Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm Tulip Festival

Today kicks off the beginning of the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm’s Tulip Festival 2014! Of course, this coincides with a big rainy week in Portland right now, but don’t worry. The festival lasts March 28-May 4th, so you have time. I kept checking the weather until I found one that suited me. I also advise you to go early if you can if you want to get shots like this where there are less people in the background.

These photos are not from this year, but I thought it would be a nice summary of what you might expect to see there. Unfortunately my visit was on a semi-clear day so I couldn’t get any gorgeous snow capped mountains in the background, but maybe you can! You can also check the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm site because they often post with a little report of their current field conditions.

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm Tulip Festival (previous year visit)

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival

Signature

Portland Dining Month- A Visit to Park Kitchen

March is Portland Dining Month! During this month, almost 100 restaurants in Portland will be offering a special menu of 3 courses for the low price of $29. In most cases, this prix fixed menu have multiple options for the three courses.

Portland Dining Month 2014 is in March- 3 Courses for $29

I covered some highlights from the list in my last post, and this time I wanted to recap one of my Portland Dining Month dinners, my first one- at Park Kitchen! Located in the North Park blocks, just a little walk from the Pearl but because of it’s location parking is very easy if you need to drive, though it is also only blocks away from the Portland Street Car or the Max Lines. Park Kitchen just recently celebrated it’s 10th anniversary. It is the older sibling restaurant to The Bent Brick (who is also participating in Portland Dining Month).
Park Kitchen in Portland, North Park Blocks

For Park Kitchen Portland Dining Month 3 courses for $29, it is a real value! Let me walk you through the options…

First Course

For the first course, you have the choice of two from their small plates section, either a hot small plate of Chickpea fries with squash ketchup, OR the cold small plate of Winter vegetable salad. I would recommend getting the Chickpea fries because they are famous here, and have been for years. I think there might be a riot if they took these off the menu.
Park Kitchen's Chickpea fries with pumpkin ketchup Park Kitchen's Chickpea fries with pumpkin ketchup

In my case the squash ketchup was pumpkin ketchup, and you will want to scrape that empty. When I asked if the chickpea fries could be wrapped up to save room for the other courses and what little pumpkin ketchup was left included in the box, I was lucky enough to even get a little extra in the container, yay! You can see the serving of this hot small plate is more like medium size that can probably feed 4 people. Also you may notice that by total coincidence that Chef Gabriel Rucker (of Le Pigeon) in the background of my shot as he was also enjoying dinner at PK.

Second Course

For the second course, you have the choice of two large plate options, either the Milk braised pork with Your Kitchen Gardens leeks, curds and whey OR the Louisiana rice grits with trumpet royal mushrooms (vegetarian). Both these entrees alone you are already getting your money’s worth via Portland Dining Month, as that pork dish is normally at $29, and I think the grits at $27.

I picked the pork and it’s a beautiful, delicious plate. It made me wonder why it’s been so long since my last visit to Park Kitchen, as this plate was so excellently executed and full of flavors. Sorry, I’ll do better now PK, I will not take you for granted.
Park Kitchen Milk braised pork with Your Kitchen Gardens leeks, curds and whey Park Kitchen Milk braised pork with Your Kitchen Gardens leeks, curds and whey

Third Course

Sticky date pudding with vanilla-rum ice cream and confit lemon. I love how the very tart confit lemon contrasts with the sticky richness of the date pudding.
Park Kitchen Sticky date pudding with vanilla-rum ice cream and confit lemon

Not part of the 3 courses, but because I needed a little something was this Park Kitchen cocktail of Burnsidecar with Whiskey, Cointreau, Lemon, Angostura Bitters, Spicy Chipotle Sugar Rim.
Park Kitchen cocktail of Burnsidecar with Whiskey, Cointreau, Lemon, Angostura Bitters, Spicy Chipotle Sugar Rim

If you can, make Opentable reservations because if you make you reservation through OpenTable,  Downtown Portland will also make a donation to the Oregon Food Bank as long as you use this link. A great majority- 68 last I looked- of the participating Portland Dining month restaurants accept reservations over OpenTable, and Park Kitchen does accept reservations over OpenTable. Last year, more than $1,800 was donated to the Oregon Food Bank to assist with their work of distributing emergency food to hungry families.

Check out the Downtown Portland Portland Dining Month website for a map of where the various participating restaurants are located to be convenient for you, as well as menu listings. If you are interested specifically in which ones have vegetarian or gluten-free options, Portland Monthly has put together a list.

I am also still in the midst of doing a free giveaway where I am giving away a dinner for two at a Portland Dining Month restaurant! You can still enter, but hurry up because it ends Thursday at midnight (when it turns into Friday)! Giveaway has ended
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Signature

Portland Penny Diner Russian Pop Up – celebrate Russian Sun Festival

Disclosure: I was invited to the Blini and Vodka Pop-up event on Friday so the blinis and my vodka infusion were complimentary, but I paid for the piroshkis earlier in the week and the other cocktails at the Russian Pop Up on my own. I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

I was really excited when I saw a press release sharing that Chef Vitaly Paley was getting into the spirit of the Russian Sun Festival, also known as Maslenitsa, as well as the end of the winter Olympics in Sochi. When I lived in Chicago, one of my favorite restaurants was Russian Tea Time– it was one of the first restaurants I enjoyed with my new found freedom as a college student now able to make my own dining adventures in Chicago. I fell in love with pelmeni, vareniky, beet caviar, tashkent carrot, salmon crepes (my first try at caviar), Russian herring and drank bottom glasses of russian tea. I realize that since moving to Portland, I haven’t had any russian food at all. Thankfully, chef Paley was about to end the drought.

This pop up is becoming part of a series it turns out: check out this story at Portland Monthly on the new Russian pop-up series DaNet!

Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa). This included homemade Steelhead Caviar

The celebration was being held via special menu items at both Portland Penny Diner and Imperial.

Piroshkis for Lunch at Portland Penny Diner

First, all this week from Feb 24-28, Portland Penny diner has been offering different piroshkis for lunch. They were $4, and were announced to feature flavors such as potato, onion and rosemary, cabbage and smoked ham hock, chicken liver and mushrooms, and beef short ribs and caramelized onions. After a long dentist appointment on Tuesday, I was able to drop by, which I usually can’t given my work is in Beaverton and PP usually is closed when I get downtown. I ordered both piroshkis of the day, and though the cabbage and potato one was fine, really enjoyed the mushroom and duck liver piroshky. Next door for dessert, Imperial served stuffed blintzes but I wasn’t able to make it.

Portland Penny Diner Portland Penny Diner Portland Penny Diner and Piroshkis

Russian Pop up – Blini Bar and Vodka Bar at Portland Penny Diner

Then, this past Friday night from 5:30 – 8:30 pm.was a pop-up blini bar with live Russian folk music, courtesy accordion player Leonid Nosov and singer Anna Kazakova (get a little taste of the music thanks to BroussardComm’s little Instagram video here).

Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Portland Penny Diner pop-up blini bar with live Russian folk music, courtesy accordion player Leonid Nosov and singer Anna Kazakova Portland Penny Diner pop-up blini bar with live Russian folk music, courtesy accordion player Leonid Nosov and singer Anna Kazakova

For only $15, Portland Penny Diner and Imperial crafted a blini bar buffet with traditional and non-traditional toppings. Offerings included blinis and potato pancakes that you could then top with jams and sour cream, homemade Steelhead caviar (check out Chef Paley’s Instagram proof right here!), Steelhead pastrami, sour pickles, fire roasted and marinated mushrooms, pickled herring, smoked mackerel salad, Chef Paley’s grandma’s fish under carrot marinade and beet pkhali, and other zakuskis (Russian drinking snacks).

Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa) Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa)

I was slightly embarrassed when Chef Paley caught how full my plate was- but I really did get a little bit of everything, and I loved it all! My plate was completely bare at the end! Fortunately, he complimented me on how colorful my plate is, and even took a photo, so phew.
Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa)

Now it was time for a couple more drinks. While I had been eating, I had sipped on some of Bar Manager’s Brandon Wise’s Infused vodkas. These included like this one with Cucumber, Melon and Spicy Pepper, as well as Apple & Ginger Vodka, Beet & Caraway Vodka, and Radish Thyme Pink Peppercorn Vodka.
Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner, thanks to Chef Paley, for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa), with Vodka Infusions courtesy Barman Brandon Wise like this one with Cucumber, Melon and Spicy Pepper

It was time to get serious though. I tried out his new Russian cocktails. This first one is the Russian 5 with vodka, lillet blanc, framboise, apricot liqueur, prosecco. Other concoctions he created included the Iron Curtain, with vodka, carpano antica, green chartreuse, bitters and spicy pepper tincture, and also the Red Gazette with brandy, cherry herring, Amaro St. Maria, lemon juice, mulled Pinot Noir syrup and bergamot black tea.

My favorite of the evening I tried was the Ivan Dragos’ Punch with vodka, orange rum, apricot liqueur, allspice dram, tea, prosecco.

Courtesy Barman Brandon Wise, this cocktail is a special Vodka Drink called Russian 5 with vodka, lillet blanc, framboise, apricot liqueur, prosecco, at Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa). Courtesy Barman Brandon Wise, this cocktail is a special Vodka Drink called Ivan Dragos' Punch with vodka, orange rum, apricot liqueur, allspice dram, tea, prosecco, at Russian pop-up blini bar at Portland Penny Diner for Russian Sun Festival (Maslenitsa).

It’s not too late though to squeeze in one more celebration tonight of the Russian Sun Festival!

4-Course Russian Dinner at Imperial 
Tonight, Sunday, March 2nd, Imperial’s Russian pop-up week will culminate with a 4-course dinner at Imperial. At $65 per person plus an optional $25 wine pairing, gratuity not included, reservations for the dinner will be available starting at 5pm. Infused vodkas and specialty cocktails will also be available from Bar Manager Brandon Wise. The 4-course menu includes:

  • Minute Cured Steelhead Belly, Salad Russe, caviar crème fraiche and dill
  • Anya’s Borscht, black bread and garlic
  • Goose Confit Stuffed Cabbage, smoked stuffed goose neck and chopped goose liver
  • House Ricotta Blintz, huckleberries and almonds

Disclosure: I was invited to the Blini and Vodka Pop-up event on Friday so the blinis and my vodka infusion were complimentary, but I paid for the piroshkis earlier in the week and the other cocktails at the Russian Pop Up on my own. I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

This pop up is becoming part of a series it turns out: check out this story at Portland Monthly on the new Russian pop-up series DaNet!

Signature

March Portland Dining Month: 3 Courses for $29 + Dinner for 2 Giveaway!

Disclosure: I am not being compensated for this post, and the Gift Certificate was won by me from a Rafflecopter via Portland Bloggers/Watershed Communications, and I am passing it on to you. I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

I’m so excited! This is my first giveaway on the blog! I’ll be giving away via Rafflecopter to a random entrant a gift certificate for two to have a Portland Dining Month dinner! Giveaway has ended

Portland Dining Month is back, moved up from what has been previously been the month of June to now be in the month of March! During this month, almost 100 restaurants in Portland will be offering a special menu of 3 courses for the low price of $29. In most cases, this prix fixed menu may have multiple options for the three courses.

Portland Dining Month 2014 is in March- 3 Courses for $29

I’ve been participating in Portland Dining Month as a diner for several years. Last year, in 2013 I visited and recapped as example Portland Dining month experiences dinners at Firehouse Restaurant, Quartet, Accanto, Urban Fondue, Fratelli (since closed but still a great example of what a great way to discover and make yourself visit restaurants Portland Dining Month is), and H50 out of my initial 2013 Restaurant Highlight list.

Images from Prix Fixe dining at Firehouse, Urban Fondue in 2013

Meanwhile, in 2012 Portland Dining Month experiences include the posts I did at Oven and Shaker, and Clyde Common. Except for Fratelli, H50, and Clyde Common, all those restaurants I named are back in the 2014 Portland Dining month list.

Images from Oven and Shaker in 2012

As I do every year, I like to share a few of my personal highlights of restaurants/prix fixed offerings in March that catch my eye. I usually will pick restaurants based on food options in their 3 courses that sound good, as in some cases the restaurant will offer dishes are special for Dining Month, or you are getting a tremendous value on the price of normally dining there. Of course remember that the menus are subject to change by the restaurant at any time.

There are many excellent choices- about 100 in fact- of restaurants participating in Portland Dining Month. I just couldn’t highlight them all!

  • With March also being the month of Mardi Gras, it only seems right to consider Acadia with its New Orleans/Creole food from Louisiana on your dining list and it’s generous 4 (four!) courses that include Louisiana BBQ Gulf shrimp, Crawfish tails, Louisiana caught sea bream, and Creole bread pudding. Just don’t go on March 4, which is when they have a special and separate Fat Tuesday celebration planned if you have your sights set on the Dining Month menu.
  • Accanto on Belmont was one of my favorite dining month experiences last year with its fresh pastas and very seasonal, unusual ingredients (they introduced me to Wrinkle Crinkle Crumple Cress). Their second course pasta course options of Cacio e pepe with Meyer lemon tagliatelle and Pecorino or Capellini with chili, garlic, anchovy and pea shoots sound amazing. I had the second dish last year, as you can see below. Also, next door you can check out Genoa instead if you want something a bit more upscale but still at the $29 for 3 courses price point, huge bargain here! Reservations available on OpenTable both for Accanto and for Genoa.
  • Aviary is a good value at this price with its sublime French and Asian influenced offerings on NE Alberta. This is a great chance to try out a previous Restaurant of the Year award winner and they offers pretty creative food. Reservations available on OpenTable.
  • Everyone thinks of Besaws for brunch, but they use their own farm to also source the dishes on their dinner menu and are worth checking out – they have a special chicken roulade dish they don’t usually have for Portland Dining Month.
    Besaw's Portland, photo by Sunpech Photography Besaw's Portland, photo by Sunpech Photography
  • You get your choice of Heirloom beet salad with walnuts, grilled chicory and Hannah Bridge cheese  or Oregon black truffle salad with crispy pig’s ear, frisée and poached egg as firsts at Bent Brick, so I’m already sold. I also have to tell you they have incredible cocktails here. I would be disappointed in you if you visit here and don’t try at least one cocktail. Its sibling restaurant Park Kitchen in the North Park Blocks is also participating and whose 2nd course option of Milk braised pork with Your Kitchen Gardens leeks, curds and whey alone is $29 on their regular menu. Reservations for Park Kitchen available on OpenTable.
    the bent brick, neighborhood tavern, northwest portland On The Veranda Cocktail from the Bent Brick, Portland OR with mint, strawberry, simple syrup, rhubarb cordial, sage liquor, white verjus, and gin
  • You can get a pretty good deal at the sweet Cocotte Bistro, where the third course offering of Poulet En Cocotte with milk-fed half-bird, farro risotto, market produce, poached farm egg, jus is normally already $25 on the menu! You can add a wine flight for $12 or a dessert for just $5 more.  Reservations available on OpenTable.
  • Shouldn’t be a surprise that Departure is a recommendation of the participating restaurants given the incredible flavor combinations and innovation that Chef  Gregory Gourdet offers on the pan-Asian menu. For their menu, they are offering choices for main course of Crispy rockfish with green papaya, roasted garlic and sweet chili glaze  or Grilled beef coulette with toasted broccoli, Korean chili and fermented black bean jus. One of the dessert options is a tasty sounding Pineapple icebox cake with banana ice cream, candied almond and spiced caramel. Reservations available on OpenTable.
  • Higgins offers classic Northwest cuisine and is one of the founders of Northwest cuisine. If you haven’t been yet, you should go at least once to this Portland institution, especially since the dishes they are offering include an Alsatian country-style terrine of duck and pork with dries cherries and hazelnuts for their first course. All the dishes are part of Higgins’ 20th anniversary celebration menu comprised of dishes from it’s March 1994 opening.
  • For some traditional Japanese, check out Hokusei where you can be transported to another country for a dining spell. The second course of Nijimasu teriyaki: Oregon steelhead with rye bourbon teriyaki sounds very alluring, and their third course are five pieces of nigiri if you are not a big dessert fan and would just rather have more food!
  • Ever since revisiting Imperial during Feast, I’ve been back several times and have been pretty enamored of various specials they offer. They have a special entree for dining month of Braised lamb shoulder with cauliflower “cous cous,” olives, preserved lemon and curried cashew brittle. No matter what, get that Parker House roll. It is worth that extra $1. I also recommend the cocktail below, A Radish Walks Into A Bar that uses radish gastrique as a nod to Chef Paley’s win of Battle Radish on Iron Chef. Also participating is Paley’s Place, his more upscale restaurant. Reservations available on OpenTable both for Imperial and Paley’s Place.
    A Radish Walks into a Bar cocktail, ransom old tom gin, carpano antica vermouth, radish gastrique, lemon, and cracked peppercorns, Imperial PDX, Vitaly Paley
  • Little Bird recently revamped their menu to offer more of a French perspective than before, as I covered recently when I stopped by for their new burger. One of the offerings for their second course is the Chicken Fried Trout you see below with gribiche, herbs, radishes and pickled carrots that I wrote about beforeReservations available on OpenTable.
    Little Bird Bistro's Chicken-Fried Trout, gribiche, fines herbes, radishes, pickled carrots
  • Ned Ludd is very Northwest and seasonal, and I love the beautiful atmosphere there. Pricewise, you are getting a bargain with 3 courses for $29 here since their entrees are typically in the $20 range already
  • Both the NW and SE locations of Olympic Provisions are participating, usually their entrees at dinner are already in the $20 range so you are getting some savings here with 3 courses. I would not be surprised if you walked out after dinner with a salami or two. For their third course, they are offering a Saucisson au chocolate, aka chocolate salami with French style dark chocolate ganache and warm baking spices, nuts, candied ginger, and red wine, which Portland Monthly previous highlighted the intensive recipeReservations available on OpenTable.
    Portland Farmers Market PSU Olympic Provisions
  • If you haven’t been to Oven & Shaker, check out all my previous reviews of their excellent seasonal pizzas
  • I’m a big fan of Picnic House, as you might have guessed from these previous raves I’ve written. I don’t know what they are offering for Dining Month, but whether it’s on their prix fixe menu or not, do not, do not miss getting dessert. That chocolate bundt cake is my favorite chocolate cake in Portland. Also, don’t you want a selfie with that monocled bear? Reservations available on OpenTable.
    Picnic House, Portland, picnic restaurant Picnic House, Portland, picnic restaurant chocolate cake, chocolate sour cream bundt cake with chocolate ganache Picnic House, Portland, picnic restaurant
  • Punch Box Social is stepping it up because besides 3 courses, their Portland Dining month dinner offers a cocktail- a choice of either Monk’s Vacation (Portland potato vodka, green chartreuse, pineapple juice, lime juice and simple syrup shaken and served chilled with a lime garnish) or Heart of the Union (Union gin, triple sec, beet syrup, lemon juice and orange bitters shaken and served over ice with a lemon wheel). Reservations available on OpenTable.
  • I have Ración at the top of my Portland Dining Month list- they have a 3rd course offering of Wagyu culotte steak with heirloom carrots, smoked apple cider, turnip and cocoa. Usually you have to have everyone at your table spend $50 for the chef’s tasting menu, and with Portland Dining Month you are getting 3 of the 5 courses for $29. Look for a recap in the next couple weeks! For a similar deal what is usually a spendy multiple course, check out Biwa who is offering their omakase (all chef’s choice, so be ready and open for anything) for $29 a person instead of the usual $40.
  • Serratto is on the list offering seasonal slow food that brings together local Northwest with France and Italy and the Mediterranean that results in something familiar and comforting but yet new (I visited and reviewed them here as part of a Bloggers Group). Given how much I loved the courses during that visit, I think their entree options of either Braised Carlton Farms beef cheek with porcini-potato gnocchi, smoked cipollini onions, braised leeks and carrots or the vegetarian Ravioli with forest mushroom, caramelized onion and goat cheese filling, grilled asparagus and preserved lemon cream sound incredible. Reservations available on OpenTable.
    Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Ahi Tuna Tartare 'Nicoise' chopped egg, capers, olives, housemade potato chips, tarragon aioli
  • The excellent fare at Smallwares is also complimented by some great cocktails. They make sure that there is a vegetarian option for each of the courses of the prix fixe, so if you can’t enjoy the Braised pork shoulder with squash puree, roasted mushrooms, smoked honey and Chinese mustard, the vegetarian option of Spicy tofu noodles, Thai basil, pickled pineapple and salted black bean promises a lot of flavor without the meat. Reservations available on OpenTable.
    Smallwares PDX, restaurant The Gin, with plymouth gin, mango, yogurt, rose water, cardamom, shaked and served on the rocks, Smallwares PDX
  • Tabla offers the best tarjarin in Portland and that is one of the five pastas they offer as a possible primi pasta course (after a choice of 6 possible starters and then third course featuring 4 entrée options). Next to the half order of tarjarin below you can see the starter from a previous visit of a gorgeous Fall Vegetable Salad. A good choice if there several of you and you want to enjoy Portland Dining Month prices but have a good choice of different things to eat still. Other participants of Portland Dining Month offering many options for the prix fixe include Firehouse Restaurant (which I recapped a visit here) and Gracie’s. Reservations for all three of these available on OpenTable.
    Tabla Bistro, Fall Vegetable Salad with turnip greens mousse, feta, market vegetables, mustard seeds  Tabla Bistro, Tajarin with truffle butter, parmigiano reggiano

I mention Opentable reservations because if you make you reservation through OpenTable,  Downtown Portland will also make a donation to the Oregon Food Bank as long as you use this link. I love OpenTable to see availability of restaurants at times I am interested in, to easily make reservations using online, and also collect points for dining certificates. A great majority- 68 last I looked- of the participating Portland Dining month restaurants accept reservations over OpenTable.  Last year, more than $1,800 was donated to the Oregon Food Bank to assist with their work of distributing emergency food to hungry families- we can do better this year!

Check out the Downtown Portland Portland Dining Month website for a map of where the various participating restaurants are located to be convenient for you, as well as menu listings. If you are interested specifically in which ones have vegetarian or gluten-free options, Portland Monthly has put together a list.

Let me help you enjoy Portland Dining Month by giving away one gift certificate for you a dinner for two! This gift certificate was something I won courtesy of Portland Bloggers and Watershed Communications and rather than using it myself, I am passing it on to you!

Giveaway has ended Use the Rafflecopter below to participate- this will run for 1 week, so a random winner will be chosen next Friday at 12:01 am! Come back to tweet about the giveaway in order to enter daily! Winner must respond within 24 hours and the gift certificate will be mailed. The gift certificate is good for two people to enjoy Portland Dining Month dinner at one of the participating restaurants.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Disclosure: I am not being compensated for this post, and the Gift Certificate was won by me from a Rafflecopter via Portland Bloggers/Watershed Communications, and I am passing it on to you. I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

Signature

Pike Chocofest 2014 Recap, and 24 hours in Seattle

I attended the Pike Brewery Chocofest last year, and we had planned to attend again this year. We didn’t want to use up too many vacation days, and we agreed to spend just a little more than 24 hours in Seattle.  We bought the tickets about a month in advance using Bolt Bus because it was closer to our home than going to the Amtrak station. The plan was for us to to be leaving Sunday morning of the festival and returning during Monday afternoon.

This entire planned getaway happened to fall on Sunday February 9- the same long weekend as the Portland Snowpocalypse. This is what it looked like by us, and the streets. These photos are before Saturday night/Sunday morning- when the snow turned to rain and that turned to ice everywhere! Yes, that is an abandoned car across the street, and some 2 feet icicles. There were also little snowmen in the Park Blocks as well as the amusement of fellow Portland citizens skiing down the street or sledding down sidewalks around our neighborhood.

Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014

Escape from Portland

So given all the snow, and now the rain that was turning into ice, that found us on late Saturday night wondering if we would really be able to get out of Portland. It had already been 2 1/2 days with the many inches of snow already on the ground essentially shutting down the city on Friday. Many businesses did not open (there was even a twitter hashtag to find the shorter list of who WAS open). I saw snow continue to pile up on abandoned cars that were left behind in favor of walking, and already there had been some cancelled Bolt Bus routes. The Worst Ride of the Year event was scaled back and the Polar Plunge even cancelled because the extreme winter weather was too risky in terms of safety.

So I was not too surprised when I got an email and text at 5am on Sunday morning saying that the 8:30am bus I had booked for us had been cancelled and the fare refunded. The two bus routes afterwards were already sold out, which meant that we would not have gotten to Chocofest in time. I quickly checked Amtrak and was surprised it was still running, so booked us tickets on the Amtrak 8:20 train instead.

That’s how at 7:45am, on the eerily quiet streets of downtown, you could hear the continued crunch of our feet as for 20 minutes we carefully tried to not fall as we navigated the ice all over the sidewalks and streets. We didn’t see another person out, and only 2 cars. It was like an abandoned apocalyptic city like from that movie The Day After Tomorrow. The freezing rain had made everything slick. A text message on his and my phone even warned everyone to stay home!

Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014 Snowpacalypse PDX in February 2014, Emergency Alert for Portland

It was sheer luck that 15 minutes before our Amtrak was scheduled to leave, one of the eleven Trimet Max trains that were reported to be running (they had actually stopped all public transportation- no buses were running and only the Yellow and Red had moving trains) fortunately coincided with our walk. Usually in the time we had been walking, we would have already been practically at Burnside and Broadway. That morning we only got to SW 6th and College. We felt like this.
Snowpacalypse commute in PDX in February 2014

The Yellow Line was able to transport us to Union Station, and the Amtrak train did leave on time at 8:20- three cheers for trains! Thanks to Trimet and Amtrak for saving us and assisting in our escape. The Chocofest Getaway Weekend to Seattle was on!

Travel by Train

Travel by Train via Amtrak, our escape from Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle

It was beautiful observing the winter wonderland from the comfort of warm Amtrak train cars. Our train did get delayed as we had to keep stopping for the conductor to shovel out switches, but given that we were safe and browsing the internet while she had to do all the driving and work, I can’t really complain at all.
View from the Amtrak by Kelso as we escape Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle View from the Amtrak by Kelso as we escape Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle View from the Amtrak by Kelso as we escape Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle View from the Amtrak by Kelso as we escape Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle

The train we were on happened to be one of the new trains that Amtrak and Travel Portland had added a special Portland Now car. If you have never taken Amtrak before to Seattle, it’s quite comfortable and I would not choose to drive to Seattle when you have this option instead. Every seat has outlets, there is free wireless (not fast enough to be streaming movies, but fine for lots of internet browsing), there are restrooms, and there is a dining car serving food and drinks (including alcohol if you are inclined).  Very comfortable! Unlike the bus you can get around and walk, and there are some pretty views to the west side.
View from the Amtrak car as we escape Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle View from the Amtrak car as we escape Snowpacalypse PDX for Seattle

The first photo you see are the coach seats, and then the seats in the Portland Amtrak Cascades “Portland Express” dining car with the cool Pendleton patterns! Check out this Portland Monthly slideshow giving you a peek of the Portland goodness inside the train car.
Taking the Amtrak to/from Seattle is comfy in the new Portland Now train Taking the Amtrak to/from Seattle is comfy in the new Portland Now train "Regular Lounge car in the Amtrak in the new Portland Now train

Our Hotel For One Night: Edgewater

Usually the 8:20am train would get you to Seattle by 12:10, but because of the snow and ice we arrived a little late, about 2:30pm. We took a taxi to our hotel for the evening, the Edgewater. Besides being a cool boutique hotel with a lot of character right by the downtown and right on the waterfront, it was only a little more than a half mile walk to Pike Place Market and Pike Brewing. Each room has a fireplace for a little extra romance, and they seem to like bears!
Checking into Edgewater for our one evening getaway in Seattle. Right by the piers and on the waterfront! Checking into Edgewater for our one evening getaway in Seattle. Right by the piers and on the waterfront! Checking into Edgewater for our one evening getaway in Seattle. Right by the piers and on the waterfront! Checking into Edgewater for our one evening getaway in Seattle. Right by the piers and on the waterfront!

I really really wanted these bear footstools. They had such cute innocent, even if slightly vacant, expressions as they peered at me every time we passed by the lobby gift shop.

Adorable footstools

Progressive Lunch/Snacking at Pike Place Market Area: Crumpet Shop and Piroshky Piroshky

After several days where most of the city was shut down, it was so exciting to walk down Pike Place Market and see all the hustle and bustle of everyone being out and about! I returned to the Crumpet Shop– I had visited previously and enjoyed a crumpet with Walnuts, Honey & Ricotta (AKA The Walrus). My friend selected the crumpet with English cheese and tomato and pesto, which I also really liked then and I was tempted to get that so I could have a whole one instead of my previous tasting bite. But there were other ones I wanted to try- and so I decided to go with entirely new crumpet topping combos.

This time I got to try a crumpet with orange marmalade Blue Stilton. I also tried a crumpet with ricotta and pesto. Both were gobbled up in mere minutes. I highly recommend the Crumpet Shop– they have been there for 36 years and have perfected crumpets. You just need to pop in for one or two and you can continue on your eating journeys, I promise!
Crumpet Shop crumpet with orange marmalade Blue Stilton in Seattle, by Pike Place Market Crumpet Shop crumpet with orange marmalade Blue Stilton in Seattle, by Pike Place Market Crumpet Shop crumpet with ricotta and pesto in Seattle, by Pike Place Market Crumpet Shop crumpet with ricotta and pesto, by Pike Place Market

Next was some wandering around taking in the sights of Pike Place Market vendors and the people visiting the market- such great people watching. Even though we have visited Pike Place Market many times, I never get tired of seeing it all. This time, I had additional knowledge to tell F as we walked because I had taken a Pike Place Market Food Tour with a friend on a previous visit, so I was able to at this point easily navigate to vegetarian choices for him as I now really know the layout of the market!

I’ve usually been intimidated by the line at Piroshky Piroshky, but we had time to spare now since it was still a couple hours until Chocofest. Besides, having a little more would help settle my stomach for the Chocofest event, right? When I had walked by at first on our way to the Crumpet Shop, there had been a line that snaked and was probably 20 people deep. When I returned, there were only a handful of people in my way – cough – I mean in front of me. Score!

This famous Russian Bakery also by Pike Place Market has both sweet and savory Russian pastries. I ordered the famous Smoked Salmon Pate piroshky, and we watched the Olympics event of the Women’s Biathlon (the one with skiing and shooting) as I enjoyed this warm bread stuffed with a salmon dill cheese mixture inside. It seemed very apropos. We also got the Piroshky Piroshky Potato and Cheese.
Seattle Pike Place Market famous Smoked Salmon Pate piroshky with warm bread stuffed with salmon dill cheese mixture inside Seattle Pike Place Market famous Smoked Salmon Pate piroshky with warm bread stuffed with salmon dill cheese mixture inside Seattle Pike Place Market famous Smoked Salmon Pate piroshky with warm bread stuffed with salmon dill cheese mixture inside Seattle Pike Place Market Piroshky Piroshky Potato and Cheese

Pike Chocofest 2014 Recap

Around 5:15 we went to get in line for the Pike Chocofest. This event is also a fundraiser, as all proceeds go to Puget Soundkeeper Alliance, a local non-profit dedicated to keeping Puget Sound clean. This event was even better than last year logically because they spread the 80 vendor tables out across more space and they also had garbage cans and water stations continually refilled and easily available at various points.
Pike Brewing Chocofest 2014 flyer

As we waited in line, there was even someone who walked down with samples of Intrigue Dark Chocolate Truffles and cheese from Cabot (some on Simple & Crisp oranges) for us to sample as we scanned the QR code to a pdf to browse the various participating vendors and their offerings.
Pike Chocofest 2014 Pike Chocofest 2014 Simple & Crisp and cheese

This is a chocolate extravaganza- so many chocolates, 14 chocolatiers alone. Look at all the flavors of Theo Chocolates, and two examples of the plates housemade Caramels utilizing Pike beers from Taste Restaurant (one of the best museum restaurants I’ve ever tried – they are in the Seattle Art Museum, nicknamed SAM here). There were also beautiful Assorted Truffles infused with Pike Ales from Carters Chocolates. I was in love with the Pistachio Paprika Caramel (among many decadent caramels and smoked chocolate chips) by Hot Cakes–  which calls itself a a molten chocolate cakery. Love I tell you.
Pike Chocofest 2014, Theo's Chocolates Pike Chocofest 2014, Fleur d Sel, Absinth, and Rose Otto Caramels from JonBoy Caramels Pike Chocofest 2014, beautiful Assorted Truffles infused with Pike Ales from Carters Chocolates Pike Chocofest 2014, beautiful Assorted Truffles infused with Pike Ales from Carters Chocolates Pike Chocofest 2014, beautiful Assorted Truffles infused with Pike Ales from Carters Chocolates  Pike Chocofest 2014, Hot Cakes' offerings. They are a molten chocolate cakery. Love.

There were also baked chocolate desserts, such as these mini cupcakes from Trophy Cupcakes, and Macrina Bakery with lovely Chocolate Cherry Bread Pudding with Chocolate Drizzle and Powdered Sugar
Pike Chocofest 2014, mini cupcakes from Trophy Cupcakes Pike Chocofest 2014, Macrina with lovely Chocolate Cherry Bread Pudding with Chocolate Drizzle and Powdered Sugar

It’s not just chocolate in the expected sweet form however. It also appeared in

  • beverage form in beer (such as Triplehorn‘s Nemesis Imperial Milk Stout with Cocoa  Nibs, Naked City Brewing‘s Mint Chocolate Porter and Charlie’s Golden Ticket beers, or Airways Brewing‘s Maylani’s Coconut Stout)
  • salt and chocolate combinations via fingerling potato chips and/or pretzels with cocoa nib salt from Boka
  • savory sweet combos like Steelhead Diner’s Signature Chocolate Pecan Pie Tartletts with Bourbon Chantilly and Cocoa Nibs or a decadent bite like Copperleaf’s chocolate chip brioche with Pleasant View Farm Foie Gras mousse and Preserved Wenatchee cherry

Pike Chocofest 2014,  Kestrel late harvest chardonnay and Salish Sea Brewing Big Love Porter Pike Chocofest 2014 Pike Chocofest 2014, Airways Maylani's Coconut Stout Pike Chocofest 2014 Boka and chocolate covered potato chips Steelhead Diner's Signature Chocolate Pecan Pie Tartletts with Bourbon Chantilly and Cocoa Nibs Pike Chocofest 2014 a taste of the chocolate with Copper leaf and the chocolate brioche w mousse and cherry

Meanwhile, Honest Biscuits generously sampled 3 mini-biscuits- Beecher’s Flagship Cheese biscuits, some sort of gluten free one that my eyes glazed over past when I saw they also had Theo Chocolate and bacon biscuits. I am not ashamed to tell you I went to that table more than once and was wrapping some of those biscuits to eat the next day.
Pike Chocofest 2014, Honest Biscuits Pike Chocofest 2014, Honest Biscuits, Beecher's Flagship Cheese biscuits Pike Chocofest 2014, Honest Biscuits, Theo Chocolate and bacon biscuits

One of my favorite combinations was chocolate sprinkled on cheese, specifically Mt Townsend Creamery‘s cheeses sprinkled with grated Theo Chocolates). Combinations of cheese and chocolate included here Seastack with Theo’s 70% Ginger, Red Alder with Theo’s Coconut Curry, and New Moon with 75% Milk Chocolate!
Pike Chocofest 2014 Theo Chocolate and Mt Townsend cheese "Pike

Another great combination was the Chocolate Covered Raspberry beer cocktail, which combines Lindemans Lambic Framboise, a raspberry ale, with Samuel Smith’s Organic Chocolate Stout, courtesy of importer Merchant Du Vin.
Pike Chocofest 2014, A great combination was the Chocolate Raspberry beer cocktail, which combines Lindemans Lambic Framboise, a raspberry ale, with Samuel Smith's Organic Chocolate Stout

Thankfully, there were also some other items to give you a break from all the chocolate. For instance, I really liked the Kestrel Late Harvest Chardonnay, which is a sweet dessert wine that is a steal at $18 a bottle. Pike Brewing also had a line for their BBQ Ribs meat vehicle for the Kilt Lifter BBQ sauce, accompanied by a Kimchee Cole Slaw (the Pike Kilt Lifter is their Scotch Ale), and offered some pretzel bread bites at one of their beer stations along with their Tinkertown Tart and Pike Octopus Ink beers.

The Trace Restaurant Kalua Pork Sliders were popular, as were the Metropolitan Market presented Ploughman’s Platter with Irish Cashel Blue topped wtih bacon and drizzed with honey, Colliers Welsh Cheddar, Olympia Provisions’ Salami (creminielli, wild boar) and Cornichon and Onion Mix. Maybe I went back for two helpings of that Cashel Blue mixture.
Pike Chocofest 2014 a vehicle for Pike Kilt Lifter Bbq sauce Pike Chocofest 2014- some of the offerings of pretzels and beer from Pike. I Like Pike Pike Chocofest 2014, Kalua Pork Sliders were popular Pike Chocofest 2014, Metropolitan Market presented a Ploughman's Platter with Irish Cashel Blue topped wtih bacon and drizzed with honey, Colliers Welsh Cheddar, Olympia Provisions' Salami (creminielli, wild boar) and Cornichon and Onion Mix.

Seastar brought Porcini Mushroom Soup with Truffle Crème, and it being Seattle, of course there were some seafood highlights, thanks to Taylor Shellfish patiently shucking Shigoku and Kumamoto Oysters all evening.
"Seastar Pike Chocofest 2014, thanks to Taylor Shellfish patiently shucking Shigoku and Kumamoto Oysters all evening

We both really enjoyed the vendor of Finn River Cidery as well, with their brandy dessert fruit wines including a tart Black Currant and they also offered a spicy Habanero Cider with balanced sweet with a bit of fiery burn. Finn River was one of the 5 Ciders/Mead vendors that participated. There were multiple samplings of Spirits along with the available beverages of Beer (13 vendors) and Wine (9 vendors)- but with 18 Spirit and Distillery Vendors there was no way I could visit them all! I couldn’t possibly highlight all the fabulous vendors.
Finn River Cidery booth at Pike Chocofest 2014 <a href=

It finally was 9pm, and we took an evening stroll back to Edgewater, with its roaring outdoor fireplace greeting us and then turned on the fireplace in our room to snuggle up. So far, we had been in Seattle for about 7 hours. We had no more tummy room, but stopped to check out the cool Six Seven hotel restaurant. We oohed and ahhed over their menu, which uses backlighting to help you read the menu, so smart!
Edgewater hotel, Seattle, at night with its big roaring fireplace outside its entrance Edgewater hotel, Seattle, the cool Six Seven hotel restaurant. We oohed and ahhed over their menu, which uses backlighting to help you read the menu, so smart!

Museum Monday – Pacific Science Center for Modernist Cuisine and Butterflies

The next day, we ordered room service breakfast before packing up and walking a little over half a mile to Pacific Science Center to check out the Modernist Cuisine exhibit before it started to travel starting February 17. The exhibit includes about 100 photos selected from the Modernist Cuisine body of work, some that were not even published in their various Modernist Cuisine books previously. Along with this exhibit, putting together this collection also resulted in a new Modernist Cuisine tome, The Photography of Modernist Cuisine. Note this is a food photography book, not a recipe book like their others. But, I personally think viewing it in the exhibit, with its large print, is the best way to admire the outcome of their work. If you want to learn more about how, you will want the book.

The photography exhibit definitely showcase a merge of Food, Art, and Science together.  It was fascinating being able to see so much exquisite detail in the larger than life formats- many of the prints you see were my size! They had to do a lot of engineering and inventions in order to create these photos.

My favorite photos were of the cross-sections like the work with the noodles and shrimp, as well as the levitating sandwiches, such as the Mushroom Swiss Burger you see next to the Mac and Cheese. My photos don’t nearly do it justice- I just am sharing a hint of how beautiful some of the work really is, if you haven’t heard of the Modernist Cuisine books or the Cooking Lab in Bellevue before.

Museum Selfie, checking out the Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center Checking out the Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center: Variations on Pesto, and Infused Butters, both by Chris Hoover 2011 Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center: Mac and Cheese by Chris Hoover 2011 and Levitating Hamburger by Ryan Matthew Smith 2009Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center: Wok Stir Fry by Ryan Matthew Smith 2008 Checking out the Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center Checking out the Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science CenterChecking out the Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center Checking out the Modernist Cuisine Exhibit at Pacific Science Center: A Panorama of Steak by Nathan Myhrvoid 2011

Museum Selfie by duh, me; Variations on Pesto, and Infused Butters, both by Chris Hoover 2011; Mac and Cheese by Chris Hoover 2011 and Levitating Hamburger by Ryan Matthew Smith 2009; Wok Stir Fry by Ryan Matthew Smith 2008; A few photos of behind the scenes setup behind some of the cross-section photos in Modernist Cuisine; A Panorama of Steak by Nathan Myhrvoid 2011, all © Modernist Cuisine LLC. Modernist Cuisine exhibit.

They haven’t announced what and when all the cities are the exhibit is traveling to as of this date, so I wanted to check it out in case it did not come to Portland and who knows how long before/if it returned to the Northwest.  According to their Modernist Cuisine exhibit website they will be announcing those stops soon. The exhibit was only in Seattle for four months, and these four months were its premiere before starting it’s 3 year journey around the world. If it comes into your area, I recommend taking a look, and then picking a nice place for dinner afterwards! Here’s a bit more from the TED talk by Nathan Myhrvold: Cut your food in half

After this exhibit, we stopped by the Butterfly House, where it’s 80 degrees F, to warm up a bit before we walked by the Seattle Space Needle and downtown to Yardhouse for lunch (after that photo of the wok and noodles, I was really craving garlic noodles!). We had just a smidgen of time to even make a stop at a branch of F’s company office to say hello. Then, we caught the 2pm Bolt Bus back to Portland, arriving in Portland around 5pm, and walked home to rest for our work week.

And that’s how we spent a little less than 24 hours in Seattle!

Warm up with the butterflies at Pacific Science Center it's 80F in here Warm up with the butterflies at Pacific Science Center it's 80F in here Warm up with the butterflies at Pacific Science Center it's 80F in here Seattle Space Needle

If you haven’t been before, I highly recommend visiting the Chihuly Garden and Glass Museum here- I covered this is a previous post. It is my favorite of the offerings at Seattle Center, even higher on my must do list than going up to the Space Needle! Portland Monthly has their own picks for 12 hours of eating in Seattle (and I have never been to Mamnoon), but my recommendations include (I have a big spreadsheet wishlist, as I often do when I travel, but here’s the highlights I have confidence in)

  • Breakfast: Serious Biscuit, Lola, Portage Bay Cafe, Skillet Diner, Toulouse Petit
  • Lunch: Revel, Serious Pie, progressive eating by Pike Place Market, Salami Cured Meats, Paseo
  • Drinks: Bathtub Gin, Bravehorse Tavern, Tavern Law, Quinn’s Pub, Rob Roy
  • Dinner: The Whale Wins, Spinasse, Shiro’s, Sitka and Spruce
  • Things to Do: Pike Place Market Wandering (or take a food tour), Chihuly Garden and Glass (if you can come late so you can see it in daytime and also when it is lit up at night), Olympic Sculpture Park, Seward Park for great view of Mt Rainier if clear, Kerry Park for a view of the Seattle skyline, Theo Chocolate tour

I’ve visited Seattle several times, so feel free to also browse other recaps I’ve done to see other deliciousness and activities I’ve enjoyed!

Photo of me between two Modernist Cuisine exhibit photos at Pacific Science Center: Mac and Cheese by Chris Hoover 2011 and Levitating Hamburger by Ryan Matthew Smith 2009
Proof I was there- a rare photo that I am actually in!

Have you ever done a quickie Seattle getaway? Do you plan to- and where would you go? Can I recommend two upcoming events – this coming weekend is the Seattle Wine and Food Experience, and at the end of March is the Taste Washington at CenturyLink Field Event Center on March 29 and 30- both big food festivals!

Signature