Stanford’s + Newport Seafood Grill

I tried out Stanford’s Restaurant because I was in the area to get new glasses and contacts after my annual eye exam. Ok, maybe I only go there every 3 years. My prescription doesn’t change though, and it’s usually because I scratch up my glasses. Last time it was the lens. Now they have protective coating on the lens but I scratched some of the paint off the frame. I apparently abuse my glasses by throwing them off when I go to sleep.

They are still on order, so I have no photo with my new glasses. My contacts prescription is switched out to one that I can change out every 2 weeks instead of monthly. Every time I go to clean them they still feel really bizarre to me, but I can definitely feel how thin they are. Sort of plasma-like too in feel when I try to rub them with the solution. However, I do have photos of my lunch.

Stanford’s is a local chain restaurant that tries to fit in the niche of being a family restaurant but being classy at the same time so you feel like you are dining out, not just eating food so you don’t have to cook. There are many restaurants in the Chicago suburban malls that fit is similar in feel to places like Wildfire, Maggiano’s, etc other restaurants in Lettuce Entertain You chain. It’s a safe choice, though it doesn’t wow you either, but it’s just fine considering that niche. After all, it’s sitting on that line between local (which it really tries to advertise as – good food but casual but nice and also friendly) but ultimately it’s a corporate venture. The menu and atmosphere is designed to be just good enough for everyone.

We started out with 4-Cheese Cheesy Focaccia Bread. I too wonder why it was necessary to clarify the 4-Cheese with Cheesy. it’s garlic butter brushed focaccia bread sliced up into breadsticks and topped with Jack, Cheddar, Mozzarella, Provolone cheese. This was ok- sorry, can’t beat Domino’s cheesy bread.

This meaty looking deliciousness looks like little steaks, but actually is wood-fire grilled portobello mushrooms with seasonal greens, rosemary vinaigrette, basil aïoli. Portobello mushrooms are always a great veggie option.

Next, here is one of their specialities, their mac n cheese with Gruyère, Fontina, Cheddar, bacon. This was a pretty good mac n cheese, something I’d expect to see in a Food Network recipe.

My close favorite though was the Knife and Fork Crab and Artichoke Sandwich topped with sliced tomatoes, aged Parmesan and Cheddar cheeses. This was less rich then the mac n cheese, and although I love cheese I had to take the mac n cheese home to enjoy for a second meal it was so heavy. The crab and artichoke sandwich though I had no problem polishing off. I think having a little mixed green salad with vinaigrette would have been the last bit to balance the sandwich and fries.


Also in this same neighborhood is another similar restaurant (I would even say competing execution of the same concept), the Newport Seafood Grill. Here my entree of the “seafood favorite” (as advertised on their menu” of Seared Alaskan Scallops with butternut squash risotto, lemon, basil, and Parmesan could only boast that it had excellent scallops, but there are only 4 in there. The risotto is more like Rice-a-roni, soggy and sitting almost in a soup, the rice is overdone. But the scallops were excellent. And, the mini-sweets were really great: just enough for a taste without having to go all overboard in sweetness. I wish more restaurants offered this.

Scallops, the only redeeming part of the dish, thank goodness they didn’t ruin those…

The Chocolate Puddin’: Rich, smooth chocolate, vanilla crème anglaise, toasted hazelnuts, served in a demitasse. Super rich chocolate, just as advertised.

I adored my cute chocolate trifle cordial of chocolate cake, raspberry sauce, chocolate sauce, vanilla crème anglaise, toasted hazelnuts layered in a cordial glass.

Last week I was in the Silicon Valley. Next: Boston, Chicago, Shanghai then training through Suzhou to Nanjing, flight to Shenzhen, a weekend in Hong Kong, and then hitting Taipei before returning home to Portland. I had a wonderful time catching up to my old college roomie H and her family, and we dined at the cool concept restaurant Foreign Cinema. I was having such a great time I forgot to take any photos.

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Brunch at Portland City Grill

Portland City Grill is located on the 30th floor of the US Bank Tower- the big pink building you can see downtown, towering over all the other buildings. Large windows give diners fortunate enough to sit close enough to the windows impressive sky high views over the city, the Willamette its bridges, the sprinkling of different houses on hills, and on a clear day gorgeous views of Mt St Helens and/or Mt Hood. It gives a unique perspective of how beautifully designed and well-situated Portland is. Looking down at the buildings, you see relatively wide clean streets that seem well-organized but not too cluttered or crowded, there are building of many floors but nothing that is exactly a wall of skyscraper steel and glass. The different type of bridges spanning over the river show a aesthetically pleasing mix of different architectural styles while ships and river ports show that a waterfront that still is business front. Just beyond though you can see busyness of the city turn into more and more trees and homes and then hills of what seem to be just green trees and then a mountain watching over it all. We're not talking looking even that far, like the vastness of LA or Chicago or New York- it looks seemingly like just an hour drive away.

Indeed, the view and perspective over Portland is probably why you would come to Portland City Grill. The inside of the restaurant feels surprisingly dark and closed in despite the huge windows surrounding the outer walls- wood beams hanging from the ceiling lower the space, and the arrangement of tables and chairs really let those sitting right by the window (literally right against the window) soak up the view, but everyone else could have been at any other restaurant in the city. The booths right in the back were raised slightly, but were so far back and in the dark that being in a booth was the only plus. All the other tables are normal table and chair and bench arrangements on a flat floor. Why they don't have a gradually elevated floor and more open space to see the windows to best please their customers is a huge missed opportunity for them.

The service at brunch was pleasant and smooth, with lots of mimosas and coffee refills, making for a good dining experience. They offer unlimited tea and coffee and mimosa refills, but when I saw the bloody mary bar they had set up, that's what I went for. You get a choice of Absolut – the original, Citron, or Pepper flavor, which is served in its own little mini-carafe so you can control the amount of vodka you'd like to start with. The fixins bar offers you multiple options to fill your glass with- I stuffed my glass with shrimp and pepperoni.

The kitchen also offers up a free mini-tasting to start with- in this case a couple slices of cantelope, a cube of honeydew, yogurt with few berries, and a mini bear claw. The bear claw was pretty hard (couldn't even cut my knife through it), the fruit not very juicy, but I could just eat the yogurt all breakfast.

 

Onto the main course. My stuffed french toast of brioche filled with mascarpone and topped with a fresh berry compote and a little whipped cream was a soft sweet mouthful mixed with tartness of the berry, though I was surprised that it came just as plated- bread and cheese and berry, and no side. The same with the banana bourbon pancakes of buttermilk pancakes, topped with bourbon glazed bananas, candied pecans, and vanilla whipped cream.
 

 

Both these dishes are rich (the pancakes especially so) and really needed a good side of scrambled egg or hash browns to help it out. The side of potatoes we ended up ordering to share tried to correct this, but we had to order this separately and ask for it (it wasn't even listed as a side on the menu – on proteins like eggs, sausage, bacon, ham or lox were) instead of a kitchen that put together that balance for you given the $15 cost of the dish- like my other favorite brunch spots, Mother's and Screen Door would have plated. Unlike these options, Portland City Grill does take reservations so as not to leave you standing in a line outside waiting (I hate starting a morning like that) and am more refined atmosphere, but why didn't that care extend to putting together their dishes? As it was, the side of potatoes we did get was pretty small- look at the relative size for $3. The potatoes were so so- crispy on the outside, though a lil undercooked on the inside, and needed seasoning

The Crab Cake Benedict, with dungeness crab cakes, English muffin, asparagus, and pimento hollandaise, at least came with a good amount of crab, and the side of potatoes- though for a $20 some dollar dish, would you expect nothing less? I didn't try this dish, but I would like to go back to give it a try. I scanned the dinner menu and there is no way I think the price is justified for that food- even with the view. But perhaps happy hour or another brunch, which are more reasonably priced (the duck and chicken are $20 something at dinner but are done Asian style, and other entrees like steaks and seafood take you back $30-80), can hold up for the slight premium in cost for the view and the fine dining special occasion-like atmosphere and that difference in what you get back in food in quantity and quality and even presentation compared to many other great restaurants in Portland. 

 

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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!

 

 

 

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Lunching Photos: Huber’s and Thai Derm

I had a nostalgic Thanksgiving at Huber's for lunch.

I started with a pretty decent clam chowder, and the beer bread wasn't bad: I've had better at home with the assistance of the bread machine, and with a better beer or maybe a touch more sugar it would have been a better loaf- or maybe served with a good flavored butter instead of the classic as seen in the pictures. But if you like a yeasty bread that is a softer version of cornbread in texture and parallel in doughy moistness but not as buttery as a southern biscuit, the beer bread here hits the mark. I also appreciated the homey-ness of the entire experience here, as the owner came by to ask us how our meal was and sits among the patrons keeping an eye out on everyone. To soak in the atmosphere sit in the back- though sitting by the window in the front room if you want to people-watch is also an option as many people do go by.

 

 

 

 

Their Roast Young Tom Turkey dish is served with sage dressing, fresh mashed potatoes and homemade cranberry sauce and veggies and stuffing. The turkey was moist but even swimming in the gravy was a bit bland, the stuffing not robust, the mashed potatoes thin. It made me realize how much better turkey prep and the increased complexity in mashed potatoes (adding horseradish, chives, expanding to new kinds of potatoes, etc) that has occurred since the 80s. It was a trip down memory lane, but also made me appreciate how much tastier the turkey meal has become since the advent of Food Network and food blogs and the overall emergence of foodie-dem.

I mean, I love cranberry sauce in the new forms this century which varies from a more acidic tart cranberry relish to cranberry-orange combos (again balancing the cranberry sweetness) and how about a chilled cranberry mousse to even add a contrast of a lil bit of almost gelato like texture and cool temperature to the turkey breast? With those new experiences, the classic cranberry sauce just doesn't compare equally. It was a realization how far society's tastebutds have become in the past 20 years. I remember how great I used to think this was- even that mashed potato texture with a pool of butter to try to add flavor. How innocent we were then!

 

 

The highlight lunch of the week actually was at Thai Derm, one of the Thai places I happen to frequent more often because it's a fave of one of my co-workers and I get chauffeured there, which is much more convenient then having to take public transit or walk, my usual modes of transport. This time I tried the Dungeness Crab fried rice with crabmeat, crab claws, egg, cashew nuts and a touch of curry powder.

Except for the large size of the dish (seriously all their portions are huge) it was something I might have expected to taste at any place in Thailand- I almost would expect to be in some open air restaurant right off the street at a plastic or linoleum table. Well, ok in Thailand it also would have been 30 baht, but I did save on airfare. And as usual it seemed 5 minutes after we ordered it was in front of us (I barely finished my complimentary tofu soup). Not all their dishes are great- some of the noodle ones have been watered down and the curries have an extra serving of coconut milk- but this dish also took me back to being in Chiang Mai a little over a year ago and having fried rice outside by a river. In addition, having the crunch of the cashews with the softness of the crab and egg and rice was just right. Fried rice in general is a dish that should have a light flavor (I am a fan of sweeter Thai fried rices or the oiler Chinese style with Chinese sausage and lots of garlic), and often can fall into being lightened too much for American tastes, but can also be a safe bet because the original authentic recipes doesn't have the intesity found in curries or fresh noodle dishes that are harder to recreate here in the US either. 

And, I have always loved cashews- I've actually forgotten about them since walnuts and hazelnuts are so much more commonly used here. It reminded me way back when I was a kid and the Sears used to have a candy/nut section how I was always so drawn and excited about those salted cashews, and they came in a white wax paper bag. Even as a kid I focused on the salty buttery nuts, not the sugary candy. Yet another lunch that was a lil trip down memory lane. 

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Limo Peruvian Restaurant

Limo's food and presentation is as good as Andina (one of my favorite restaurants in Portland – I was transported my first visit during a lunch, second time was a crowded dinner and was nothing special but still remembering that glow from my first time I still list it as a favorite for now).

But, atmosphere much more intimate and the entire feel is family owned and personal rather then the trendy hip vibe. I loved, loved every appetizer dish we had. It has achieved the same happy memory glow that Andina did.

I started out with a ceviche of limo cream sauce mix with fresh fish. What I really liked was not only the acidic heat toned down with a touch of cream, but that the chunks of fish were chunky like mini sashimi and fresh. I won't be able to come here without ordering a ceviche, ever, thanks to this experience. I especially look forward to this during the summer.

Another tapas like appetizer was the "Golden potatoes w/trio of sauces". The three sauces were Huancaina, Ocopa(black mint and Peanut) and Anticucho cream sauce. Soooo good. I was wiping every last bit of all three sauces off, it was a great mix of spicy, savory, and cheesy, and the potatoes were crisp on the edges and doughy inside to better absorb the incredible sauces.

 

The final piqueo was Pastel de Choclo, a cute lil savory corn pudding made with Aji Amarillo filled with Beef stew or goat cheese- I had mine with goat cheese- and then torched on top for a bit of a creme brulee texture. It is served just at the right size to compliment some of the heat in other dishes.

I can't wait to come here and order some of the entree sized dishes. I'm one of their Facebook Fans, and every Sun and Wed in January and February, they have dedicated 25% of their sales to go to the Red Cross to help victims of the Haitian earthquake- so I want to go back in the next few weeks!

 

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