happy birthday to me… thanks to Cupcake Jones

Actually my birthday was 2 weeks ago. It was relatively low key, and for something sweet I bought a monthly special cupcake at Cupcake Jones. The "jumbo" sized ones are stuffed in the middle, which is what I like about these- the minis are cute, but the point is the middle filling. What flavors they have each month and each day of the month changes, except for the front row of the white, chocolate, and red velvet cake ones which are consistently offered daily.

In April, they had flavors inspired by cookies and candies. For my birthday, I bought the one in the upper right for myself: a special for the month of April of Salted Caramel Peanut. Today, there is a Groupon so you can get $20 worth by spending only $10!

From Spring 2011
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Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm – Tulip Festival

Lest you think all I do is eat, last weekend beside also attending Cheers to Belgian Beers, I also visited Woodburn to fill my May Day with flowers at the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm’s Tulip Festival.

The bounty of natural beauty you can reach from the Portland area, from gorge with a roaring river to snow capped mountain to seaside, and then add these various farms with fields of flowers, is really fulfilling in a way I didn’t know was empty when I lived in the midwest. I can’t say enough about how beautiful Portland can be.

The Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm gets pretty crowded by late morning, but if you go in the early morning, you might find very few people (I guess families still bundling their kids into the car), so that’s when I suggest you go to get the endless fields photos like I did below.

Tulips

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival

Poffertjes?!

Although… speaking of eating. There was a little snackity food that I really liked. Poffertjes are small puff pancakes from Holland. We got two versions, poffertjes with butter and sugar, and with then poffertjes with berries/hold the whipped cream but can get it with whipped cream are shown below. As you can see, they are made fresh right in front of you and served warm from the special puff grill. YUM.

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Poffertjes at the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Poffertjes at the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Poffertjes at the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival Poffertjes at the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm- Tulip Festival

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Happy Cinco de Mayo!

In order to properly give homage to today’s 5/5 celebration, here are some photos of other previously undocumented (in this blog) yummies from Santeria, a little hidden hole in the wall slightly off the main street on Ankeny (across from Baileys, also near Mary’s – and sharing their bathroom… hey hole in the wall remember) but putting out really great Mexican.

Their ridiculously huge chimichanga. A friend coined it best when after finishing it, said she was now pregnant with a “burrito baby” belly. It’s true…

Sometimes instead of a burrito I get a Pastor Taco Salad

But it’s no small salad- look at it in perspective with the sauces and snifter glass of beer… but then again, I always am able to finish it… why is it so good. The only way to keep myself in control is to limit myself to tacos, and I sometimes will wrap the last part of the burrito in the paper it comes in and take home. But these are too messy to take home… but too good to leave behind…

I will also dream fondly of Mexican roasted corn on the cob (which I actually like when they take it off the cob and just put it directly into the cheesy pepper mayo and sometimes also butter mess that you can stir and get on every smoky kernel in a cup). Unhealthy but happy food memories. The last time I had elote was 2009 in Seattle at the Pike Place Market. Yes, I remember when I last had it. I was super excited to see it. (All of these photos are from the Maxwell St Market in Chicago except the one with the kernels being cut from the corn which is from Seattle)

I also miss the duck confit nachos from De Cero in Chicago, another guilty pleasure.

From Adventures of Pech 2007
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Eat Mobile does Forktown Tours- Saturday version

Another progressive meal- this time dinner, thanks to Eat Mobile does Forktown tours- a one weekend special tour offering after Eat Mobile 2011 (though they might do this again next year). It visits participating carts from Eat Mobile, but at their original home carts, and we visit multiple pods while riding in a comfortable Ecoshuttle. This one was dubbed “Southeast Sunset Snack-a-Thon”, as opposed to the other “Lunchtime Cart Hop” the day before. We started off at Cartopia, and made our way to D-Street Noshery, A La Carts, and Good Food Here, 4 food cart pods (grouped communities of carts) with 10 carts in all- and more samples then that!

At Cartopia (SE 12th and Hawthorne) we started out with one of my favorite carts there, with Pyro Pizza with their wood oven fired pizza. This is a great cart- you may think it’s just another pizza cart, but it’s so much more- as you would expect from an owner like John who has built what, like 9 pizza ovens by hand now?

Pyro Pizza food cart in Portland, OR Pyro Pizza food cart in Portland, OR

I like their white truffle pizza, add basil and tomato as additional toppings. As part of Eat Mobile this year I had become introduced to their organic homemade sodas, which we also got to taste here again and this time I got to try them all. I won’t be able to resist getting sodas here every time I stop at Cartopia in the future. They offer Cucumber, Sarsparilla, Basil Lime, and Hazelnut (almost like a cream soda with a bit of nuttiness), all made with real ingredients and sweetened with organic cane juice, no artificial flavorings. They also make bread in their wood fire oven- which we got a little sample of with a tapenade smear and cheese as compliment to the taste of their roasted beet and leek salad with butter and balsamic dressing on a bit of spinach, also really good.

Pyro Pizza food cart in Portland, OR Pyro Pizza food cart in Portland, OR Pyro Pizza food cart in Portland, OR

Next stop, still in Cartopia, was People’s Choice for the 2nd year in the row, Whiffies. We were able to try their standby and most popular savory and sweet fried pies, the bbq beef brisket with mozzarella, and the apple, fried pies. Gregg came out to tell us the story of Whiffies- how he runs the cart, and how it became so named. I really wanted to try their mac and Irish cheddar cheese with peas (and bacon) pie, and I thought I would since the tour would return here at the dropoff… but I was just too full. Next time I hope. The apple is my favorite sweet pie- I’ve always liked the apple pie from McD growing up, but I’ll never order it again- I’ll always come to Whiffies, it is  just like how I remember it from my childhood, but much better. Look at that buttery crispy but doughy crust!

Whiffies food cart Whiffies food cart Whiffies food cart Whiffies food cart's fried pies Whiffies food cart's fried pies Whiffies food cart's fried pies

Next the 18 of us piled into the Ecoshuttle and off we went to D-Street Noshery at SE 32nd & Division (see, the D is for Division). This pod is one of the rare that have beer as part of the offering of the actual pod, so it’s almost like a progressive food court including libations- thanks to Captured by Porches Brewing. I had seen this entire pod come into fruition per my previous visits to Pok Pok, which is across the street, and it was great to see it now functioning and doing well. We started off with Koi Fusion. I’ll just leave you with a photo of their cart (they now have several) and taste. Yes they do know the famous Kogi in LA, I’ve reviewed them before in more detail in a previous blog entry. I prefer their sliders, and burrito only if I’m starving as they are big- and the short rib and pork are the best meats in my taste, bulgogi is ok.

Then we walked to the other side of the D-Street Noshery to hear about Oregon Ice Works bringing the water ice of Norristown (known as Italian Ice) to Portland, but made with more of an ice cream touch: less ice-y and more smooth texture, which I can’t argue isn’t an improvement. They experiment with new flavors all the time (everything is with local fruit not flavoring or syrup ingredients), and this time I had a nice big scoop of the Pear Ginger- Oregon grown Bosc pears with bits of candied Ginger. He also has introduced a Philly Roast Pork sandwich in which he has his mom be his “supplier” by shipping the peppers from Philly- my problem from when I tasted it at the Eat Mobile 2011 is that it still can’t quite compare to a real Philly cheesesteak for me, though I appreciate the peppers- the meat and cheese weren’t quite rich enough. But I’ll be back at this cart anyway for those fruity firework gelatos.

Back onto the shuttle, and to A La Carts at SE 50th and Division Street. This pod is famous for the fact that there is a cart that you can get your hair done in a cart… well it’s really a trailer, but still who does this except for models and movie stars?

We visited Fon-due It, presenting “fast food” fondue in that they will have their own signature mix and a monthly special cheese to get your melted cheese fix. The cheese I had with toasted bread was the same as from Eat Mobile- and although not bad, didn’t stand out compared to other fondues I have had from fondue restaurants. Even the one he talked about which helped inspire this cart- one with Black Butte Porter and cheddar- sounded better. Maybe the cheese of the month is what to watch for.  I understand that they need to offer one that doesn’t have alcohol as an ingredient, but this cart is still a bit of a puzzle to me. I know at the Oregon Brewer’s Festival bread and cheese always seem to do well as a small snack with all the beer (that one is from Gustav and is just swiss cheese), but that’s because alcohol and cheese go well. I’m not sure how they would get that collaborative relationship at this pod, and with the hours they have now.

We did get to try their chocolate covered bacon too- I was thinking it would have more chocolate. Vosges chocolate bacon errs on too much chocolate (though Vosges *is* a chocolate shop so understandable), but shows this combination can work- I just want more bacon! Dip that sucker in!

Shut Up and Eat, also at this same pod, brings more Philadelphia to Portland (Norristown is a suburb of Philadelphia- so no surprise with the Philly team stickers back at the Oregon Ice Works cart) with their food cart- but with more Italian from Philly attitude. They gave us a a little – ha, little- meatball on marinara gravy and a stuffed popper. The meatball was so rich and wonderful, I think I would just get a order of the meatballs and gravy, leave out the bread- I don’t want anything else filling my stomach but that moist meat punched with flavor.

Next we journeyed to the food cart pod named Good Food Here, and which would be our last cart pod, located at SE 43rd and Belmont. This pod also has beer, right when you enter thanks to Buckman Village Brewing. More than that, this pod has a very European feel to it because instead of being a circle of carts with eating area in the middle like most pods, the carts are parked in rows so almost like alleys of food carts. They also host movie and other events, so it definitely feels like a little community- like a small town of food carts that represent all around the world.

A pork belly sandwich from Lardo at Good Food Here had everyone quiet and rolling their eyes in pleasure as we admired their very pretty cart- and they were apparently a runner up in the People’s Choice at Eat Mobile. This was my favorite savory bite of my dinner that night.

Next stop was Eurotrash and their bright pink cart and a sample of Fishy Chips, their anchovies breaded then deep fried to a crisp and finished with a little lemon and sea salt and aioli- it sounded intimidating to everyone at first but they came without heads (though they can be ordered with) and didn’t have the strong flavor most would expect- just crunchy lil fish, and was enjoyed by everyone.

Creme de la Creme is celebrating the 25th birthday of their 1961 home, a former school bus now home of French cuisine, and the bus is named Charlotte. This food bus, and its owner, were so cute, as they talked about how they made the bus the home of their little business.

 

They offered us a their rendition of Croque Monsieur with the traditional ham and Gruyere sandwich then topped with béchamel and more Gruyere and toasted- a great little sandwich. We also had what has brought them some fame (including a feature on Eat St)- Creme de la Creme’s famous Escargot, snails, garlic and butter sauce with sliced baguette. I liked the Croque Monsieur more- but I like my escargot extremely unhealthy with each in its own pond of butter, so there’s that.

Dessert course, and last course-  passonfruit szechuan peppercorn sorbet at Fifty Licks, winner of the Style Award at Eat Mobile 2011. It’s always hard to choose from the wonderful flavors they offer each time- except for the Red Bull one I had at Eat Mobile 2010, I have not been disappointed by any flavor from them.

Fifty Licks food truck, Portland OR Fifty Licks food truck, Portland OR
Fifty Licks food truck, Portland OR
Fifty Licks food truck, Portland OR Fifty Licks food truck, Portland OR

Well, that’s it… end of tour. Thanks to Heidi and Jessica, our lovely tour guides, for providing facts and fun about the food cart world of Portland, and for all the owners who took the time to step out of their cart to talk about their cartpreneurship challenges and victories, and Jess from Willamette Week- she and her mom (whose birthday was Saturday- mine was Friday) were with me and the tour guides in going on both tours! I think my stomach might need a rest from another day of multi-hour sampling, but I would recommend any of their food tours to any visitors of Portland or those who live in Portland and want to explore lots of little bites and learn about food culture- be it the food cart culture like these tours, or neighborhoods- Forktown Tours covers the Alphabet District (Northwest 23rd area I think) and North Portland (Alberta/Miss neighbohoodish) areas on walking tours on Thurs and Sat.

Heidi and Jessica were very gracious, knowledgable, and thoughtful- making sure everyone gets a sample, that we were hydrated and always gathered around to hear the food owner, making sure we had napkins and forks and wet naps and carrying Tums just in case. It is obvious they love food, love Portland, love spreading that love as if you were their own friend visiting them from out of town. Check them out!

And that completes my food cart report of two weekends of Eat Mobile 2011!

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Eat Mobile does Forktown Tours – Friday version

You might think that after last Saturday, I would be satisfied with my food cart sampler. But, Forktown Tours was offering a tour on Friday and one on Saturday that would visit various participants of Eat Mobile at their regular place, and promised more food samples and more time to chat since we would be just enough people to fit in a shuttle bus (14 of us)… not the 250 VIP tickets or 3000 overall Eat Mobile eaters of Saturday, so definitely a bit more intimate atmosphere of cart sampling. Of course I am there. I think of it as a birthday present to myself.

I started off with the Friday tour, which took us from downtown to the Crystal Gardens pod, North Station, and then Mississippi Marketplace. As I was coming from work in Beaverton, I am embarrassed to say I was 10 minutes or so late to the tour. However, I caught up before our first samplings, and we didn’t board our shuttle bus until 40 minutes in, phew. We would end up visiting 9 carts, and since the sampling offerings were coming directly from the kitchen, and the fact they were not having to be as mass produced as Eat Mobile, meant that each bite I had was much better then even what I had last week if I had visited that cart at Eat Mobile. What I also really enjoyed was hearing the additional information about Portland and the formation of the food cart culture in Portland, the ease yet challenges of operating a food cart, information courtesy of our tour guide, and at each cart hearing how the food cart chefs were inspired to create their food offerings and start their entrepreneurship, and their future plans for their small business.

We started out with gathering downtown, and visiting The Dump Truck. At Eat Mobile I had tried the Bacon Cheeseburger dumpling, which was a little too greasy for me. He told us about his inspiration of doing dumplings from travelling within Beijing (home of the real Mr Ma), and that the Bacon Cheeseburger dumpling was a request to offer something akin to “pub food” – which is still a bit of a mystery to me because this would make good “late night” food, but they are only open during the day. This time, I had the choice of two, and I went with a “Mr. Ma’s Special” which was my favorite, which had a burst of pork and ginger with scallions, and a “Potato Curry” which essentially has a Malaysian yellow curry with potato inside the dumpling wrapper. I still like their icon of the dump truck with a dumpling.

Eat This! was the next stop- and the flatbread was much fresher then what I had at Eat Mobile. This came topped with spinach, roasted scallions, smoked chicken and bacon and an aioli- a great sandwich that you can pretend is healthy and filled with offerings better then most any other flatbread.

Next, we stopped at Emame’s Ethiopian, where we sampled both the lentil version on top of the injera which had a nice mild spice to it, and the much spicier chicken in berbere which is the Ethiopian national dish. This would be the favorite even by the end of the tour of several of the tour participants. The name Emame comes from what her son called her, aw. We got a great introduction to what is in Ethiopian cuisine as well thanks to our knowledgable guide, and got to see a representive of a food cart owner who is dishing home cooking

We then piled into the Ecoshuttle and were driven to Baowry. Here we had a chance to hear about how Ross built the cart from scratch, their attempt to handmake and struggle to get the dough for their bao to rise in the winter, and the possibility that the house next door to their cart might be something they could expand into so they can begin to offer many more ideas he has for Asian inspired dishes, a la Pok Pok. The sample here was missing the spicy kimchee I had liked at Eat Mobile, but the meat here with their steamed Chinese bun was more tender and moist, and came with the same little scoop of white ginger scallion rice but also a spicy noodle

We then walked to the Crystal Garden pod. Here we learned about cooperative cart communities of pods, about Portland’s DIY (do it yourself) and DIT (do it together) culture. We learned that Pizza Contadina’s starter dough for their sourdough pizza came from Alaska and supposedly has heritage that can be traced to the Gold Rush, and how he has mutual agreement to supply food with Leisure Public House so that you can enjoy the natural combination of pizza and beer (more DIT). I hadn’t sampled them at Eat Mobile- and we heard how during the festival how crazy it was for him as his oven kept going out so it was taking 3x as long to cool the pizza as normal so he didn’t feel like it was representative of his pizza at all. What I found outstanding was the hand cut huge pepporoni, and he makes his own hot sauce and the chipotle habanero was spicy and kickass.

We returned to the shuttle bus and headed next to the pod on North Killingsworth, at North Station for more food carts at another pod. This was also my first visit to this pod. Here, we visited two that I had appreciated being introduced to at Eat Mobile 2011, PDX 671 and The Rolling Stoves Gimme Sandwich.

I still have the baby spork that PDX 671 gave me that you can see in the picture. I’m going to save it in my scrapbook, dammit, because it’s awesome. Also great was the sampler here. It has a bit of several things they offer- the chamarro flatbread, the red rice flavored with achotte, the chopped grilled chicken I had loved at Eat Mobile, a fritter, the choice to add a Finadene sauce to infuse more flavor of soy sauce-lemon-chili-onion (added in the last pic). Everything he offers is great, you can’t go wrong here. Try Guamanian food!

Rolling Stoves Gimme Sandwich- I had loved her roast beef with horseradish mustard mayo au jus at the festival, but this time I got the extra bonus of trying her loaded potato salad with the genius topping of crunchy bacon, why doesn’t everyone do this… Maybe I had two samples of the meeat with mayo, I can’t wait to have the whole sandwich one day with the drippings and melted cheese and onions. I’ve never really understood why people would want a french dip sandwich until now, but now I see (look at how good even that little slice of beef looks). If I worked at the Adidas campus I would definitely be at this pod for lunch, I wish there was something like this around the Tektronix/Nike campus I work at.

Back into the Ecoshuttle, and then to Mississippi Marketplace at N Mississippi. This was my first visit to this pod anchored by Prost. Our focus here was Garden State, which just like last year and at the Eat Mobile, continues to plate food like they are a fine dining establishment instead of a food cart . It’s almost as if the shiny silver-ness of their cart makes up for the lack of silverware and tablecloth because hey, we’re doing casual New Jersey take on Sicilian food, so that equals a laid back attitude but with all the charm, care, and flavor that you might expect back in the old country. I had passed up this cart at Eat Mobile because their vittello tonnato sample has veal which tugged a bit at my animal rights heartstrings, but I gave in and had it anyway here- and it was guiltily good.

We took a nice walk, window shopping as we went on our stroll to Flavourspot. The highlight as we took in the neighborhood was encountering by chance, the “neighborhood goat” tied to a tree on the way. We had to cross the street. This goat was so sweet and I didn’t know goats came in a shade of cream with a tinge of pink.

I definitely got enough sweetness for dessert at Flavourspot as we heard the story of how he started this cart- a combination of misadventure, coincidence and luck, and drunken destiny. I had three desserts, Lemon Pie (lemon curd and whipped cream), Peanut Butter & Jelly, and S’more Waffle with Nutella and Mallow fluff, all types I had not tried before. I obviously finished off this tour quite satiated.


Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Lemon Pie Waffle Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Lemon Pie Waffle
Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Peanut Butter & Jelly Waffle with your choice of <strong>creamy or chunky peanut butter? grape jelly, organic strawberry or raspberry jamFlavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle, this is the Peanut Butter & Jelly Waffle with your choice of <strong>creamy or chunky peanut butter? grape jelly, organic strawberry or raspberry jam
Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle. This is the Nutella and Mallow fluff (it's homemade egg based & gelatin-free Mallow fluff, or you can also substitute rice fluff)Flavour Spot Dutch Taco, a savory or sweet sandwich wrapped in a waffle. This is the Nutella and Mallow fluff (it's homemade egg based & gelatin-free Mallow fluff, or you can also substitute rice fluff)

I’m also going on the tour tommorrow night, but because it’s from 6-9pm I’m not sure the photos will come out. However, I’m excited to be shuttled to 10 carts on a progressive dinner.

The original photos in this post have been added to the end of my Eat Mobile 2011 album on picasa

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