Recently: Boke Bowl Experience #2, Spring Beer and Wine Fest

Boke Bowl, 2nd time (they were at Decarli this month). For this visit, I had everything- pork and chicken broth ramen with slow smoked pulled pork (you can see it to the right of the bowl) which is the usual meat for the ramen dish, but then additionally topped with pork belly, and then a slow poached egg and then finally buttermilk fried chicken.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

Just as before, insanely delicious, it does taste as incredible as it looks.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

To make sure you don’t fall asleep at your desk after that ramen bowl, give yourself a bit of sugar high with a Boke Bowl twinkie – this one is vanilla with miso butterscotch.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

I had originally thought I would be visiting the Spring Beer and Wine Festival and the Eat Mobile Festival one after the other today (Saturday), but as I thought more about it, I wanted to enjoy some of the cheese offerings at the Spring Beer and Wine Fest and bring back some bottles from Gouger Cellars, as I always like Gary’s taste as he mixes his wine like a wonderful scientist. His 903 blend was well rounded burst of boldness, and even more unique and amazing was his Mine Mine Mine which he added chocolate to. These went perfectly with the Brownies from Heaven chocolate treasures (which are monster size! Yet once you take a bite, they are the right size… how tricky) by his wife Bonnie… The combination of his wines and her chocolates are truly a perfect pair.

Brownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland OregonBrownies from Heaven, Portland Oregon

I got some great samples of cheese from Abbie and Oliver’s, where I had the difficult choice of picking my cheese plate of 6 choices from a wonderful offering at their booth. On the way to a table I also discovered Brazi Bites. I have always adored pao de queijo, but have not been able to find manioc starch which is the true base (I am forced to substitute tapioca flour). Now it looks like I’ll be able to buy them as guilty puffs of chewy snacks at retail locations.

Brazi Bites, Portland Oregon

I also discovered the amazing cheese of Mt Townsend Creamery, in the photo you can see their samples of Trufflestack (infused with black truffle) and a Off Kilter (washed with Pike Brewing Company’s Kilt Lifter Scotch Ale). I’ll definitely keep my eye out for more offerings from them when I browse for cheese.

Boke Bowl ramen, Portland Oregon

I need to prepare now though for one of my top 3 favorite events in Portland of the year, the Food Cart extravaganza that is Eat Mobile. Starting at 4:30 (I bought the pretasting tickets)  and for four hours, you can enjoy sampling from 40 various food carts. Proceeds from the event goes to Mercy Corps Northwest. So Excited.

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Sunday Snackies at my house

Putting together a cheese plate- not pictured is the Brillat Savarin (but you saw a photo of it in an earlier post in the box), and also a guest brought a Fra Roussel Cantalet, the ancestor of British cheddars and one of the oldest cheese in France. The cheese in the back is a mixed goat/sheep cheese Causse Noir from the Portland Farmers Market vendor Monteillet Fromagerie which I can remember the location at the market and their cheese and what the guy looks like… but I always seem to mess up their name and substitute other random syllables after “Mont”.

These are also all from the Portland Farmers Market: the seedy bread from Fressen, specifically Vollkornbrot, made of Dark Rye and Whole Wheat flours with cracked rye, Sunflower, Flax and Sesame Seeds; a duck truffle pate from Chop; and kielbasa from Olympic Provisions. I often cut up bread into cracker size pieces rather then serve crackers (although a guest also brought a nice baguette from Grand Central)

I prepared the kielbasa two ways. First I sliced them. Then, on the left I just put it on a pan and let it cook in its own juices til it got a bit crispy on the edges. On the right, I simmered a bottle of beer with I think 1/3 cup of brown sugar until it was bubbly, added the kielbasa and simmered for 30 minutes with an additional 4-6 teaspoons of bbq sauce I think- I did it mostly to taste, and depending on what beer profile you use it will vary. The simmer mixture adds a bit of sweetness to the outside of the sausage- you can add cornstarch to make the sauce stick to the meat like a glaze, but I didn’t want to cover up the already well smoked and flavorful meat too much.

I can never get tired of having cheese, bread, and a little meat with wine. It’s nicer to throw in a little pickled something and fruit as well to round out casual snacks- but since the day before I had gone to the market on my own and brought back several bottles of beverages, there’s only so much I can carry on my own, and uphill to boot. Someone needs to buy me a little cart- not so big that it gets in the way of others at the market, but that way I don’t have to have all the weight in my arms and shoulders. On the other hand, knowing I need to carry everything does keep me in check as I walk around the market on how much I get as well- sometimes I get a little overexcited about what I see without thinking about how quickly I need to eat it to really enjoy it at its peak and take advantage of freshness.  Next Saturday is a special “Bacon Time” edition where I’ll be fancying snacks up with a bacon theme, hopefully the bacon tart will be photogenic.

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February 14, 2011: Valentine’s Day

Last year, we celebrated with champagne fondue and tiramisu fondue (although technically it is sparkling wine, not champagne). This year we decided to keep the bubbles and hearts theme. For the bubbles, I picked out one from the very dependable Iron Horse Vineyards, though I'm also a fan of Domaine Chandon and Schramsberg. This year it was a 2006 Iron Horse Vineyards Classic Vintage Brut, a brut blend of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. The result is a lot of yeasty bubbles but a very traditional taste that makes it as classic as they label and can go with anything and anytime, although its traditional taste also doesn't make it necessarily stand out as particularly memorable. But bubbles are always fun- especially when within a week I get to enjoy bubbles twice (there was a Bubbles theme to a monthly women's wine locker get-together 4 days before that I had attended). Although many people seem to associate having champagne or sparkling wine with special occasions, I think it should be enjoyed whenever you want some cheer. Something about bubbles is always uplifting in mood, so why hoard it for rare occasions when just popping the cork already starts something fun and special?

Brie my valentine!

The cheese is a P'tit Basque that is a semi-soft French sheep milk cheese that is produced in the Pyrenees Mountains that form the border with Spain and is basically Basque people. The cheese is aged for seventy days and has a mild nutty flavor similar to a Spanish Manchego but with a little bit more olive oil on the skin texture and smoother. The brie is a St Andres triple cream brie that is a basically like butter. The crusty bread loaf you see if from Di Prima Dolci.

You want a piz za me?

We made this using rosemary pizza dough, portobello mushroom marinara, a mix of Tillamook's mozzarella parmesan and smoked provolone with veggie pepperoni and italian sausage, shown here before and after the heat. I liked the Italian sausage's peppery taste but thought the veggie pepperoni was a poor substitute, while he felt the exact opposite. Clearly this pizza, besides the heart shape, is more his taste then mine. He kept wondering when I was going to stop sprinkling on so much cheese so I made myself stop… but he's Jack Spratt after all and also likes to dip his pizza in more marinara. A generous dusting of more parmesan and red pepper always helps me, but I refrained from adding garlic oil or truffle oil since I already had included the cheese plate earlier… I can eat lean!

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Recent Eats: Pok Pok lunch, a cheese + beer at Bailey’s Taproom Cellarfest 2

I recently went with friends to lunch at Pok Pok. Whatever meal you visit here for, I always recommend getting an order of the Vietnamese Fish Sauce wings, ask for it spicy. The half a dozen natural chicken wings include the leg along with it as you can see for a good amount of meat, and after beeing marinated in fish sauce and palm sugar are fried and further tossed in caramelized Phu Quoc fish sauce and garlic. It comes with Vietnamese table salad on the side, but I recommend two orders of sticky rice to go with.

Pok Pok, Ike's Wings,  Vietnamese Fish Sauce wings, Andy Ricker, Thai restaurant

The recipe comes from daytime cook Ike, and was named one of the top ten restaurant dishes in America 2007 by Food & Wine magazine. It is as a sticky mess to eat as it appears in the photo (they do give you little wipes)- and also just as full of intense flavor as you might imagine from the photo.
Pok Pok, Ike's Wings, Vietnamese Fish Sauce wings, Andy Ricker, Thai restaurant

Since they don’t have Kaeng hung leh (a pork belly and pork shoulder curry that I adore from my mom’s Chiang Mai/Northern Thai area) at lunch, and I was a bit too chilled for their namesake som dtum (they call it the “papaya pok pok”) I opted for the one dish meal of khao muu daeng/muu krob. This is a pork dish done two ways- the top slices you see are the muu daeng, which is their housemade chinese bbq red pork, and the bottom is a crispy pork belly. The whole dish is then doused with a sesame sauce and on the left is a steamed gailan.

Pok Pok, Andy Ricker, Portland, Thai restaurant, khao muu daeng and muu krob

The gailan was a nice break from the sesame sauce which I thought they put too much on the dish. Their housemade version of chinese bbq red pork could not stand up to any bbq pork you can get from any random Chinese place- and although the Thai interpretation is a little more thin and bland the taste is made up for using a red sweet and salty sauce which didn’t have a presence here.  The crispy pork belly was ok but not quite what I was expecting- there was only a little bit of crispness to it, although I do recognize they gave better pork meat along with it.

I think I’m a harsher judge because what Pok Pok excels in is making street- style Thai food, no holding back the flavors that you would get if you were really there in Thailand- but I’ve had street food in Thailand. Most Thai restaurants have compromised on the homeland taste in order to survive normal consumer demands when Thai food started becoming acceptable take-out and because taste buds here are just different, understandably, then the home country. Also, ingredients that compose the dish are hard to find or just don’t taste the same as if fresh from the Thai markets there. Many times, the kitchen in Thai restaurants are also turning out home cooking, and don’t have the recipe or even intend to compete with the flavor profiles coming from food cart style expertise. Just like here in Portland, in Thailand, certain stalls are famous and followed to inconvenient locations because of their signature take on a dish. Pok Pok has been rewarded for holding true to Thai strong flavors even on American soil- but it also means that if you’ve had the real thing in Thailand and remember it well, as I have- sometimes Pok Pok can’t win the inevitable comparison. IMHO, their khao muu daeng/muu krob wasn’t bad, but just can’t compare to the real thing on the other side of the world- if you’ve had that experience. Otherwise, you might find this wonderful- and you wouldn’t be wrong either.

Whatever you do- don’t forget to get the chicken wings. And, order items off the menu that you haven’t seen before in other Thai restaurants- there’s more to Thai food than the 20 kinds of standard Thai dishes that you see on most Thai restaurant menus; here especially try the Northern and Eastern Thailand regional speciality dishes. Also, try to overlook the prices- sorry they are in dollars not baht (if you don’t know the costof these dishes in Thailand in Thai currency, you may not even think about the prices given the intensity of flavor it buys)… remember it’s saving you airfare! Besides, I have to admire the guts of a chef who is willing to dish out pretty much the real thing to the general public, not just in secret “in the know” to Thais only via secret menus or hole in the wall word by mouth only locations. To get the recipes they do use, he has to have the charisma to learn cooking in Thailand, so extra heart points.

Pok Pok, Andy Ricker, Portland, Thai restaurant, khao muu daeng and muu krob

Our regular beer bar, Bailey’s Taproom, was having their second Cellarfest. Our friends brought their liquid crack brie, while I brought the cheese board and utensils as well as (counter clockwise from the brie) a Beecher’s No Woman, a sharp cheddar, and Port Salut.

We also had two kinds of local bread: Franz’s Palouse Plateau all natural steel cut oat, and Great Harvest‘s 9 Grain (loaves baked fresh daily all day!). The usual bread, Portland French Bakery‘s asiago bread, was missed since it wasn’t at the Fred Meyer’s during the grocery run, but Great Harvest was a fine tasty (in a different way- sweet rather than the chunks of cheese) and much healthier substitute. I’m thrilled to be able to be a supporter of so many local bakeries- and that there are so many to choose from (I am also a fan of Dave’s Killer Bread and Gabriel’s Bakery).

Our plate went great with all the beers we tried at the Cellarfest- and we tried all 18 of them that were available- and our seconds (and thirds) of tastings of the Block 15 2009’s Pappy Dark, though the sweet when emerging from the cellar Dogfish Head 2009 120 Minute IPA was a strong 2nd place favorite of ours. Last year this event is what convinced me that I wanted to start cellaring beers along with wines. Thank you Baileys.

bailey's taproom festival event, bring your own cheese plate

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Cheese party…

The only picture of me at the cheese party, sadly. In the mirror… as we were setting up with guests arriving.

Table filling up with cheese… the goat cheese we made is out in the front in this photo, and you can spread it on a baguette and top with basil/mint/sage and/or pinot noir jam and/or honey balsamic vinegar. Most of the wines for the evening were reds, though some beer also got thrown into the mix later.

There are actually two more side tables of cheese items not in this photo that included blackberries, the parmesan romano rice, slice granny smith apples, and chips with homemade cheese salsa, but this was the main spread that everyone revolved around.
Other cheeses that were added to the chevre (topped with mint/basil/sage and/or honey vinaigrette and/or pinot noir jam), Willamette Valley Farmstead Brindisi, and Pecorino E Tartufo Rusti that I had planned included Chaubier, Feta, Humboldt Fog, Cave Aged Swiss Grueyere, and Queso Del Invierno.

 

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