Hotel 1000, and Happy Hour and Breakfast at Boka

While I was attending the Pike Chocofest last weekend in Seattle, we stayed at Hotel 1000. It was picked by me based on its proximity to Pike Place Market- which is only a few blocks. In addition, the price was reasonable, and it had great reviews on Tripadvisor, one of the my main sources in researching trips.

It came down to this hotel and Inn at the Market, but reading about how each room had a big tub with a little rubber duckie and the tub filled from the ceiling was unique enough to have me choose Hotel 1000. Yes, I did have fun in the tub with that duckie too, it was much a needed soak  to soothe my feet after walking the hills of Seattle and a lot of standing to taste/drink at the Chocofest. The way the tub is placed with a view of  the main room when the privacy screen is up, I could even watch TV.

F was impressed by the hotel- we were greeted with glasses of sparkling wine on arrival to make us feel like a VIP or like we were on our honeymoon, and when we came back later there were robes waiting and our beds were turned down with chocolates and the TV set to the sound of a beach at sunset.  The Molton Brown products smelled great- and I confess when I was in the public restroom on the lobby level, they had all the soap and lotion scents available to choose from and I tried several.

The bed was comfy- we thought about extending our checkout to lazily eat our brunch as room service, but in the end went down to eat. Thanks to the fact they provide ice in little ziploc bags by the elevators, I was even able to procure little baggies for some of the small bites I wasn’t able to finish at Chocofest and ate the next day back in Portland. When we left, we also discovered a hot cider station right by the concierge, which kept me warm as we walked out into the cool rainy Seattle weather. The only disappointment is that they also had a Surface in their Studio 1000 lounge, but it was out of order even though I really wanted to try it out to see what it was like.

Fireplace and to the back left the Surface in Studio 1000 lounge at Hotel 1000 Hotel 1000- Rubber Ducky, you're my friend... and this bathtub fills from that spout from the ceiling.

On the hotel first floor is also the trendy and hipster looking restaurant Boka, which we stopped at for happy hour and breakfast the next morning.

View of the bar and a few booths at Boka Some pickled mysteries at the bar of Boka

F was quite pleased because they had several vegetarian options that he was interested in. For happy hour there were lots of options, and we had to hold ourselves back knowing our next stop was Pike Chocofest. We started with Crispy Kale with grated parmesan, lemon zest. The kale on top was great, but as we got lower down the bowl they became soggy- they should perhaps think of serving that on a flatter serving dish. I could not resist the Dons’ Truffle Fries with truffle oil, truffle salt, and parsley, which came in an adorable little fry basket and did not need those sauces you see on the side at all as they were perfectly tasty and crispy and needed nothing else. We both shared the Mac + Cheese with caramelized onions in a mornay sauce, though we didn’t think there were any onions at all until we found out they were all at the bottom of that baby cast iron dutch oven.

The next day for breakfast while he enjoyed oatmeal, I indulged with Boka’s Breakfast of a Lumberjack omelette stars applewood smoked bacon, onions, golden glen creamery cheddar, sausage, country gravy and includes roasted potatoes + choice of bacon, ham or veggie sausage (egg whites or egg beaters are available upon request). Here you see egg beaters and choice of bacon… because I rationalized that the egg beaters were a credit so I could have my bacon side.

Boka Seattle Crispy Kale with grated parmesan, lemon zest Boka Seattle's The Dons’ Truffle Fries with truffle oil, truffle salt, parsley Boka Seattle's Mac + Cheese with caramelized onions, sauce mornay Boka Seattle's  Breakfast of a Lumberjack omelette

Overall, I liked the bartender, who served us on both our visits. While we were there for happy hour, he made sure we had water and our food quickly, but then gave us space to chat. During breakfast, the bartender also served us very efficiently, again making sure to check in on us so we knew he was available, but still unobtrusive. Only the hostess gave us a negative impression as for a while, there was only a few other tables as it was a late Monday morning but she sat other patrons very close in the corner and even lifted up one of our bags in order to make room for the next table to slide in. This was even though 75% of the restaurant was empty and yet many of us were seated immediately next to each other in a very tight corner space that seemed more like the bar/lounge area, even though the restaurant also has a main middle area that had more open seating (and spacing between tables) as you would expect in a hotel restaurant. All of us glanced at each other because we were conscious of our proximity and lack of conversation privacy and being all cornered together.

That whole area was almost like we were all sharing a sectional couch space, it was weird. I can see how it works theoretically as an extension of part of the bar, but not as well for restaurant meal service if all the tables are occupied. Good thing I didn’t change my mind about getting coffee or a bloody mary to kill some more time before our Bolt bus. We paid our check and headed to Studio 1000 to relax (and paw sadly at the non-working Surface) for the remainder of our time. Studio 1000 actually is a great space with the same upscale modern ambiance and that middle fire pit and spacing between seatings still giving it some cozyness- it seemed like a better lounge area than that corner of Boka too. Since that lounge is also served by Boka I think, consider it an option.

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Brunch at Brasserie Montmartre

When the wait at Tasty n Alder for brunch the other Sunday was too long as we were afraid of missing the Bolt Bus to Seattle, we were forced to a Plan B. We wound up at Brasserie Montmartre. They offer a complimentary breakfast pastry as you wait for your order to come up- I had a flakey buttery croissant, and F had a scone.

For our brunch entrees, F was surprised at how good his oatmeal was: the secret was because it had bananas already mixed in even before adding the brown sugar and milk. Meanwhile, I tried an unusual breakfast dish with my Bloody Mary: D’Anjou pear fritters with breakfast eggs, potatoes, and Italian sausage. For breakfast potatoes, the oven roasted offering here are wonderfully crispy and seasoned, which is nice to see given so many other soggier potatoes that are often served during brunch.

Brasserie Montmartre, brunch Brasserie Montmartre, brunch

There were several other groups brunching, including several groups of all ladies- and that’s how I learned they have a $10 bottomless mimosa. There was no line/wait during brunch time, service was prompt and we were in and out in 45 minutes which gave us plenty of time to go to an ATM before even going to the Bolt bus stop. Because the space is historic it has a charm that was relaxing and beautiful, without the din of other people or crowding like so many other brunch locations in PDX. It really seems like a hidden secret brunch gem.

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Lunch Date at Davis Street Tavern

Photo post… a lunch at Davis Street Tavern several weeks back. The meal included for him, a Mushroom Risotto with basil hazelnut pesto and spiced kale which was a nice lighter take on a risotto that wasn’t heavy with cream. For me, an order of Steak Frites with grilled bavette steak and green chili hollandaise with shoestring fries that had too much sauce that I couldn’t detect the green chili and seemed heavy like an aioli, I wasn’t sure how it was supposed to compliment the steak. It was fine with the fries. I also had a great glass of red- I have always been impressed with the wine by the glass selection at Davis.

Davis Street Tavern mushroom risotto Davis Street Tavern steak frites

There is something so luxurious and indulgent with having a glass of red wine with lunch, and meeting F for lunch- a lunch date! We never see each other during work time because we for the past 8 years have always worked on opposite sides of town- him inevitable downtown and me doing the reverse commute to go out to the suburban area more. Being a veg he was on the verge of disgust as I sliced into and ate a medium rare hunk of meat, but we still walked back to his office together, holding hands and bumping playfully into each other as we walked, before we had to part for him to continue his workday and I continued on my errands.

Even though F isn’t much of an expressioner (is that a word? Well, I made it one), the first time we see each other when me meet up after work we always pass to each other this little quick small doofy smile of recognition  and relaxation and comfort at seeing the other, a smile I’ve also seen at children when they get tucked in with their favorite toy at night. We still have these little greeting smiles even after all our time together so far, and shortly after reuniting, we report out our adventures of the day to each other. <3

Davis Street Tavern steak frites

 

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Lunches at Lardo

Lardo PDX– sniff. I remember when we first met, when it was a new food cart, brand new and just custom built, when I attended the annual food cart festival Eat Mobile 2011. I also visited it on a food cart tour. Then, the cart grew up- so fast!- to a brick and mortar location, first on the east side of the river, and now on the west side where I visited its bright shiny digs with huge glass windows and doors and the same clean wood and food that celebrates fat. F/Jack that can eat no fat hates this place, but I naturally love it. Now they are so grown up they are throwing Super Bowl parties with heated tents and a big screen and game day food today, and earlier this month collaborated to offer a Swine and Barley Wine event (A Pig Out Production) of barleywine pairings with offerings from their menu and cheese from Steve’s Cheese (check out a take from an attendee at one of the local PDX blogs I follow, Beer Musings from Portland)

In their transformation from food cart to two physical restaurants, they still have a very casual level of service.  I’ve seen this in many places in Portland in order to reduce service staff costs. You go up and order from a chalkboard on the wall, and are handed a number so that your order can be delivered to you, and then you bus yourself to the bins. Wisely, they already have to go boxes for your leftovers out.

I also want to assure you that what is pictured below is more than one lunch I had at Lardo, and these sandwiches are not all mine. You don’t need to fear for my heart and whether I can continue to enjoy deliciousness. This was not one meal.

First of all, the Bloody Mary is quite spicy! I loved it! There haven been many a bloody mary that I have tried around PDX that didn’t bring it (and with great distilleries like New Deal with their Hot Monkey vodka and so much heirloom tomatoes and homemade pickling!). Thankfully, Lardo brought it to punch with flavor with their take on a bloody mary. As I waited for my order to be prepared (they do so to order), that bloody mary really raised my expectations of what I was about to experience, as it ranked right up there with ones I’ve had at for instance when I visited Tasty N Sons and my brunch at Simpatica.

Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Bloody Mary

You may consider bringing a friend to share with if you get the double burger and fries- I felt my heart would burst just eating that half of a Double Burger (with both Cascade natural beef and pork belly as the meats along with the cheddar and lardo sauce) and the Dirty Fries. Oh those Dirty Fries with fried pork fat scraps, marinated peppers, fried herbs and parmesan, a tasty but filling combination on the tastebuds of savory and salty and spicy and sour, both crispy and so lingeringly soft in the same chew. Genius.

I’m not sure why you would not order these fries dirty- you sort of need all those peppers to balance out that pork belly on the burger. Not to say the pork belly isn’t delicious- at one point I separated them out to eat them individually to savor them, and even without the pork belly that burger is so juicy and messy and glorious. I can see this showing up on the national charts of Food & Wine as one of the best burgers in the US, and it is definitely in the top 3 for Portland.

Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant
Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant

Other sandwiches I was able to sample included the fried chicken sandwich, eggplant parmesan, and porchetta sandwich. The fried chicken sandwich was decent but I was hoping for more- I don’t mind cold fried chicken, and the description of Cold Fried Chicken, blue cheese, bacon, pickles sounded promising. But, I realized as I ate it that I was hoping for a cold fried chicken that would compare well with cold chicken from Kentucky Fried Chicken.

Maybe my memories are rosy since it has been years since I’ve had KFC since I don’t eat fast food chains anymore, but I remember not minding leftover KFC the next day because of the wonderful seasoning on their original recipe chicken or the extra crispy chicken version still having a corner of super crunch here or there. Neither of this was true with the cold fried chicken from Lardo, and I was hoping they would have celebrated the fat of the skin more either with seasoning to let it sing, or lots of breading to highlight extra crispy skin. I also wouldn’t have minded more blue cheese, such as Rogue blue cheese tang.

Meanwhile, Lardo’s Eggplant Parm ‘Old School’ with tomato sauce, provolone, basil was messy with its generous saucing, and the breading still had a bit of crispness despite it. It is a good option for the vegetarian who you drag to eat Lardo with you. In fact, Lardo offers two vegetarian sandwiches- there was also a Rapini sandwich with aged provolone, capers, and red pepper agrodolce available as an option.

Fried Chicken Sandwich, Cold Fried Chicken, blue cheese, bacon, pickles, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Fried Chicken Sandwich, Cold Fried Chicken, blue cheese, bacon, pickles, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Eggplant Parm, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Eggplant Parm, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant

Finally, Lardo’s signature porchetta sandwich with caper aioli, gremolata that have been written up nationally including the recipe shared at Saveur. It’s a sandwich of fatty melt in your mouth pork belly that is wrapped around the roasted pork and doesn’t apologize for it, and in fact adds all that good olive oil and gremolata on top (though seriously just the meat/fat combo itself is already luscious).

Lardo's signature porchetta sandwich with caper aioli, gremolata, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Lardo's signature porchetta sandwich with caper aioli, gremolata, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant

Lardo is serious about bringing the fat back. And, it doesn’t hurt that now with having a restaurant space (two actually!), they can offer half a dozen options for cocktails and more than a dozen local Northwest microbrew beers to wash that extreme richness down with. They also have pie holes- I stared so wistfully at those pecan pie holes but couldn’t muster the courage to add more to my arteries in one meal (well, also considering what gluttony the meal order already consisted of as you see. I more than blew my caloric allowance before dessert…) Not a single thing is more than $10, but every item is an indulgent pleasure that seems to border on sinful in its exaltation of richness.

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A Winter dinner at Oven and Shaker

So I’ve already raved about their savory Wild Fennel sausage pizza with potato, tomato, chilies, scallions, smoked mozzarella, and their heavenly Bianca cheese pizza topped with teleme, truffled sottocenere, bufala mozzarella, and fried sage. These two are regulars all year round. The brussels sprouts pizza is part of their winter menu, replacing what during the summer included the smoky and tangy Cauliflower pizza I had with roasted cauliflower, mozzarella, provolone, olive, spring onion, Mama Lil’s chlies, and crumbled salami.

See, I haven’t even shown you what I ate yet and you probably already want to go to Oven and Shaker.

This time I will roll my eyes back as I bite into their Brussels sprout pizza. After seeing I Love to Eat, it was only a block away to Oven and Shaker, and I had no problem waiting the 15 minutes or so until their dinner menu began to be served (this was perfect for vegetarian F who immediately ordered off the Happy Hour menu). He started with the salad of Semplice with spring greens, fennel, carrots, scallions, pear, red wine vinaigrette, a nice starter if you don’t want the heavier Nostana salad. He also ordered from the Happy Hour menu the Margarita pizza which had lots of tangy tomato sauce.

Oven and Shaker salad Oven and Shaker margarita pizza

I will also sip these beautiful new cocktails they offer. The Caribbean Snowflake with 2 oz Cruzan Single Barrel Rum, 1/4 oz St Elizabeth All Spice Dram, 1/2 oz freshly pressed lime juice,. 1 oz freshly pressed grapefruit juice, 1/2 oz simple syrup, 1 small egg white, and silver flake sparkled before my eyes and as I sipped it, I think it also added sparkles to my eyes too.

Oven and Shaker cocktail Oven and Shaker cocktail

I also loved the Pisco Noir with 7 fresh blackberries and 2 oz Capel Pisco, 1/2 oz Green Chartreuse, 3/4 oz freshly pressed lime juice, 3/4 oz simple syrup and 1 small egg white with its dark berry and citrus flavor. Ok, I admit maybe my eye wandered a few times to the Pepper Smash and Lost Cosmopolitan cocktails at the table over, but I wasn’t cheating. I was reminiscing and admiring beauty.

Oven and Shaker cocktail

And I loved you most of all, Brussels Sprouts pizza with brussels sprouts, bacon, robiola, pecorino, a mix of flavors of the leafy shreds of brussels sprout and salty bacon and creamy robiola. I had to force myself to stop eating you all up because I totally good you are so delicious, but I wanted to wrap you up to go so I could have some more of you later. I have to stop looking at you now or I will go pull you out of the fridge even though I told myself you are a reward after going to the gym. Miss you already, brussels sprouts pizza.

Oven and Shaker brussels sprout pizza Oven and Shaker brussels sprout pizza

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