New Years Eve 12-31-2012

Happy New Year’s Eve! How are you ringing in the change from 2012 to 2013?

Every year for the past few years (well, ever since the New Year’s Eve outing in 12/31/2009, my first time ringing in the New Year since I moved to PDX. This also is the time where F almost got us kicked out of the party before midnight because of his state of inebriation, tried to hail the Portland streetcar because he thought it was a taxi, and my long cashmere wool coat was stolen and still hasn’t been replaced because petite cashmere mix long coats, I now discover, are hard to find. Maybe I’m still bitter that someone stole my coat on New Year’s Eve. Maybe.), F and I have focused our New Year’s festivities more around fabulous food than party dancing. New Year’s is always celebrated with a multi-course dinner out on New Year’s Eve. This is always followed by having a New Year’s day morning in pjs with mimosas watching the Tournament of Roses Rose Parade on my DVR. It’s become my tradition for New Year’s in Portland.

Of course, seeing the Rose Parade on TV is not as breathtaking as seeing the floats live in Pasadena as I did for New Year’s Day 1/1/2008. When I was young, my mom would turn on the parade on TV, and I remember vaguely paying attention to it when my mom pointed out a float she liked, otherwise it was in the background. It was thanks to her interest that J arranged it so that my mom and sisters and I were able to attend and see the actual parade. Once I saw it in person, it was unbelievable all the details and lush beauty of the florals I had missed watching it on TV.

I immediately developed a new-found appreciation and level of viewing the floats. Add to that, now I have the bonus of knowing a couple who helps work on the Sierra Madre float (theirs was even one of my favorites floats when I watched the parade live) so it’s fun to see and hear about what it takes to put the float together, watching the progress on Facebook daily. Now I know to watch the entire Rose Parade live and uninterrupted on HGTV to get more background on the floats.

It’s a wonderful way to start the new year absorbing the cheer and camaraderie of a parade, and those floats are really magnificent celebration and appreciation of human artistry and effort and the bounty and beauty of nature, and there’s always a few that have a whimsical theme to make you grin. Here are a few photos from when I saw it in person and some of the most memorable floats that year for me (in order, they are from Rain Bird, City of Torrance, City of Long Beach, Sierra Madre, La Caanda Flintridge and City of Cerritos) and which started my Rose Parade watching tradition. I also like to now look for the Dole sponsored float, which has won 2 for 2 now for the years they have participated. Participants in the Rose Parade change each year slightly, understandably since it is a financial and time commitment. You can see this year’s list here.

me and the parade guide Rose Parade float 2008  Rose Parade float 2008 Rose Parade float 2008 Rose Parade float 2008 Rose Parade float 2008 Rose Parade float 2008 Rose Parade float 2008

Let’s talk about dinner now. This year after I selected some multiple choice options for restaurants offering New Year’s Eve dining (since I can eat anywhere being an omnivore, but F is a vegetarian), and from this list F picked out Coppia ($58 per person with an extra $22 for wine pairings) for our New Year’s Eve dinner. Coppia pairs food and wine from Italy’s Piedmont region in a small, intimate setting in the Pearl District. Given that they evolved from the wine bar Vino Paradiso, there is no surprise that the listed menu for the night will start with a greeting of Italian sparkling prosecco upon arrival.

FIRST COURSE
Choice of insalata of radicchio, olive oil, garlic, anchovy with parmesan and crouton or a zuppa of cauliflower veloute and scallop

SECOND COURSE
Choice of a risotto with wild mushroom or tajarin that is house-made with sugo di carne (pork & veal) and parmesan

THIRD COURSE
Choice of sformato, a souffle-flan with artichoke and spinach in a spinach sauce, or fagiano, a roasted pheasant with cavolo nero (black kale) and quince, or agnello, lamb chops with cotechino sausage and lentil

FOURTH COURSE
Choice of bonet chocolate flan-mousse with amaretti crust and caramel sauce or a torta of flourless hazelnut cake and creme anglaise

Oh, were you hoping for photos and a review? Well, you’ll have to wait, because dinner isn’t until 9:30, and I don’t think I’ll be in any shape to blog until 2013.

Happy New Year Eve everyone- thank you for the memories 2012, and here’s to the hope and opportunities of 2013 and that the best is yet to come.

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A Dinner at Ox

Ox Restaurant wants to celebrate the meat loving appetites that Portland has and combines it with Argentinean execution technique and the fact that the meats in South America are also quite celebrated (see any churrascaria, and also that famed Argentina beef raised on grass on the pampas since the 1800s and are considered as some of the best in the world). Why hasn’t this happened before!?

A dinner experience at Ox on a Friday evening started out when we arrived about a quarter after 6pm and were told there was a 60-90 minute wait for our party of two (they only take reservations for parties of more than six guests). They have a separate bar space behind the restaurant that actually involves walking out the front door of the restaurant and back away from the street to reach it (Whey Bar- debuted a few months after the restaurant itself opened earlier this year in the spring). But once you arrive it has the hidden vibe than the loud busyness of the trendy dining space- although depending on how many people are waiting and how long you are waiting, I can see that it can also feel like purgatory. We had asked for first available seating, which 45 minutes later after putting our name on the list, ended up being at the counter bartop area right before the wood fire grill, watching them masterfully turned the crank to raise and lower the grill from the fiery heat and track and flip the various simultaneous dishes all grilling away.

Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner

Over the course of the evening, I had the opportunity to try a few cocktails. My favorite by far was called “Things Done Changed” created with Pisco, Smoked Lemon, Jalapeño, and Egg White- the drink went down so smoothly but through every sip and even lingering after the sip was the subtle smokiness. I suppose it is only right that the star of the cocktails I had is a South American one (based off Pisco Sour).

Ox restaurant dinner cocktail pisco sour Ox restaurant dinner cocktail pisco sour

The others, in order of enjoyment in my opinion, were Devil in a New Dress with Tequila, Red Pepper, Combier Orange, Lime, Mezcal; Falling Leaves with Jameson Irish Whiskey, Apple Cider, Maple, Lemon.

Our dinner service started with complimentary bread with butter and chimichurri sauce. We also enjoyed some extremely creamy amuse bouche of butternut squash soup. Next came the starters of Empanadas, one each of Beef, Green Olive and Raisin, the other with Grilled Poblano Chile, Sweet Potato, Fontina & Chèvre. The vegetarian one was slight sweet but mostly understated, while the beef green olive was a nice mix of salty savoryness, but didn’t need the fried empanada shell. I appreciated them being on the menu as they are very typical Argentina offerings, but it didn’t offer a wow factor at all- they were nice, but something you could find just as good or better elsewhere.

Ox restaurant dinner chimichurri Ox restaurant dinner chimichurri Ox restaurant dinner empanada

Unlike, for instance, the Wood-Fired House Ricotta, Button Mushroom Confit, Balsamic Brown Butter, Grilled Bread. I could have just eaten that straight without the bread, it was wonderful with the light creaminess of the ricotta floating and melting on your palate like a cloud but enhanced with a dark and sex smokey-ness, and then the buttery juicy mushrooms… you will not be able to stop your spoon from visiting until it is all gone. You must get this dish.

Ox restaurant dinner baked mushroom ricotta

Most of the meats and the salads/sides portions comes in small and large portions to choose from, so you can mix together your dinner experience from various menu offerings. We decided to share a meat dish since they seemed pretty large (8 oz being the smallest we saw… well the meat anyway. The shellfish came smallest in 6oz and the maitake mushroom in 4oz). We went with the Grass-Fed Uruguayan Beef Ribeye, which came in 12 oz, medium rare. The sides we selected were a bit of acid and bitter counter with a salad of Belgian Endive, Bosc Pear, Arugula, Dijon Vinaigrette, Aged Farmstead Gruyère, Toasted Pecan, and also a creamy luscious side of Tuscan Kale Risotto with Parmigiano Reggiano, Mascarpone, and Herb Butter.

Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner

The meat was so incredible. Simply prepared but expertly and perfectly done in the flames to the right temperature and perfect tenderness. It offered an outside crispy char to show how it was so loved by the fire but not so much that you can’t savor the drippings that still came from the meat and the flavor of the meat itself. Ox respects the ingredient and nature to resonate memories we didn’t know we have and appeal directly to our primal pleasure cells and- and oh they so do. They so do.

Ox restaurant dinner steak beef ribeye

The dessert menu was too enticing to just pick one to share, so we went with three. Of the three, our favorite by far was the Torte, with  a Warm Hazelnut Brown Butter Torte, Honey-Chamomile Ice Cream, and Honeycomb Candy. The torte was so warm and gooey and comforting, while the ice cream wasn’t too tea-y with the chamomile and the honeycomb gave good crunchy texture to the soft dessert dish. The Cake, composed of Vanilla Bean Tres Leches Cake, Roasted Banana Pudding, Dulce de Leche Alfajor Cookie was very sweet- it should be enjoyed with coffee or a dessert drink that can balance it out. We also had a dessert dish named “Magic” which offered Roasted Pear Sorbet, Bittersweet Chocolate Magic Shell, Bosc Pear and Marcona Almond Salad didn’t quite live up to the magic in its name in my opinion. Maybe if the pears had more strength in flavor and the chocolate had more bittersweetness rather than reminding me of the same chocolate in Dairy Queen- there for texture but not much else. Definitely choose the Torte.

Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner

I will definitely be back. I want to try their clam chowder with the marrow bone that they have brought perhaps as a callback from their Metrovino days, and more items from their wood oven fired sections like the skirt steak and lamb shoulder and I didn’t try any charcuterie… Don’t mistake Ox for a typical Portland restaurant though- Ox’s prices are a bit spendy but is typical in terms of as you would see from a steakhouse, so if you keep that in mind you won’t have sticker shock. If this was any other large city, these prices and the wait would be expected. But still, at these prices, despite the buzz of this restaurant, I wish they could move to a reservation system that is not just big groups, even if for only part of the space- maybe they need time to figure it out.  I can’t imagine that as time passes at these prices, that guests would continue to be ok with a long wait with little considerations. Even though Whey was a good start it’s pretty small space best left at two dozen people or less, and given Portland’s long dark rainy days coming up now, and not many other options for waiting/getting the call in the area, patience will wear thin. It seems like they have some outside space- if they could tent it and add some outdoor heaters, it could give some respite and expand Whey during the winter for waiting guests instead of only during the summer.

Ox has the benefit of also being very Portland-y in vibe and in unique and bold combinations in what they offer on the menu to demonstrate that Ox has a viewpoint that is worth trying and supporting, and they are definitely up and comers. I observed the Dentons that night working the evening with determination to execute well and consistently do so, and did so in an organized manner while also being hands on and in the trenches with the rest of their staff. You can tell this is their dream come true and they are passionate and willing to about making this work.

Combining the fine dining style they had helped lead at Metrovino while still having a modernist, forward style instead of a traditional steak menu and enhancing with the earthy core of grill cooking and bold South American flavors is a great idea given all the amazing quality of meats available here. I think Ox will still be hopping for quite a while. Even if not everything was a hit out of the ballpark, there were enough impressive home runs that I want to try more and see how they grow- after all, they haven’t even had their 1 year anniversary yet. I’m sure there will be another wait before I can actually be seated to dine thanks to the buzz- good thing there were still a few drinks on the menu at Whey that I want to try. But, I would also return in a similar small party or close to when it just opens for dinner service to make the experience with the wait bearable because they mostly have two-tops. Really the best seats in the house are really at the countertop bar by the fire anyway- just wear layers so you can shed them as needed as you feel that radiant heat and become perfumed by that smoky wood.

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Macarons from Nuvrei

I went to Nuvrei Patisserie & Café in order to purchase some macarons to share at work. Macarons are one of the items Nuvrei is famous for (some have called their version best in all of Portland), and these Parisan style flourless almond based treats are filled with a variety of flavorful creams and custards.

What I didn’t expect that now that they have moved from their basement location which had given it a secret bakery feel (as if you were walking into a commercial kitchen that baked for other restaurants and catered and you were purchasing their goods on the side- Ota Tofu also has that feel) to now a spot on the first floor, how utterly sweet and charming the storefront cafe now is, and how inviting it is to want to linger over coffee or tea. It’s also given them opportunity to expand their offerings.
Macarons from Nuvrei, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café Macarons from Nuvrei, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café

I chose to get an assortment of macarons. Their variety of flavors include their

    • Caramel au beurre sale (salted buttery caramel! My fave of what I tried!)
    • Italian pistachio with light vanilla butter cream (my second favorite of the box)
    • Framboise with oregon raspberry preserve
    • Fruit de la passion with vanilla passion fruit custard
    • Citron with lemon lime and orange zest folded into buttercream
    • Rose et Fraise with pure rose and Oregon strawberry preserve
    • Espressio with Coava espressio and white chocolate custard
    • Chocolat with Valrhona chocolate ganache

Macarons from Nuvrei, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café Macarons from Nuvrei, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café

As I was waiting to select my macarons, my eyes kept being drawn to the other wonderful baked items they had showcased. And so that’s how I “accidentally” also ordered a Bagel Sandwich.
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baked goods from Nuvrei, bagels, croissants, scones, muffins, macarons, macaroons, bagel sandwich, danishes, cookies, biscuit, brioche, sandwiches, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café

It starts with a choice of bagel here as part of a Fried Egg sandwich that includes fontina, tomato, frisée and dijon butter and cream cheese. I went with the asiago cheese bagel, but other options of their bagel, made with home made pretzel dough, were cheddar jalapeno, honey oatmeal, everything, onion, sesame, salt, poppy seed, or plain.

Fried Egg sandwich that includes fontina, tomato, frisée and dijon butter and cream cheese, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café Fried Egg sandwich that includes fontina, tomato, frisée and dijon butter and cream cheese, Nuvrei Patisserie and Café

I took a bite and just couldn’t put it down and stop until it was all done and maybe shook the sandwich bag for any crumbs or smears to lick the paper clean. There are a variety of other bagel sandwiches, as well as various croissant sandwiches be it for breakfast, which they serve all day, or such as one for lunch that caught my eye that has avocado and Oregon bay shrimp, apricot creme fraiche, dill and butter lettuce.

They also have just “regular” croissants (regular, chocolate, almond, or chocolate almond), scones (blueberry blackberry, lemon poppy seed with lemon glaze!), muffins, danishes, cookies, bacon cheddar biscuit or berry brioche, not to mention a whole bunch of other hot and cold sandwiches varying from your croque monsieur or madame to one with roasted and pickled beet with chevre arugula and truffle oil on their bread…

My goodness the menu is big enough for a whole tri-fold menu that would rival any restaurant, not a tiny cute cafe with only a couple tables and lovely window counterbar for people watching. And each option is irresistible you will be so torn what to get. Everything is clearly thoughtfully created with love and high quality and European craftsmanship.

I’m glad I don’t have to live too close to these temptations and that this is totally out of the way to go to work, or I would be their daily and this would be part of my routine. As it was, I had to go early when they opened to get them before heading to Beaverton for work, and it was totally worth it thanks to that sandwich even before I got on the trolley to get to the Max. I already hope to visit again (and maybe twice…) as after next week, I’ll be on vacation from work for the rest of the year!

They are open 7-5, and are an amazing little breakfast and lunch destination that just takes you from a gray dreary day in Portland to a mysterious gray dreary day in Paris, and seems to remind you of opportunity as it whispers “aren’t you ready for adventure and romance? let’s go!”

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Munchen Haus

The Munchen Haus Bavarian Grill and Beer Garden is the direct competitor of Leavenworth Sausage Garten that we had visited a couple days earlier. Naturally, this means they are across the street from each other (one at 636 Front Street, and Munchen Haus at 709 Front Street) so that you can actually sit in one and look across to the other. Munchen Haus has more history here, being open longer while Leavenworth Sausage Garten is a newcomer that opened in 2011, so it isn’t surprising that you will often see patrons naturally heading here thanks to previous experience and good word of mouth from here.

The offerings are essentially the same- close to a dozen sausages on a toasted bun, even served on the same blue and white checked paper in a plastic basket. Besides the classic bratwurst, kielbasa, bockwurst, currywurst, beef frank and the vegetarian wurst (both Munchen Haus and Leavenworth use Field Roast sausage for their veggie sausage option), Munchen Haus also offers an organic turkey dog, a chickena and garlic sausage, and a jalepeno and cheddar sausage.

Munchen Haus is more self-serve, handing you a coaster buzzer so you know when to go to the open pick-up area to get your finished order, rather than bringing it to your table based on your order number. But the grilling happens right there in the open so you can also watch with your hungry eyes if you wish. Their seating space is all outdoor, just like Leavenworth Sausage Garten, and additionally includes an upstairs area but less warmth as they have less heating lamps. Overhead ones are placed over the tables on the first floor  (although they have one cozy blazing fireplace near the pick up area as well).
Munchen Haus, Leavenworth WA
Munchen Haus, Leavenworth WA

Munchen Haus also offers a buffet of toppings including a dozen mustards, and the varieties are different than Leavenworth Sausage Garten. Here, the mustard flavors lean more classic, including three kinds of beer mustards (München Haus Amber Ale, München Haus Porter, München Haus Brown Ale mustards, all using local Icicle Brewing beer).
Munchen Haus, Leavenworth WA

I tried the Hans’ Jalapeno and Cheddar sausage with champagne honey mustard on the left and porter mustard on the right, and in my opinion mustard wise I have to hand it to Leavenworth Sausage Garten. Execution wise, the bite and warmth of how they grilled the sausages
gives Munchen Haus the advantage over Leavenworth Sausage Garten.
Munchen Haus, Leavenworth WA

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Leavenworth Sausage Garten + Cured by Visconti

Besides offering an outdoor beer garden featuring local and imported German beers on tap and homemade German sausages such as Bratwurst, Bockwurst, Currywurst, Kielbasa, and more (some other international options include Chorizo and Italian Sausage as well as the standby beef Frank) by the Cured by Visconti Italian Market just a couple doors down, the Leavenworth Sausage Garten also offers a big mustard bar.

The variety of mustards number more than a dozen, and so I couldn’t choose just one for my currywurst. So  I went with the Hawaiian Pineapple Mustard, Cranberry Mustard, Maui Onion Mustard, and Russian Mustard. You can also top as much or little sauerkraut as you desire.

In the colder months, they have tents and heated fire lamps to keep you cozy while you people watch and enjoy your sausages. After you order, you can relax at your bench and table as a server will bring your meal to you based on the number they gave you and take back to your seat. Even if you are vegetarian, they have veggie sausage options, as well as pretzels and cheese and a few other sides.

Leavenworth Sausage Garten
Leavenworth Sausage Garten Leavenworth Sausage Garten

If you would like to take some of the sausages home, just walk down to Cured by Visconti  Italian Market just a couple doors down to get some packaged up in their cases, as well as see their salami and other offerings.

I was impressed that they had sliced up samples of so much of their deli to try, and picked out my favorite as the Bockwurst, and also the Mole Salami (pure pork chopped, mixed with spices, chocolate, chili peppers, raisins, sesame, peanuts, almonds, than fermented and aged for 30+ days) while my friend picked out the Felino (pure pork chopped and marinated with wine and fermented and aged for 30+ days). I admire their tagline of “Preserving history’s recipes one pig at a time”.

Cured by Visconti Leavenworth WA sausages Cured by Visconti Leavenworth WA sausages Cured by Visconti Leavenworth WA sausages Cured by Visconti Leavenworth WA sausages Cured by Visconti Leavenworth WA sausages Cured by Visconti Leavenworth WA sausages

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