Steaks at Urban Farmer with my brother

My brother came to visit November 17-19, 2011. We started out with a first meal- well, really a snack- at Little Big Burger after we met up at Powells City of Books. After we settled in at home and relaxed for a bit, then we had a steak dinner at Urban Farmer. He selected Urban Farmer barely over my other multiple choice options to him of the happy hour steak of El Gaucho and the quality local butchered steaks of Laurelhurst Market because the Urban Farmer menu offered a larger variety of steaks to choose from on the menu.

All of these photos are courtesy of his skills and Canon EOS 60D camera.

steaks, Urban Farmer, Portland Oregon

We started out with the appetizers. I went with the smaller order of Artisanal and house-made selections of pâté & cured meats pickled vegetables, preserves, mustard. None of them are local unfortunately, and my brother left before I got to show off Chop’s pate or Olympic Provisions charcuterie which I love… and now that I’ve had those, this homemade/imported offerings plate from Urban Farmer just couldn’t measure up to my new higher bar.

steaks, Urban Farmer, Portland Oregon

His choice in appetizer, the Foie gras, veal sweetbreads, roasted peach, hazelnut plate, was better. We weren’t sure we liked the roasted peach as part of the plate as only a small bite was so sweet and seemed to overbalance the savoryness of the meats. But, the foie gras and the sweetbread were very flavorful and I liked the slightly crispy outer texture. It’s hard to believe how far we’ve come from the very first time my sister accidentally ordered sweetbread during our family vacation in Las Vegas a long time ago but thought it was actual bread (she was vegetarian at the time) and the waitstaff took it back graciously.

steaks, Urban Farmer, Portland Oregon

Anyway, back to the Urban Farmer dinner. After they took our appetizers away they presented us with the cornbread and warm rolls to tide us over while waiting for our main meal.

steaks, Urban Farmer, Portland Oregon

We were torn by the sides we should order, and settled on the waitress’ recommendation of the Creamed spinach gratin (which was super rich and melt in your mouth but also greatly helped by the crunchy topping for texture) and we meant to order the fries but were so torn by either fries or mashed that I accidentally said Potato purée instead… so we got the mashed. This was also super decadant, very buttery and cream.

For the entrees, he and I conspired together where I would order the 24 oz Painted Hills, Oregon, grain-finished, bone-in Ribeye and he would help me, and he was also ordering what I wanted to taste compare, the New York Steak Tasting of 6 oz each of Oregon grass fed, Brandt prime, and Painted Hills twenty-one day dry aged. Both were ordered medium-rare. Of the NY steaks, I liked the aged, while he preferred the grass fed. Both of us loved the juicyness of the Painted Hills grain finished ribeye best of all the entrees.

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Unfortunately we did not have room for dessert. I really like Urban Farmer’s atmosphere, which unlike most steakhouses which seem to be full of wood and shadows and are remisicent of a old men’s club, Urban Farmer is located as part of the upscale and trendy boutique Nines hotel in the Macy’s downtown (originally the Historic Meier & Frank Building, circa 1909). So, its atmosphere is much younger and hipper with its decor a cross between a nod to nostalgia of the farm with canned fruit and flaked wood and animal print, but also the modern urbanity of clean lines and layout that makes it almost seem like it’s all outdoors (while still being indoors as part of a hotel). It is located on the 8th floor is also the atrium of the hotel, so you don’t feel as enclosed and can even get a peek of the sky via their skylights. Their menu also celebrates a lot of local meat (except for their charcuterie, as mentioned). It definitely reconfirmed its place as one of the steakhouses I recommend.

As a side story, this was also the same day that the Occupy protestors took theier walk and only a few hours earlier, were pepper sprayed at the Chase Bank area just on the other side of the square…

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Original Dinerant and a Thanskgiving Gravy Cocktail

I knew it was a holiday trick to get me in the door. When I read in Eater’s email that the Original Dinerant was offering a new stunt food cocktail called “the Red Eye Cocktail” with a main ingredient of warm Thanksgiving gravy, along with Wild Turkey and rum and strip of bacon. I was 75% appalled, and 25% intrigued. A work colleague moved my intrigue percentage up when she asked me about it, and so taking one for the team, I went to try it.

I admit I summoned some courage at Bailey’s Taproom first.

But then it was time for the Original Dinerant. When I asked the hostess about it, she told me it was usually on their brunch menu, but they good-naturedly hustled to produce it. Another worker from the kitchen (by his outfit, I am guessing here… it might have even been the originator of the recipe but he was here and gone in a flash) even came by to ask me how it was only a few minutes after I received it and unfortunately had not tried it yet as it was still quite warm and I was steeping the bacon for extra flavor.

According to the Thrilllist recipe from the Executive Chef, it calls for 3 oz of hot liquid brown gravy (I don’t understand the specification for it to be in liquid form…), 1 1/2 oz American honey Wild Turkey, 1/2 oz Cruzan black strap rum, 3 oz coffee, 1 oz hot water, and 1 piece of bacon. If there was any coffee in it, I did not detect any. The recipe called for salt and pepper on the plate, but I would have preferred if it had been all pepper- those salt granules were pretty big.

It tasted more like a light gravy broth with a kicky burn at the tail end in my throat. It was similar to how chicken broth is not the same thing as creamy thick chicken soup. I would always pick the soup over broth because the soup has a thicker texture and more flavor… but there are some broths that offer quite a bit of flavor even while being thin. This gravy was not like that. Really, the key is that you better have really quality tasty gravy to make this drink work. After having amazing gravy at various places such as Screen Door and Dahlia Workshop, perhaps I have serious standards for gravy. I was looking for a savory drink, but this was not savory enough because of its watered down nature and a gravy that didn’t have a stronger profile to be the foundation for this admittedly new look at a hot holiday drink.

The Dinerant saved my dinner experience with my totally indulgent dinner plate. On the menu, it is listed as the “Chicken Double Down ham, gruyere, honey mustard”. It comes with a side of soup salad or fries that you can upgrade to poutine or chili cheese fries. I went with the poutine (aka fries with cheese curds and gravy). When it came out, I was a little frightened. I confirmed that they need some serious help on their gravy.

But wow, that sandwich is good. Instead of buns, you just have fried chicken breasts holding together your sandwich of ham and cheese. Just. For $12.95 this is an awesome value for a sandwich too. I am having the other half of the sandwich today for dinner and am sorta excited.

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Thanksgiving in Astoria

Thursday: of the food contributions I had (I won't count the cheese plate or helping to tie the pork loin) which were the salad (making the ricotta and picking out the garden grape tomatoes) and stuffed squash, I think the ricotta was my favorite of what I made. I think the stuffed squash dried out a little as it was waiting for the pork loin to finish, as it took longer then anticipated.

Friday: of the food contributions, I really liked the gougeres I made: unlike my trial bake at home I kept a much closer eye on them and was able to pull them out before they were dried out. I should have been patient and let them cool 10 more minutes, as they get much fluffier after that, but even after 5 minutes I still liked their very light cheesy puffiness. And, it made the house smell wonderful.

I made the sausage apple stuffing with vegetarian apple sage sausage… and I really missed that I didn't get to use real meat. I used the vegetarian sausage because of one person (even though I had real sweet Italian sausage for the next morning for the hash brown with egg whites and cheddar casserole). If I had used real sausage it would have stood up to the rye bread I decided to use and spiced it up- the vegetarian sausage just couldn't. Stupid vegetarian only had a spoonful of it too.

The corn pudding was also a disappointment- it wasn't tall enough because I didn't have a 2 qt dish- only 1.5 and 2.5- and in choosing the 2.5 it spread it out too thin and did not have the right texture. Next year, I plan to try another take on corn but this time making spoonbread, which I first had at Poppy in Seattle last month.


Saturday = Beer Day, thanks to visits to Fort George and Astoria Brewing (at Wet Dog Cafe).

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Tofu Tasteoff- A Tale of Two Tofu Dishes, Round 1

One of the new things that I have been spoiled with is what fresh tofu tastes like. There are several companies in Portland that make tofu using family made recipes, and generally I have been purchasing from Bui Natural Tofu- my first vist there and the goodies I came home with were blogged about earlier this year in April– so since then I've been a repeat customer. I am not the only one- their parking lot is always busy each time I've been there, and I know to go earlier to get the fresh hot egg rolls. Don't be put off by the busy lot- people go in and out quickly from this barebones storefront.

I hadn't tried Ota Tofu or Thanh Son Tofu, so I thought I should give them a try. There's only so much tofu we can eat, so we decided the first faceoff round would be Bui vs Thanh, simply because they are located close to each other (within 1/2 a mile).

First tofu try- Bui Tofu in a curry. I like to buy the Maesri curry paste. I heated up the one small can of curry with one can of light coconut milk (I think the instructions make it too milky and wuss out the curry), threw in some additional chopped Thai chili peppers, and once those were heated through just added in the cut up fresh tofu uncooked and turned the heat off. This is a great use of fresh tofu because if you get the prepackaged tofu in liquid, you have to drain it by putting heavy objects on it and it ends up not quite tasting like anything. By using fresh tofu and putting it at the end you get bites of a light clean flavor with the chewy texture to contrast the richer curry.

Second tofu try- Thanh Son Tofu with Bow Tie Pasta in Chipotle Pesto. Cook the pasta, slightly saute the cubed tofu in olive oil, and then throw in the al dente drained pasta and the pesto in the pan and stir with the heat off to mix.

The Chipotle pesto is from Pesto Outside the Box containers of 5oz pesto, which I got from the Portland Farmers Market. As you would expect from the name, the owner creates interesting pestos using an more unique combination of herb and nut besides the standby basil and pine nuts (hey, pine nuts are expensive! And I don't like the parsley blends), such as using pistaschios and creating roasted asparagus hazelnut or a strawberry basil or pineapple macadamia version of pesto. He also makes other kinds of dips for sale sometimes as seasonal specials, varying from the cranberry port chutney to the smoked blue cheese dressing.

Pesto sauce is a nice emergency pantry item to have in the fridge that takes it up a level from just pasta with Ragu when you want a quick dinner and without even a need for cleaning up the food processor afterwards. You can throw pesto in on pasta, with meat, or just slather on bread. His chipotle pesto has a nice smoked flavor that I added in some additional red pepper in for a bit more heat. This is a light dish that tastes pretty good cold too.

Between the two, Bui Tofu wins according to our taste buds! Although we liked the firmness of Thanh Son, and both tasted pretty similarly, Bui had a slight edge in that the fact it wasn't so dense also meant it was lighter on the tongue and the flavor just seemed a bit fresher and appealing. So next round, we'll try Bui vs Ota.

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A dinner at Nel Centro

It was my first time at dinner at Nel Centro, although I have passed it many times and always supported the blazing flames of the firepits of their patio. It being November, it was too chilly to enjoy those fires outdoors that evening, but we did have dinner in a cozy booth in the mid century atmosphere of the restaurant. 

The focaccia bread came with a small little pitcher of olive oil shortly after we had ordered. Of the meal, my favorite dish was my starter of the Roasted Beets with Baked Ricotta, Arugula, Orange & Hazelnuts.

Entrees: I had the Pumpkin Agnolotti with Hazelnut Sage Butter. It's a medium sized dish, and I was expecting the size that I received based on the price of the entrees in comparison- it's meant to be the pasta first course, aka a il primo piatto, followed by a secondi or second course that is the heavier filling main dish of dinner.

In terms of actual entrees at the table, the Grilled New York Steak with Maître d'Hôtel Butter & Potato Gratin looked delicious and put me in a steak mood for later in the week for when my brother is coming for a quick visit.  The Spit Roasted Pork Loin with Red Cabbage, Polenta & Mustard Sauce was quite a hunk of pork. Both were plated prettily- particularly that steak.

The large floor to ceiling windows let in the atmosphere of the dark evening (along with the hint of mysterious fog returning from the morning chill), but this was balanced with enough spot lighting on the table to actually see and enjoy my food and easily enjoy conversations. The restaurant is colocated on that block with the boutique hotel Hotel Modera, and its atmosphere and positioning is befitting for those restaurant patrons who want to treat themselves on vacation to a cozy dinner without going far from the room, or have a networking business dinner, or dine before or after a nearby show at the theater… and fair warning, so do the prices reflect such.

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