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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Deschutes Street Fare 2010

Deschutes Street Fare was a street festival event that featured sampler size street fare from ten food carts, paired with Deschutes beer tasters, to benefit Morrison Child and Family Services. It's just getting summer-like hot in the past day or so, which meant that when the gates opened at 5pm there was full on sunshine and sweat as everyone seemed to come directly from work. Within a few hours, it started to calm down so everyone was no longer elbow to elbow, and half the street started to get some shade as the sun went on its way down.

Except for the crowd (which was a good thing for Morrison, but meant that when the space got full it was very uncomfortable and they even limited admission for a while because of reaching capacity… not sure how you calculate capacity on a street but I'm sure there must be an algorithm), I have no real complaints. Obviously, they were not sure what the turn-out was going to be, and since they had only set aside the outside block between Deschutes and Armory and no space inside Deschutes itself there wasn't a lot of space to go to. As comparison, the Beer n Burgers Event had also only been a block and that space had been fine (not even included the sidewalk), though they also only had 5 stands, not 10, and no musicians or stages.

I got a sampler pass, which got me in the door and also 7 tokens for $25, allowing me to sample 7 out of the 10 pairings. I carefully tried to plan my calories for the day based on this. When I arrived, the line for prepaid vs at the door was the same, so apparently the only advantage was that online you could pay with a credit card while at the door was cash only, and even those who had already decided what to buy got to enjoy everyone at the door reading through how many carts there were and trying to guesstimate how many tokens to get. I wish there were more reward for those who plan ahead and guarantee a paid sale before the event, but I also had the advantage of already knowing my cart visit order.

First was Slow & Low, for their cantonese pork belly Bahn Mi with housemade kimchi, kimchi mayo, cilantro, iceburg lettuce, and fennel pickle, paired with Cascade Ale. This was very satisfying, though there was a little too much bread competing with that tasty pork belly. Needed less doughy bread, or more belly (fat and all, as I would expect from a traditioanl bahn mi). Cascade went so naturally with this I didn't even think about it.

Next was a stop at Grilled Cheese Grill, which has been on my wishlist for a while, and still is after this tasty example of a jalapeno popper sandwich of roasted jalapeno peppers with colby jack cheese, cream cheese, crumbled corn tortilla chips on grilled sourdough bread. It was matched with a green lakes organic ale to try to cool the spice. Extra love for them because they gave out branded frisbees, which were great for balancing food and drink while standing. I saw that some thought this had too much heat and couldn't finish it, but I had no problems.

Garden State came with their famous meatball parmesan sliders with all natural beef and pork in a big meatball covered with mozzarella and marinara, paired with Mt St Hellens keller beer. It is as seriously filling as it appears. 

Mum's Kitchen offered a South African influenced Indian spicy garlic pork curry with fresh squeezed IPA, a pairing which just didn't work for me.

My palatte was immediately refreshed and cheered by Flavour Spot's sausage&maple dutch taco (waffle sandwich) and their maple pecan version, both paired with maiboc. Extra shoutout for providing their branded wet naps for sticky finger cleanup, so thoughtful.

 

Potato Champion's poutine from Spudnik, paired with alma NWPA, met expectations. Really though, getting the real deal from the cart at SE 12th and Hawthorne after a few drinks where it is more loaded with gravy and chunks of rogue cheese can't compare to a sampler.

The excellent finish was Oregon Ice Works strawberry gelato, which I had with Green Lakes Organic Ale. The strawberry was the best of the three offerings they had, the other three being peach and chocolate black butte porter.

This means I passed on Whiffie's bbq brisket and mozzarella fried pie paired with Hop in the Dark- I was tempted for the beer alone, it being the only dark beer, but I had Whiffie's already at the Bite. For similar reasons of having experienced them before, I passed on Pyro Pizza and their margherita pizza on wheat crust with Twilight ale. I also passed on Ali Baba's gluten free chicken and kabob with gluten free pale ale, though the gluten free pairing was clever.

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2010 Eat Mobile Food Cart Festival: the retrospective

We were excited to pre-purchase our tickets for the 2010 Eat Mobile Food Cart Festival even before they were on sale, and so it was no surprise that we planned to show up 30 minutes early to start snacking on our 30 samplers from the 30 carts right at the opening bell. The event sold out (capped at 1200) people, and even though they spaced it over 2 1/2 blocks under the Morrison bridge it still got very difficult to navigate through lines just to get from cart location to another after just an hour after opening. Portland people do love food carts.

First stop was Vietnamese Banh Mi Sandwiches, which I passed on because it’s relatively close to where I live. I’ve had their sandwiches twice: not as good as Best Baguette, but then again this is a cart not a restaurant, and they still are able to offer 8 sandwiches (Best Baguette offers about a dozen, but they also can offer freshly baked bread and other pastries since they have more space at a brick and mortar location). If you are looking for banh mi sandiwiches in the downtown area, I’m not even sure there is anywhere else in the city proper as they are pho houses that I’ve seen.

Next was Sip, a cart offering organic vegan juices and smoothies. I confess I went back for their tastings of their green smoothie with kale, spinach, and some citrus fruits like apple or orange or lemon) twice. Their location at Division and Powell in the neighborhood of the People’s Food Coop isn’t an area I go to, but they plan to have a second mobile (actually mobile like driving around) in the summer and are also adding some food to their menu, so I hope to find them again. A lot of the food carts that people seem to fawn over involve pretty unhealthy food that is often rich and savory, but it doesn’t always have to be that way and it’s great to support food carts that are also tasty but even good for you.

Micro Mercantes were cutting up their jalapeno cheese, pork, and chicken tamales for tasters, and I doused my pork one liberally with my favorite green chili and enjoyed it quickly as I was trying to move through carts quickly before the rest of the line behind us caught up. Even though I linked to their official website, there isn’t much information on it, but it does communicate one tidbit many may not know: this cart is actually a coop for Latin women to help economically empower them through their tasty tamales. Their presence is at various farmer’s markets and their cheap $2.50 homemade tamales helps them establish a community via housing, healthcare clinics, a credit union, and community centers. I’m not sure which farmer’s markets they’ll be at this year (I know they are not at the ones downtown), but I know they are at the markets closer to OHSU, one at the Pearl, and several more on the east side of Portland. How can you not want to at least get one tamale knowing this every time you see them?

Moxie was on the ball with their platters of homemade granola with greek yogurt and raspberry rhubarb compote. With all the rich food the other carts were offering, this was an incredibly tasty break for the palate, and they had the most beautiful stop in terms of setting up a feel for who they are at their station at Eat Mobile, so no wonder they wonder they were awarded Best Style of Eat Mobile. They are located at North Mississippi and North Shaver and are very well known for their homemade take on brunch (and people appreciating them, as judged by waiting in long lines) 

PBJ’s Grilled was one that I saw on the list but had not heard of- and it turns out it is because they are still at the “coming soon” state. PBJ was a surprising discovery of taste for me with their offerings of various takes on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in the same vein that grilled cheese has gone gourmet- and they did it very successfully. I’m not usually a fan of pbj sandwiches, but their offerings had me coming back for 3 of these (I just wasn’t satisfied tasting just one and not knowing what the other combination’s taste profiles would turn out to be- a cruel tease)! When they do open as an official food cart (they are opening April 26 at NW 23rd and Kearney Street), I think they will do well: they were even a runner-up for best tasting food at this Eat Mobile Food Cart Festival as voted by a panel of culinary professionals.

It took a while to understand their selections though: and their write-ups on the table were not very illuminating. The more you document on a big sign the less you will have to explain! And make it big so that by the time someone comes up they already can pick out what they want instead of processing under pressure. There’s the process manager in me thinking how I would set up a cart. Although I don’t think the tasting versions had all these ingredients, the regular offerings off their future menu include the “Good Morning” had blueberry jam, apple wood smoked bacon, 100% maple syrup, PBJ’s peanut butter, while the “Wildflower” had peach jam, wild flower honey, PBJ’s peanut butter, the “Pumpkin Pie” is a sweet dessert-ty concoction of pumpkin butter, Two Tarts caramel sauce, pie crust, PBJ’s peanut butter. I still prefered the “Spicy Thai” with orange marmalade, sriracha, fresh basil, curry, PBJ’s peanut butter and the “Betty” which will be Gruyere cheese, bread and butter pickles, white pepper, sea salt, PBJ’s peanut butter. I’m going to try to make it to their opening, we’ll see if I get caught on some work call or if I can continue my investigation.
PBJ's food cart at Eat Mobile 2010

F’s favorite and his People’s Choice vote was Asaase Ital Palace, African-Carribean food that is vegan/vegetarian: I had to admit their “fish” did taste like fish. I only had a shared bite of Fat Kitty Falafel, where they were already behind in the first 20 minutes as they struggled to produce their freshly fried falafel in time to meet the crowd. But, their falafel deserves the buzz it gets. Addy’s Sandwich Bar was trying to offer 5 different types of tastings, which was quite ambitious… for what at the opening was a one woman operation. The “line caught Oregon tuna with capers, red onion, cornichon and house mayo” was good, as was the rich “country pate with dijon and cornichons) and the “duck confit with cranberry relish”. This cart is located at SW 10th and Alder, not far from the trolley line and in company of other great carts such as Nong’s Kao Man Gai, Eurodish, Zita’s Pitas, Altengartz and Savor- a very strong cart pod. I have them on my wishlist to try their consistently well reviewed ham, gruyere, and butter sandwich, which did not make the tasting menu at Eat Mobile.
Addy's Sandwich Bar at Eat MobileAddy's Sandwich Bar at Eat Mobile

After 2 weeks of pizza for lunch as leftovers, I didn’t have the heart to try Pyro Pizza, but I heard lots of rave reviews and as evidenced by the long lines every time I went by after that, they did very well. My foodie friends couldn’t say enough good things about their pizza with caramelized torpedo onions with gorgonzola and parmigiano-reggiano cheeses and pistachios. They are normally located at SE 12th and Hawthorne, neighbors to Potato Champion and Whiffies. I’m kicking myself a little for getting out of line after these foodie friends had come to be raving about Soup Cycle, which I had skipped since they can actually deliver if I wished it. I ended up getting 2 tastings of Soup Cycle that evening anyway- when I went back to drop off my glassy stone for my favorite cart (that’s how they tallied votes for the People’s Choice Award), Soup Cycle had no line, while Pyro Pizza still was 20 people in the weeds. Well, the cauliflower apple gruyere soup was still delicious both times I had it, so I don’t regret that! And I’m sure that SE 12th and Hawthorne cart will still be visited by me: now I’ll just have 3 carts that I’m aiming for, not just two.

My vote at the Eat Mobile Food Cart Festival went to Nuevo Mexico for their stuffed sopapillas (fried sweet dough that is then stuffed) and their green chili chicken stew. Both were on fire with flavor! And, I appreciated their large signage and line of preppers in their area… so I guess I was also awarding them my appreciation of a good setup. The first food picture is a look at the green chili chicken stew on the left, and on the right is the ground beef and green chili sopapilla decked out with cheese and tomatoes and beans. My choice was the carne adovada, with pork and red chili: messy but worth it, and the sopapilla was the perfect sponge for all the chili and sauce from the carne. Thank you Nuevo Mexico for bringing sopapillas to Portland (at Mississippi and Skidmore).
Nuevo Mexico food cartNuevo Mexico stuffed sopapillas Nuevo Mexico stuffed sopapillas

I kept glancing to my right at the equally long line (Pyro Pizza, Taqueria Los Gorditos, and Nuevo Mexico were all right next to each other), which was Taqueria Los Gorditos, offering Mexican vegetarian and vegan.. I wanted to run off with the giant guacamole of Taqueria Los Gorditos: I was surprised they actually let everyone help themselves to the guacamole portion, so they must have had lots ready to keep filling that pestle up! I was curious bout the blue corn beverage but didn’t try- their lines were long mainly because you had to wait for each person to guacamole-themselves up. All three still boasted the same long lines of patient people a couple hours later- but were not out of food, unlike others I had skipped then/went back later but were out, like Bombay Chaat House, Mono Malo, and Sawasdee Thai.

The Carne adovada is when my hands started getting super messy, but the People’s Pig is what sealed it. A long line that wrapped around chairs and tables hinted at what was to come: a piggy looked on as people line up for The People’s Pig offering of cuban pulled pork taco as a taster. I put down the extra $6 to get the porcetta from the People Pig… which I then carefully wrapped, put into my purse, and into tupperware to enjoy the next day!
People's Pig food cartPeople's Pig food cartPeople's Pig food cart

I was getting pretty full at this point, but still had room for Flavourspot which was just next door to People’s Pig at the Eat Mobile. Flavourspot proclaims themselves the home of the dutch taco, aka this mix of savory and sweet with the waffle wrapping cheese and maple sausage. With 3 locations across the city and also scoring runner up for the People’s Choice Award, they are proof that waffle sandwiches are a winning combination of flavor
Flavourspot cheese and maple sausage Dutch Taco

I forgot to capture the photos of Whiffies, but their bbq beef with mozzarella was pretty good- and since Nuevo Mexico’s sopapillas are a bit harder for me to get to location-wise, Whiffies is a fine substitute of fried goodness sponging up flavor, just in fried pie instead. They won the People’s Choice Award for Eat Mobile 2010. Rather then selecting one of their sweet versions of pie (like the peanut butter with chocolate chips I tried), go for fruity frozen ice-pop like offerings of Oregon Ice Works (they are working with Whiffies but will be opening their own cart soon). Their raspberry was so chunky with raspberry I had to chew it, while the lemon was like a perfect summer tart lemonade. Although I appreciate the audacity and coolness of Fifty Licks‘ offerings of hand made ice cream in flavors that include Tahitian Vanilla, Stumptown Coffee, Maple Bacon (all three of these are winning combinations!) and Red Bull Cola, I can’t help but prefer the fruity ice more as a cool clean refresher that doesn’t have the cream of Fifty Licks. I don’t want to think about how many calories I’m having…

Potato Champion‘s poutine was as good as I was expecting: and considering I’ve had my eye on this cart ever since I moved here and still haven’t made it over, my expectations were pretty high. I’ll be visiting that cart pod this year, it’s my goal!
Potato Champion, poutine

Top honors for best tasting food as judged by the culinary panel this year at the Eat Mobile food cart festival went to Garden State, offering Sicilian street snacks. I’ve heard only good things about this cart, but their location in Sellwood is inconvenient for me to get to by public transit even as they are being raved about even on a segment of Good Morning America. They also have a new Mississipi location. Garden State’s taste offering of grilled alaskan cod with vinaigrette (along with lettuce and orange slices) on a slice of baguette was a pretty healthy offering and showcased their ability to put together a clean taste profile, even as a cart (though I wasn’t sure what was the Sicilian snack part of it)

I wrapped up the last bosnian cheese pita (sirnica) that Ziba’s Pita had before they were out, then tasting seconds at Soup Cycle and Sip (which I’ve sworn I will now have to patronize twice more this summer to make up for it), and also a taste of the grilled cheese turkey, Tillamook cheddar, and truffle oil at Savor Soup House (The Grilled Cheese Grill was supposed to be at Eat Mobile but had to drop out because of an illness: I guess I’ll still have to plan on visiting their school bus), and a few blocks away, a beer at Green Dragon. There were many other carts I didn’t try- some because I’ve been to them before, others because I know I can easily get to the cart myself on my own time- but it wonderful to see so many options at this festival. It would be great to see this continue to grow. The $7 per person for all the tastings is a steal, honestly, but even if they moved to a ticketing system like Taste of Chicago does (so you can decide for yourself how many tickets to spend at each cart to get a choice of different samplings or a full size portion: in some cases if everyone wanted to taste it made sense to put tickets together to get a full size everyone could enjoy then just individual bites), I’d have no problem coming back, no hesitation, and it was even for a good cause. And, that would also make it more fair for places like PBJ where no one just wanted one little taster.

And next time, consider our groups’ two browsing strategies. I came in with a must-try list of carts, often based on what I hadn’t had before and also based on how difficult it would be for me to get to, car-less and relying only on public transit and based on their hours of operation. The second strategy was to divide up and grab samples for friends so instead of waiting in all lines, you wait in half of them- generally with the men being sent to scout for the shorter lines to bring goodies back while the ladies chatted in the longer lines patiently nesting :X Being stuffed almost like its Foodcartthanksgiving FTW.

This coming weekend we have some Chicago friends and a birthday at Rogue/Green Dragon, so I am pretty excited to get some more friend and food time in before my work project takes me on the road for two weeks again.

More on the awards and a few more pictures of Eat Mobile 2010 can be found at The Examiner’s coverage, and much better photos by ExtraMSG on Flickr. Hey, I was eating.

 

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