Grilled Cheese Grill- Cheesus and Quesus

What could be a more satisfying reward for surviving a 4 mile snowshoe at Trillium Lake (especially the seemingly neverending uphill curve back to the parking lot on the return loop) then a burger between two grilled cheese sandwiches? To Grilled Cheese Grill we go!

Last time I went to the Alberta location, this time I went to Southeast location in order to check out their double decker bus, and show my guests the “outdoor dining food cart” that is more like roadside casual dining. Bad timing on our part, we got there as the Cartathlon people were still wrapping up, so the bus was actually packed on both floors! We got our food to go, giving us a chance to go back home to change out of our clothes anyway. The actual “cart” part is exactly the same as the other location: only the type of bus that serves as an indoor seating/eating area as an alternate to their outdoor picnic benches is different. Inside the double decker there was no art to stare at on the ceiling, but the same old yearbook photos were all over the side bar seating area and booths.

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I ordered the Cheesus and Quesus. As my sister put it, “burger with two grilled cheese sandwiches as the bun. Basically 3 meals in one!!” The Cheesus is their sandwich with Pickles and American Cheese in one grilled cheese “bun”, Grilled Onions and Colby Jack in the other grilled cheese “bun”. and then Lettuce, Tomato, Ketchup, Mustard and 1/3lb Burger in between. The Quesus is the spicy cousin of the Cheesus, with with Tillamook Pepperjack and Jalapenos in one grilled cheese half, Cheddar and Onions in the other grilled cheese half (the top half in this case at least how I unwrapped it at home for photos). Same Lettuce, Tomato, Ketchup, Mustard, and 1/3lb burger in between.

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I cut the sandwiches in half hoping we could each eat half and then continue on to beer and dinner, but we scarfed down everything in minutes. It was greasy but too good.

burger with two grilled cheese sandwiches as the bun, Grilled Cheese Grill, food cart, bus, roadside dining, double decker bus, grilled cheese

burger with two grilled cheese sandwiches as the bun, Grilled Cheese Grill, food cart, bus, roadside dining, double decker bus, grilled cheese

If this looks a bit familiar, this is similar to Brunchbox‘s offering of “You Can Haz Cheeseburger” which I have had twice. The meat was cooked better at Brunchbox- it was done medium, you can even still see the pink meat inside, so the burger was juicier, and they put a slice of cheese with the burger to help hold the grilled cheeses to the burger. Meanwhile, Grilled Cheese Grill puts most of the toppings- grilled onions, jalapeno- inside the grilled cheese, and offers more interesting combinations of grilled cheese “buns”. If I wanted to clog my arteries again in one meal and was going to get a grilled cheese burger, I think I would go with Brunchbox, because the burger portion rates higher than the grilled cheese bun portion. But, a lot of it depends on location as well- Grilled Cheese Grill is definitely more convenient if you are on the East side of the river, and offers a seating area, unlike Brunchbox, and if anyone was in the mood for a grilled cheese and soup or a vegetarian was in tow, GCG might be a better option. Check them both out and judge for yourself.

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Gaufre Gourmet Food Cart

Before our trip to Fred Meyer on a quest for tire chains (that we would not be using but had to carry just in case) to go to Trillium Lake, we headed out for breakfast/lunch. My sister voted between a stop at a brick and morter for crepes or a cart for waffles, and she went with waffles and her first Portland food cart. When we arrived, my choice of Flavourspot was not open for whatever reason – it’s a risk sometimes with food carts, and especially in the winter, and especially as this past weekend was just ending a very cold spell that froze many cart water tanks (though I didn’t see anything on FB or Twitter, oh well).

Backup plan! So we went a few blocks down to F’s recommendation of Gaufre Gourmet. Gaufre does a slightly more traditional waffle menu from their relatively new cart- they top mini waffles  with sweet or/and savory, rather then making a dutch taco (where the waffle is the “taco”). You can order whole servings or halves of any of their waffle menu offerings.

Savory offerings. One was a special for the day/week/season?, a “street taco waffle” with seasonal shredded chicken with pico de gallo, salsa verde, sour cream and guacamole on a cornbread jalapeno waffle. I didn’t get to try this one, but other F seemed to like it, and it sure looked good.

street taco waffle with seasonal shredded chicken with pico de gallo, salsa verde, sour cream and guacamole on a cornbread jalapeno waffle, Gaufre Gourmet Food Cart, liege waffles, sweet waffles, savory waffles, mini waffles

The other savory offering we ordered was my half order of an ABC waffle: arugula, bacon, camembert cheese, and fig jam. They sure were generous with the arugula, and although I liked the combination of the acid from the dressed arugula with the savory salt of the bacon and soft lightly sweet of the fig, I wish that the cheese had been more creamy melted on the waffle. You can see sorta under all the arugula and bacon that the camembert got warmed enough to sweat but not get oozy to release its butteryness.

ABC waffle: arugula, bacon, camembert cheese, and fig jam, Gaufre Gourmet Food Cart, liege waffles, sweet waffles, savory waffles, mini waffles

Sweet offerings. The Milk and Honey: goat cheese mousse, pistachios, and balsamic caramel sauce, was lightly sweet, but became overwhelming after getting halfway through it. The goat cheese mousse was delicious though- I would recomend only getting a half waffle on this instead a whole. The same advice can be applied to the the Nutty Pearfessor (ok, cute name) with nutella, pears, caramel sauce and candied pecans, unless you really love nutella.

Milk and Honey: goat cheese mousse, pistachios, and balsamic caramel sauce, Gaufre Gourmet Food Cart, liege waffles, sweet waffles, savory waffles, mini waffles Nutty Pearfessor: with nutella, pears, caramel sauce and candied pecans, Gaufre Gourmet Food Cart, liege waffles, sweet waffles, savory waffles, mini waffles

I thought the combination of both sweet and savory can be best found in the Maple Bacon waffle. I think this is better then Voodoo’s maple bacon bar, without having to wait in line and isn’t as sickly sweet as the doughnut, and the ratio of bacon to sweet is more in line to distribute the salty with the super sweet. Pictured below is a half order. I actually saved this and heated it up later so that the maple frosting melted off a bit (there was a bit too much frosting) but the thick crispy bacon definitely still held up in crispness a few days later!

Gaufre Gourmet Food Cart, liege waffles, sweet waffles, savory waffles, mini waffles, Maple Bacon waffle

This kept us pretty full up to dinnertime- and Gaufre’s location on Burnside and 4th makes for easy parking on 4th when you want to quickly stop and grab some deliciousness from a cart and go. Gaufre will take credit cards and also offers warm beverages on their menu varying from coffee to hot chocolate to cider too, they have some picnic benches around the carts… basically everything you need to get your morning (or erhm late morning) started. You will need to use their plastic silverware to eat any of their waffles- they are messy, and even then you may need to lick your sticky fingers so if you can bring a wet napkin for each diner that would be ideal. Their location, no surprise, is also open at late night so you can walk only a block or two from the clubs in the vicinity for a wee hour waffle bite. Why get fast food or wait in line for Saturday brunch at a restaurant when you can have food like this at a food cart?

Everything was a bit too sweet for my taste, so maybe next time I visit (I have a Groupon for them that I had not been carrying since I switched purses to snowshoe), I might ask them to dial back on the sweetness and that could make it work for my palatte, which has always leaned more towards savory than sweet. Parker’s Waffles is still my favorite waffle cart, but they put entire scrambles and meats liked pulled pork in between their waffles, which they just brush with maple butter or sweet cream butter, so it’s not a fair comparison. Waffle Window would be more fair competitorto Gaufre- but I haven’t had them either so can’t judge yet. Since Gaufre is new, it has the advantage right now of no huge line… yet- but given the devoted followers of the other 3 waffle carts I have named, it may be just a matter of time.

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A Progressive Meal on Alberta Highlights: Grilled Cheese Grill, Mash Tun Brew Pub

I finally made it to the Grilled Cheese Grill, a cart that also has a bus so you can eat your melted cheese and bread inside the toasty school bus if you don’t want to sit on the benches. The bus has lots of interesting art to look at on the ceiling, and Trivia Pursuit cards on the table, that is if you aren’t already having fun looking at all the old school photos that are printed on the table and bar. The photos I took were parts of the ceiling by our booth that particularly caught my eye: panda mailbox with panda-man, a hummingbird with an owl with horns visiting on its lap while pet mice crawl around it, striped bear-things and no-faces.

Grilled Cheese Grill, Portland Oregon, food truck, grilled cheese, bus Grilled Cheese Grill, Portland Oregon, food truck, grilled cheese, bus Grilled Cheese Grill, Portland Oregon, food truck, grilled cheese, busGrilled Cheese Grill, Portland Oregon, food truck, grilled cheese, bus

I greedily ordered two sandwiches and ate half of each. First was “The Hot Brie”: Melty Brie, Red Peppers, Tomato, and Spicy Mustard on Sourdough.  This turned out more greasy then I liked, with the brie and red peppers getting mushy and squishing out of the sandwich.

The Hot Brie, Melty Brie, Red Peppers, Tomato, and Spicy Mustard on Sourdough, Grilled Cheese Grill, Portland Oregon, food truck, grilled cheese, bus
The second sandwich, the “BABs”: bacon, Apples, Bleu Cheese, Swiss on Rye. A great mix of melty cheese with crunchy bacon and apples, I would get this again.
BABs, bacon, Apples, Bleu Cheese, Swiss on Rye, Grilled Cheese Grill, Portland Oregon, food truck, grilled cheese, bus

The next stop of our progressive eating (it started and ended at the Kennedy School, which is where we stayed for the weekend) was Alberta Co-op for snacks, and then Mash Tun Brew pub for a bacon bloody mary and some local beers. Our snack while we had our beverages was a pretty tasty “Tempeh Things”- fried tempeh, served buffalo or barbecue style (we asked for half and half as they weren’t too busy) with house-made veganaise. Both sauces were flavorful but in different ways- the spicy slightly drier buffalo, and the smokier, more sticky barbecue, and the crisp texture of the tempeh was a great vehicle, better then the traditional chicken wing since we could bite right in. The veganaise was not as good as a traditional ranch offering though, offering some of the creaminess but little more than that. Still, we were impressed how vegetarian friendly this brewpub was in providing a dozen decent options that weren’t just salads or hummus or a frozen veggie burger (they make their own veggie burger in fact here), and we wouldn’t mind coming back for a second visit to try a full meal.

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Deschutes Street Fare 2010

Deschutes Street Fare was a street festival event that featured sampler size street fare from ten food carts, paired with Deschutes beer tasters, to benefit Morrison Child and Family Services. It's just getting summer-like hot in the past day or so, which meant that when the gates opened at 5pm there was full on sunshine and sweat as everyone seemed to come directly from work. Within a few hours, it started to calm down so everyone was no longer elbow to elbow, and half the street started to get some shade as the sun went on its way down.

Except for the crowd (which was a good thing for Morrison, but meant that when the space got full it was very uncomfortable and they even limited admission for a while because of reaching capacity… not sure how you calculate capacity on a street but I'm sure there must be an algorithm), I have no real complaints. Obviously, they were not sure what the turn-out was going to be, and since they had only set aside the outside block between Deschutes and Armory and no space inside Deschutes itself there wasn't a lot of space to go to. As comparison, the Beer n Burgers Event had also only been a block and that space had been fine (not even included the sidewalk), though they also only had 5 stands, not 10, and no musicians or stages.

I got a sampler pass, which got me in the door and also 7 tokens for $25, allowing me to sample 7 out of the 10 pairings. I carefully tried to plan my calories for the day based on this. When I arrived, the line for prepaid vs at the door was the same, so apparently the only advantage was that online you could pay with a credit card while at the door was cash only, and even those who had already decided what to buy got to enjoy everyone at the door reading through how many carts there were and trying to guesstimate how many tokens to get. I wish there were more reward for those who plan ahead and guarantee a paid sale before the event, but I also had the advantage of already knowing my cart visit order.

First was Slow & Low, for their cantonese pork belly Bahn Mi with housemade kimchi, kimchi mayo, cilantro, iceburg lettuce, and fennel pickle, paired with Cascade Ale. This was very satisfying, though there was a little too much bread competing with that tasty pork belly. Needed less doughy bread, or more belly (fat and all, as I would expect from a traditioanl bahn mi). Cascade went so naturally with this I didn't even think about it.

Next was a stop at Grilled Cheese Grill, which has been on my wishlist for a while, and still is after this tasty example of a jalapeno popper sandwich of roasted jalapeno peppers with colby jack cheese, cream cheese, crumbled corn tortilla chips on grilled sourdough bread. It was matched with a green lakes organic ale to try to cool the spice. Extra love for them because they gave out branded frisbees, which were great for balancing food and drink while standing. I saw that some thought this had too much heat and couldn't finish it, but I had no problems.

Garden State came with their famous meatball parmesan sliders with all natural beef and pork in a big meatball covered with mozzarella and marinara, paired with Mt St Hellens keller beer. It is as seriously filling as it appears. 

Mum's Kitchen offered a South African influenced Indian spicy garlic pork curry with fresh squeezed IPA, a pairing which just didn't work for me.

My palatte was immediately refreshed and cheered by Flavour Spot's sausage&maple dutch taco (waffle sandwich) and their maple pecan version, both paired with maiboc. Extra shoutout for providing their branded wet naps for sticky finger cleanup, so thoughtful.

 

Potato Champion's poutine from Spudnik, paired with alma NWPA, met expectations. Really though, getting the real deal from the cart at SE 12th and Hawthorne after a few drinks where it is more loaded with gravy and chunks of rogue cheese can't compare to a sampler.

The excellent finish was Oregon Ice Works strawberry gelato, which I had with Green Lakes Organic Ale. The strawberry was the best of the three offerings they had, the other three being peach and chocolate black butte porter.

This means I passed on Whiffie's bbq brisket and mozzarella fried pie paired with Hop in the Dark- I was tempted for the beer alone, it being the only dark beer, but I had Whiffie's already at the Bite. For similar reasons of having experienced them before, I passed on Pyro Pizza and their margherita pizza on wheat crust with Twilight ale. I also passed on Ali Baba's gluten free chicken and kabob with gluten free pale ale, though the gluten free pairing was clever.

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Bite of Oregon: Day 1 (Friday)

After a pretty intensely busy day at work, I dropped by on opening day of Bite of Oregon for an evening of a few food cart tastings and wine tasting at the Wine Pavilion.

My first stop once through the gate was PBJ’s Grilled, a cart that had wowed me at the Food Cart Festival and I just haven’t had the opportunity to visit the cart yet. They were offering three of the dozen gourmet upgrades of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches that compose their cart menu. Just as the first visit, I still think how genius this is, and why haven’t more people in the US stumbled upon this? If cheeseburgers, grilled cheese, mac and cheese, tacos and sliders have been transformed from comfort food childhood simplicity to adult nostalgic but more complex flavor combination profiles that reinterpret something we’ve taken for granted, why has peanut butter and jelly been left out? Thankfully, at least PBJ’s had taken up that gauntlet.

I started out with The Hot Hood, a $3 for 1/4 a sandwich taster of their toasted pbj interpretation which included black cherry jam, jalapeno, bacon, and peanut butter. Similar to what I thought when the Spicy Thai (which uses sriracha and curry to give its bite), there seemed no question on why jalapeno and bacon should be part of a sandwich except why shouldn’t I always add bacon! The bacon particularly gave a little extra crunch to what is usually a pretty smushy sandwich. I admit that when I make peanut butter and jelly at home, I always use crunchy versions of whatever nut butter I have, so I really like the crunch to go with the chew.

Also, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches are very food porn-tastic in photos.

The other offering I tried was the Oregonian, this time between grilled challah bread were marionberry and Rogue creamery blue cheese and hazelnut butter. Maybe I had this twice even. Although I tried to sell this to others, they seemed afraid of the blue cheese, though at least on three tasters of this sandwich, they were careful to add only enough blue cheese to add a bit of savory creaminess and not let the blue cheese get strong enough to overwhelm the sandwich at all, and you couldn’t even smell it. It, along with the hazelnut butter, were more of just a little subtle highlight of support, as the marionberry definitely held the lead role. I like blue cheese, and having had blue cheese with a bit of berry topping often at wine tastings, I could have stood to have more blue cheese on my sandwich, though I understand the more cautious approach since many people don’t like it, thinking it’s salty or pungent.

 

This tastes better then it looks… though you might consider clicking and then select the full-size version of the photos to see the larger version of this photo anyway. Personally, I liked the Hot Hood better between the two. And, for Day 1, PBJ’s Grilled was my overall most tasty Bite winner.

The next stop was at Whiffies, which for this tasting created small pastry puff versions the size of my point and shoot camera (or basically half a hot pocket). They had their BBQ Beef and the Chicken Pot Pie when I visited. Both were ok- my opinion was that although the sizes were very taste-friendly, it changed the ratio of buttery flaky pie to gooey inside contents. The way to make this work is, similar to a samosa or empanada or the harder to find Thai curry puffs :D, make sure the inside filling is intense enough to balance out the fried outside shell… and in these sampler tasting portions, I don’t think it did. I still loved the taste of the deep fried pie container, but the fillings didn’t have enough flavor. I know at the Food Cart Festival though, when they just cut up their normal sized pies for sampling, the BBQ pie I had there had offered a lot more sauce and flavor, so I blame the smaller size here.

Actual size:

Filling close-up

Switching from chicken pot pie to BBQ Beef

Filling Closeup with summer sunshine making it look better then it tasted:

Not pictured were two other visits to food booths, sort of. We stopped at the Pie Spot, which offered pie holes and pie hole bites, and sampled the bourbon peach and pecan- bourbon peach won that round. From the Chef’s Table, which rotates various small plates based on what chefs are manning that slot on different days and times, Domo Dog offered the Major Domo Dog- smoked sausage, teriyaki onion, ponzo-mayo, flaked seaweed, sesame seeds, and red sweet sauce. The teriyaki really came through for a moist earthy sweet flavor.

Wine-wise, I stopped at Rizzo, Girardet, Hillcrest, Palotai, Zerba, Spangler, David Hill, Capitello, and Duck Pond.

  • Don’t bother with David Hill- I perked at seeing ports, but they were terrible, too much alcohol.
  • I was forced to try Duck Pond and was immediately annoyed by multiple askings to pay for the $1 taster despite stating wanting to try more then one wine. None of the other booths were so pushy for immediate payment.
  • At Rizzo, ignore the whites, at least at this showing. The reds are interesting, and unfortunately this was the very first winery I stopped at and I remembered to start making notes after the visit was over.
  • Girardet has a ice-wine style called “Frostbite” that has the sweetness but not much complexity if you’ve actually had Canadian icewines like Inniskillin or Jackson-Triggs before.
  • Hillcrest has more of a traditional profile to its wines. What I remember most is that they actually still stomp down grapes the for one/some of their wines, but I also have a strong aversion to feet. I might try them again but I thought a lot of them were young for me though I really liked the winemaker
  • Palotai was showing some newly/recently bottled wines that have potential but need some growing up time- my favorite was the syrah with its black peppery nose and overtones in taste but is not spicy, a bottle I’m still thinking about (I didn’t immediately buy a bottle, as I wanted to think about it… and I’m still thinking about it. I tend to buy a lot of reds and we still have many in our “cellar”- this one is interesting and unique, but do I really need it?).
  • Zerba had an amazing malbec that outshone the syrah and syrah port we tried because of its complexity.
  • The goal was actually to try to appreciate some whites, and we finally found it at Spangler with their crisp Sauvignon Blanc that didn’t have a too sweet or grassy or acidic legs. Unfortunately, they only had their syrah and not their petite syrah that a friend had recommended (the syrah wasn’t bad though- I personally like them darker)
  • We were surprisingly blown away by Capitello’s New Zealand-grape wines, which were not afraid to hide their bell pepper overtones. I know many wineries think this is a “problem”, and perhaps that’s why Capitello offered both the New Zealand grape version and the more expected taste in the Oregon-grape version. Whatever. It’s just like wineries now thinking they don’t want to over-oak… and no one makes those super creamy and buttery Chardonnays anymore in extreme rebellion because Chardonnay’s used to always be that way, and now instead of being able to get both styles you usually find only slightly oaked (if oaked at all) and there’s barely a difference between it and pinot gris and blancs. Bah. I bought the most wines here- the New Zealand version of the pinot noir as well as the sauvignon blanc. Their cuvee pinot noir is beautiful though pricey- and is also the type that though is complex now, is going to mature into old-world classic beauty in the next decade or so if you are willing to invest the money and cellar time.

Today, after the cheese class, I might go again. I have my eye on mainly the Chef’s Table tent again because of Belly‘s offering of a pork belly dip with bacon jus. If I get there in time for Kenny and Zuke‘s pastrami reuben sliders, I might try a taste depending on the visual appeal and taste pricetag- I might save the experience for actually visiting their establishment instead (although when I did for the first time, somehow I got lulled away from the pastrami for their still quite delicious chicken salad and their bagels and cream cheese).

Sunday afternoon/evening at Chef’s Table is highlighted for me because of Pitxi’s Restaurant and Wine Bar’s offering of Duck Mousseline with Berry Chutney Tomato Confit Bread, and also Soluna Grill’s Oregon Mushrooms, Caramelized Shallots, Bacon and Roasted Garlic-Corn Flan. I might try to reward H50 for having the balls to list as one of their booth options “nitro whipped sorbet in black peppercorn cone with balsalmic sauce”- unlike most of the other restaurant booths which often went the safe route of what is easily mass-produced in the booth environment.

I should note that when you walk in to Bite, the pamphlets list certain options being offered at the various booths. You should just know that just from these two carts, they serve what they want, so you should always stop and see what they are really offering rather then going off of the printings of the event guide.

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