Caps and Corks, Jack of All Trades for your Drinking Needs

Caps and Corks is a neighborhood bottle shop but also pub offering both beers and wine and mixed drinks in the Pearl District/Slabtown area. I'm not sure who writes their little tidbits on the Facebook feed, but I always enjoy reading them. During my first visit on a Thursday evening, I was surprised to see all the tables in the front and the main front area all occupied by other relaxing 20-30 somethings, but the back, where the air conditioning replaced the summer breeze, was empty. Perhaps everyone was trying to soak in as much sunlight while we had it, and the darker back portion didn't offer that, even though it had the more comfy deep booths. A short time later, suddenly everyone was gone- and I realized they came on the Brewcycle. So, if you arrive and you see it parked out front, go on in- the "crowd" will only be there for a short period.

The full bar is stocked with many kinds of liquors so that they can concoct whatever your regular standard drink is (and can do so even using local liquors), but they don't offer a cocktail menu of their own recipes, save a few that mix alcohols in "Beertails", such as one I saw that put a porter and champagne together. They also had three large cooler units full of bottles of regional beer and cider with a few other offerings from other locations thrown in to give you a lot of beer options, as well as a rotation of 7 additional beer on taps and wines written on the chalkboard (I admit I did not study the wine offerings on this trip). There is a minimal corkage fee if you decide to drink your bottle (beer or wine) here instead of taking it to go.

They offer some bites to go along with all their beverages. The happy hour here is called "191 Merry Minutes", lasting from 3-6:11 with lots of snackity options for less than $5 , ranging from the expected burger, fries, tots, pizza, mac and cheese options to a few luxuries such as Chicken and Gravy Slider ("On a buttermilk biscuit, covered in gravy to help it sliiiiiiiide.") or Bacon Wrapped Asparagus (described as "Bacon, hugging its vegetable friend, in a bleu cheese bath."). Also, on Mondays they have "Burger Monday" with options of 10 different burgers along with tots and a beer and a pint- a happy meal for adults. They also seem to have a Saturday/Sunday brunch with supposedly very good bloody marys.

I went during none of these times, so ordered off the regular menu. Our 3 orders of a Cheese plate of 3 cheeses, Bourbon Fried Chicken with house made bourbon batter (with 2 sides- I selected tots and a mixed greens salad), Veggie Burger with roasted garlic, caramelized onions, and blue cheese on a toasted kaiser roll (with selected side of double tots) all arrived simultaneously.

I tend to be more forgiving of bar food, but I was pleasantly surprised that the dishes we got had good flavor, even if they did lean towards the greasy. For the cheese plate, the cuts of cheese were thin but the herbed goat cheese was spreadable and buttery, and the doughy fresh bread and big helping of house-pickled vegetables that we used to cut through the fat of all our dishes was very welcome. The chicken meat was moist with crispy skin that was cooked well, and the vinaigrette on the mixed greens was a good counter that was not too acidic or oily, but I couldn't detect much seasoning or the advertised bourbon. The veggie burger was the least appetizing looking with its shiny smothering of roasted garlic combined with caramelized onions and blue cheese, but all those toppings also brought flavor and juiciness to a burger which after all, is veggie… by adding a lot of fat.

The service here was very friendly- you go up to the bar with your selected bottle selection for them to open and give you glasses, as well as order your food, which they will then bring to your table. They will also provide water and check on you often to make sure you aren't wanting for anything, be it more beverages, napkins, or taking plates out of your way.

Caps and Corks seems to want to try to offer enough of everything to satisfy whatever your drink crave is and earn their place as your local neighborhood bar, but are ambitious enough to be aspire to offer levels above a mix of beer bottle shop, wine bar, and local dive bar. A jack of all trades is an expert at none, but a jack of all trades is also quite handy to get the job done of satisfying multiple tastes in your party, or just within you depending on your mood.

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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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Seattle Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast

A lunch at Matt’s in the Market was a delectable fresh halibut sandwich with a salad which was a special of the day- our table got the last two sandwiches they had to offer during our lunch at noon. The fish was delicate and tender, fortunately the crusty but doughy bun held it together. The sandwich was accompanied by what was dubbed a simple green salad but with its touch of toasted pumpkin seeds, crumbled bleu cheese, and roasted garlic dressing was a blockbuster of bold flavors to contrast the gentleness of the fish sandwich. The space was very clean with mostly sunshine and woods and open air (including the open kitchen) to highlight the simplicity but hustle and bustle of this Pike Place Market space.

Dinner at Poppy was something I had looked forward to- so often that I had visited the website to torture myself with what I would order several times before the final arrival at the restaurant in the trendy Capital Hill neighborhood. The restaurant presents its entrees in the style of Indian thalis, which are meals served on a tray in which multiple small portions are plated in individual bowls and plates or compartments, almost like a mix between bento boxes and tapas but which are intended to be eaten in any order and whatever mix you wish. There usually is at least one portion which includes a dhal (soup or thin stew), basic vegetable side, a creamy curd or yogurty side (which balances any heat from the typically curry main), a small pickled relishy acid offering, naan or crispy pappadum for carbs (Indian bread), and a rich main.

At Poppy you can select from 7 item or 10 item thalis. Since I was insisting we have the eggplant fries with sea salt and honey which were so raved about on their Yelp reviews and we wanted the dessert thali (a variation of the same idea with multiple small sweets collected in a tray) we edited ourselves to the 7 item entrees. The eggplant fries were a good balance of the crispness from the battered outside but melt in your mouth on the inside, with just a touch of salt and honey to balance the frying treatment. I also started with my first cocktail (I had three… so maybe I ordered as many drinks as the cost of my entree), what was called the “Tomato Trap: ripe tomato, aquavit, lemon, lovage”. The cocktail was a disappointment- I was expecting a stronger tomato profile, and it was nothing compared to the amazing sangritas I had at Teardrop Lounge.

Sorry for the dark lighting- there is only so much you can do without a flash. For the next course my beverage was the “Papi Delicious:  tequila, curacao, red bell pepper, jalapenos, lime, mint” which again, disappointed me with its weak pepper and jalapeno body- the Calapooia Chili beer, an amber ale with fresh Anaheim, Serrano, and Jalapeno peppers had taken better advantage of the cool and heat combination then this drink did and that was a beer, so sadness.

I did love my entree- maybe not all the offerings within it, but overall I would definitely love to give Poppy another try. I went with the fish 7-item thali, which included neah bay salmon with a lemon hollandaise sauce on lentils, pumpkin vanilla soup, carrot leek and salad, roasted squash, corn and basil spoonbread, plum-shiso pickle and nigella poppy naan.

The standouts here were the creamy spoonbread- definitely an inspiration for a future autumn or Thanksgiving dish, and the salmon with the lentils was a good play of the lightness of the fish and light handed hollandaise with the texture of the lentils. The pumpkin vanilla soup was wonderful to start with, but the vanilla became stronger and stronger as consumed so I tried to balance it with the naan and pickles and no longer enjoy it by spoonfuls. The naan was ok but nothing special- plenty of naan I’ve had is superior- and the same with the one note roasted squash. The salad was the worst- it had a taste like it had been sitting in Tupperware so long it had taken in the taste of the plastic container.

Dessert started out with a cocktail that was the best of the three that evening: “Lemon Verbena Drop: lemon vodka, lemon verbena, limoncello, lemon juice”. This was fresh and tart without being overwhelming sweet or sour like most lemon drops are: the use of lemon verbena and limoncello instead of just lemon juice and sugar gives it a good zing, with the lemon verbena tempering the lemon acid while also upping how refreshing it is both on the palate and aroma.

The Dessert Thali: we were offered a choice of one dessert choice, one ice cream choice, plus the other thali assortments would include lavender shortbread, nutter-butter squares, passion fruit pâtes de fruit, and salted caramel truffle. For the dessert choice we went with coffee-avocado ice cream sandwich with mocha rum dipping sauce, and for the ice cream we went with the Guiness buttercrunch.

The best of the tray were the nutter butter squares in its intensity, followed by the ice cream sandwich. The Guiness buttercrunch didn’t have the Guiness taste to it really, only the buttercrunch gave it some interesting texture and malty flavor. The chocolate ginger cookie was actually quite good and chewy- I wish I had thought to tear it up and mix it with the ice cream but in that kind of martini presentation there isn’t really room for that but that would have really elevated the dish in flavor. The salted caramel truffle was mostly mocha with not enough salt or caramel to balance the heaviness of the chocolate. The lavendar shortbread had too much lavendar and was remiscent of soap, sorry.

The hangover breakfast the next day was at Serious Biscuit, just a block or so away as the Halloween party that caused our hangover. Tom Douglas really does have an empire of food establishments in Seattle, but I can’t say I don’t like this eithers, even though I really hate his website with its difficulty in finding menus and confusing navigation and more space given to the icon/typography of the restaurant then evoking the feel of the restaurant or its food. Still. We both couldn’t resist fried chicken with our Serious Buttermilk Biscuit and tabasco black pepper gravy (both soothing me with its creaminess and making my tongue tingle with every bite). I added a smothering of Beecher’s cheddar to mine, while my peer went with “the Zach” which embellished hers with egg and bacon. That boneless hunk o chicken was juicy and extremely crispy, holding up to the generous drenching of spicy gravy.

Thank you to my coworker for a serious adventure to and at and from Seattle. Although our work relationship started out a little bristly, now we know it’s because we are both so awesome . I can’t believe even though I had my camera and captured our eatings and drinkings that I didn’t take a photo of us in our pizza and beer costumes- thanks for being more clever with your camera. I’m so proud that we didn’t leave the party until 2am…

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Pine State Biscuit at the Farmer’s Market- pron pic of the Reggie

Ah, Pine State Biscuit. You tempestuous guilty pleasure of a too rich breakfast that can get scarfed down in 10 minutes it’s so delicious, even though it contains probably half my calorie allotment for the whole day.

Get thee there to the Pine State Biscuit tent at the Portland Farmers Market on Saturday by noonish- they always sell out to the lunchtime crowd of shoppers so 1pm is probably too late, unless you go on a lucky day (like I had yesterday) where the market wasn’t as crowded- perhaps everyone was at Pinot in the City or the Belmont Area Street Fair.

I had my order in a mere 7 minutes or so, with only a handful of people in line before me. Of course, you can also go to one of their two brick and mortar locations- that way you can go at a more flexible time for your schedule. I prefer the Farmers Market so I can picnic enjoy it in the Park Blocks as a pre-reward for carrying the farmers market goodies back up the hill to the house.

They sure work hard at that little stand on Saturday- they have physical locations now but still dish this yumminess up the original way on Saturday at the Portland Farmers Market, and manage the inevitable crowds amazingly. The dude multitasks admirably while executing the food- frying eggs in a pan, meanwhile, there are two pots of gravy (mushroom or sausage) to stir, and the bubbling cauldron of fried chicken on the right… all this in the 7 minutes it took to get my Reggie. Faster and better than any fast food breakfast or wait-for-brunch-joint can pull off- thanks Pine State Biscuit for the quickie and super satisfying breakfast/lunch.

Pine State Biscuit at the Farmers MarketPine State Biscuit at the Farmers MarketPine State Biscuit at the Farmers Market

If you want to enjoy the biscuit, as I have recommended before, I like to get it simply with pimento cheese and let the butteryness of the biscuit play with the smooth bite of the spread.  Or use it as a means to get their savory gravy. That slathering of every bit of pimento cheese or generous pour of gravy makes it because the biscuit can be a bit too flaky dry.

But they have an awesome fresh fried chicken, which brings me to the Reggie. It is so awesome I cannot do it justice in explaining how the fluffy but firm biscuit and savory meaty gravy sauce and crisp and moist still hot from the fryer chicken and salt of the thick bacon all swirl together and are heavenly on your tastebuds. This is the star of Pine State Biscuits. Pine State Biscuit’s Reggie: Fried chicken, bacon & cheese topped with gravy between a buttermilk biscuit O.O Look at that chicken, look at that beckoning bacon

Pine State Biscuit at the Farmers Market, Reggie sandwich: Fried chicken, bacon & cheese topped with gravy between a buttermilk biscuit

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Another visit to Breakside Brewing

I saw Breakside Brewing had just released their bourbon barreled Aztec on Wednesday, so  I had to go check it out. The Aztec is their take on an American strong ale. It is dark (my type of beer) and brewed with honey malt, cocoa, and a mix of Serrano and Habanero chiles. This is a regular on their tap, but this version was additionally aged in bourbon barrels, which I found tamed the spice so it was less backside taste of English Indian curry as instead there was more rounded smoothness, with even a tinge of hard alcohol sweetness. It is sweet, spicy, and strong (12%).

I selected for dinner Breakside Brewing's Curry Fried Chicken served on a bed of mashed potatoes and seasonal local veggies topped with a curry bechamel, fresh pico de gallo, and crispy onions. It went really well to compliment the beer- the chicken was moist with a thick crispy fried skin, the mashed potatoes were creamy as was the curry sauce (resonating the smooth but spicy of the beer), the veggies were cooked right to bring out some color of the broccoli but it was still crisp, and the pico de gallo balanced it out with a bit of tart juicy acid. I would order this dish again, depending on the beer I am highlighting.

Not that of course as soon as we sat down we didn't as a group once again order the excellent blue cheese waffle fries. You can't come here without ordering that again. We also tried on the barkeep's recommendation the Fire Roasted Jalapeno Poppers, fresh jalapenos stuffed by hand with chorizo, jack, cheddar, and cream cheeses, herbs, and spices… which I liked though not as much as the blue cheese waffle fries (photo of fries from previous visit– I was drinking beer when the fries came thanx)

Other dishes served to my beer drinking companions included two other appetizers since they are so generously sized: Breakside Brewery's Housemade Hummus and Marinated Veggie Plate with olives, Italian marinated tomatoes, cucumbers, pickled onion, pepperoncini, feta, and pita; and their Nachos with housemade pico de gallo, jack and cheddar cheese, black beans, sliced jalapenos, guacamole and sour cream

The only other entree that night was the Lambwich 1/2 lb Lamb/Beef patty cooked to your liking, served on a Brioche bun with pesto mayo and Tzatziki Sauce topped with red peppers, pickled onions, lettuce, and tomato, with a side of salad

In terms of breweries to visit, Breakside and their regular update of their beer offerings weekly on Wednesday with special collaborations makes it one of my most highly recommended brewery to visit when in Portland, kicking out my previous choice of Rogue to try "unique beers", and it even pushes me to go outside my usual downtownish/Pearl hood for beer.

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