordered to share while waiting for whatever was on the end of our fondue stick to finish was the Gratin Yukon Potatoes with parmesan, black pepper, and gruyere. It was a creamy soggy mess, despite the visual tease of the oven crust, it wasn't there. Oh well… I don't like making gratins because it's time consuming to prep, but this shouldn't even count as a gratin. Potatoes are great base for flavors, but texture is so important.

The vegetarian came with these six dipping sauces for us (starting from the back, L to R) Blackberry Ketchup (yum!), Pesto, Apple Chipotle Relish, Sun-Dried Tomato Aioli (also yum), Lemon-Garlic Butter with Parsley and Caper, and Chili Vinaigrette. One thing I didn't like is that other fondue experiences I have had, such as Gejas in Chicago or the chain Melting Pot, you get a lot more per person in terms of dipping sauces to try. Since their cost is so low (just prepping ingredients and cleaning the pots which is definitely a pain), these sauces and the raw ingredients are the main differentiators that can make a fondue experience great Only the Blackberry Ketchup and Sun-dried Tomato Aioli stood out at all.

The broth we used for our entree was a tomato fennel broth, a flavorful composite of vine-ripe tomatoes, fennel, parsnips, and sweet peppers finished with flat leaf parsley and cracked pepper- at least this was delicious, we kidded about just drinking it if it hadn't been so hot. Urban Fondue's vegetarian platter includes these for dipping:  tofu, marinated tomatoes, artichoke hearts, grilled sweet onions, sweet carrots, mushrooms,and asparagus. None of these "dippers" stood out- sad, especially given the local bounty here, and except for the tofu, artichoke hearts, tomatoes, and onions, nothing more then a bite worth and minature sized. The onion was hardly grilled, and the artichoke hearts mushy, leaving only the tomatoes and tofu to try to hold up this platter as some sort of "entree".

Chocolate Martini with the Banana Foster fondue with house made caramel with a hint of banana liquor topped with caramelized bananas foster and vanilla whipped cream, then served with this plate of seasonal fruit (pineapple, strawberries, banana), cheesecake, cookie dough (peanut cookie and chocolate chip cookie), mini-cream puffs, and pound cake. In the back was a nutty wafer. The trick with cooked fruit is that if it is overcooked, it turns a bit sour and gets very mushy, so you need to counterbalance it. This fondue really needed more counterbalance, unfortunately. The stuff on the plate was fine plain, fortunately- a interesting mix, much more then for the veggie entrees.

In summary of my experience, the fondue concoction of cheese and broth were great, though the accompaniments were not. Dessert-wise, the banana foster sounds better then it tastes- maybe go with the traditional chocolate to give justice to the dippings for dessert.

Signature

Fred’s 18th Annual Beer & Cheese Tasting

Next time, I'll have to order a loaf of bread because although the vast amount of cheese was wonderful (even though often the cheese would not necessarily marry best with the beer), we really needed a palate cleanser besides a glass of water.

The lineup included

  • A jumpstart on the alcoholism (if you hadn't already ordered a beer while waiting for it to start as seating was at 5 and the tasting was at 6) with a special tasting of Rogue Spirit's Dead Guy Whiskey. A pretty smooth whiskey.
  • Full Sail Ltd 03 Lager with Fern's Edge Fresh Chevre. Great chevre, just so light and airy
  • Eugene City Brewery Honey Orange Wheat with Willamette Valley Gouda. Great summer beer, very flavorful gouda- but that didn't in my opinion go well together as the gouda overwhelmed the subtle honey orange
  • Rogue Hazelnut Brown Nectar with Alsea Feta. I already knew I liked the beer, but the feta was surprisingly not too salty. And, I got lots of it because the table didn't particularly care for it. I forgot to take a picture of this one as I was getting greedy with the feta.
DSCN2178DSCN2181DSCN2183

 

  • Rogue Dead Guy Ale with Monteillet Mejean. This was the smelliest cheese, but since it didn't smell like foot fungus and certainly didn't even worsen upon breathing out after taking a taste of it, it is not the worst cheese I have ever had. It is pretty barnyard-y though. I see the humor in pairing it with a beer called "Dead Guy" because of this, but seriously this needed a much stronger beer.. maybe even a merlot with some tannin to balance it
  • Rogue Mocha Porter with Rogue Creamery Chocolate Stout Cheddar. Thank goodness this safe combination cleared our palates. Would be a great combination for fondue I think.
  • Deschutes Twilight Ale with Bravo Cheddar Special Reserve. I kept this cheese as an "emergency cheese" in case as we got to stronger beers another Mejean appeared in the lineup. Who knew what Humblodt Fog or Oregonzola would actually turn out to be like…

DSCN2185DSCN2187DSCN2188DSCN2190
  • Terminal Gravity India Pale Ale with Cypress Grove Humblodt Fog. Turns out this was my favorite cheese, and maybe a bit of it was that finally, there was some bread to cleanse our palates too: all we have had is what I showed pictured and a glass of water (and perhaps a leftover pint from while we were squatting our booth before the tasting started). At the end the waitress was kind enough to bring some of the leftovers the kitchen had from the tasting, including 5 of these which I could not stop eating when I tried to snack on just one.
  • Issaquah Brewery Menage a Frog with Rogue Creamery Chipotle Cheddar. I totally forgot to take a picture of this one. I was disappointed they did not pair this with Rogue's own chipotle ale or smoke ale.
  • Hair of the Dog Fred Strong Ale with Rogue Creamery Oregonzola
  • Rogue Imperial Stout with Maytag Blue of Iowa. Maytag is already my go-to bleu cheese, and I was happy to rack up all the leftover blue cheese from the rest of the table that I put on some potatoes the next day. Great combo since the potatoes didn't need anything but me mashing them and spreading the cheese around (I always eat the skin at home because I wash them and know they are clean).
DSCN2193DSCN2195DSCN2197

At $25 (member cost for the event, prepaid) for all this tasting, it was a lot more beer and cheese than I had experienced at other tastings. 10 beers and cheeses and a taste of whiskey! Still, I think next time I'll make sure we have crackers or nuts or something as it got really overwhelming for me at the end.

 

Signature