Schwenking. No really.

Shwenking is going on tour in Portland this summer. No, really.

The schwenker (or schwenk for short) is a special kind of portable grill and technique originating from the Mosel Velly and Saarland region in Germany that cooks meat over an open flame on a swinging grill platform over the fire. This grill platform can be pulled up and down and swiveled or of course, put into a swinging motion over the fire by the “schwenk meister”. No, really.

During the grilling, or schwenking process, you can watch the meat slowly cooking as it moves, like watching a hypnotist swing a watch but this is much more appealing to watch as it is glistening meat that has already been marinated for three days versus some ticking stopwatch, and it spins not just swings.  Yes! Really!

The Tuttles of Teutonic Wine Company are ambassadors of Schwenking and brought this back from their trip. They are taking their coal fired tripod schwenker grills on a Schwenk Portland 2013 tour this summer to 13 Portland restaurants, where each restaurant will create their own schwenk dish, and then pair it with Mosel Riesling imported or produced by Teutonic.

I tried out my first schwenking dish at Raven & Rose yesterday (I missed other tour stops during June).

Schwenking at Raven & Rose The Schwenk Meisters, Schwenking at Raven & Rose

For their schwenking stop, Raven & Rose were offering 3 schwenk dish options, and also 3 Kabinett style Rieslings or you can get a flight of all three rieslings:

Menu Raven & Rose Schwenking Stop

  • Trout on fennel fronds, gooseberry conserva, cucumber radish salad
  • Pork tenderloin, German potato salad, kolrabi slaw
  • Spatchcocked Quail with peaches, green beans, walnut sauce
  • 2012 Teutonic Wine Co Crow Valley Vineyard
  • 2011 Ackermann Zeltinger Sonnenuhr, Kabinett Feinherb
  • 2010 Philips Eckstein Graacher Himmelreich, Kabinett

Ok, first I confess I got temporarily distracted from the schwenking. I love the Rookery, and while I was waiting for a friend to join me I had a flight of single barrel bourbons. But then, it was time! I tried the riesling flight, as well as the pork and quail dishes. The Ackermann Kabinett Feinherb was the most dry of the 3 rieslings, which paired well with the sweetness of the spatchcocked quail. Meanwhile, the pork tenderloin was perfect in its hint of smoke and the oh so tender texture like ahi which I accompanied mostly with sips of the Philips Kabinett which was in the middle between dry and sweet. The Teutonic riesling which was the sweetest of the three I matched up with the kolrabi slaw and the bacon flecked bites of the German potato salad.

single barrel bourbon flight at the Rookery in Raven & Rose Schwenking and Riesling at Raven and Rose, Flight of Kabinett style Rieslings: 2011 Ackermann Zeltinger Sonnenuhr, Kabinett Feinherb/ 2010 Philips Eckstein Graacher Himmelreich, Kabinett / 2012 Teutonic Wine Co Crow Valley Vineyard From the schwenker during Schwenking Portland 2013, Raven & Rose stop: Spatchcocked Quail with peaches, green beans, walnut sauce From the schwenker during Schwenking Portland 2013, Raven & Rose stop: Spatchcocked Quail with peaches, green beans, walnut sauce From the schwenker during Schwenking Portland 2013, Raven & Rose stop: Pork tenderloin, German potato salad, kolrabi slaw From the schwenker during Schwenking Portland 2013, Raven & Rose stop: Pork tenderloin, German potato salad, kolrabi slaw From the schwenker during Schwenking Portland 2013, Raven & Rose stop: Pork tenderloin, German potato salad, kolrabi slaw

Here are more upcoming stops on that tour (you can find more pictures also at the Schwenk Portland Facebook page) or you can also look at the NPR coverage of Tuttle and his schwenker here, including a simple pork recipe!

  • Accanto – July 14
  • Ned Ludd – July 21
  • Olympic Provisions NW – 7/28
  • Wildwood – August 1
  • Old Salt Marketplace – August 10
  • Sauvage – August 11
  • Grüner – August 17
  • Cheese Bar – August 18

And if you have not visited the Rookery before, get your butt over there! The atmosphere is relaxing and warm in their big open loft with 2 TVs and a pool table, several couches. And, a nice long bar to sidle up to and get an education on whiskeys or whatever you are thirsty for while listening to, if you are lucky, the deep husky voice of Dave Shenaut, bar director / president of the Oregon Bartender’s Guild, or Alan Akwai’s incredibly efficient way of mixing while simultaneously eloquently rolling a whole vocabulary of descriptors of flavors and knowing exactly what bottles or eye droppers or misters to reach for to concoct the perfect drink for your palate, all belying his fresh face. Well, I’m sure Dave is eloquent too but I was lulled by that voice. It doesn’t even matter what he’s saying.

I’ve written previously about how they have special beer events (Beer with the Bird, such as one I attended with Double Mountain and Logsdon and with cheese!!) and whiskey Wednesdays (including special event Raven & Rye Wild Turkey I attended and blogged about) so you can see more wonderfulness of my crush on the Rookery there. Please note the Rookery does not serve the full menu of the restaurant downstairs, though it seems they are experimenting with offering some more than just the bar snacks they have been doing so far (a ploughman’s platter was the most substantial item). There is another bar downstairs though, tended by Angel and she is also great at taking are of you, including one evening providing F an ice cube to put in his too hot soup so we didn’t have to wait so long to enjoy it.
A flight of single barrel bourbon at the Rookery, upstairs of the Raven & Rose Flight of Kabinett style Rieslings: 2011 Ackermann Zeltinger Sonnenuhr, Kabinett Feinherb/ 2010 Philips Eckstein Graacher Himmelreich, Kabinett / 2012 Teutonic Wine Co Crow Valley Vineyard

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A Dinner at Ox

Ox Restaurant wants to celebrate the meat loving appetites that Portland has and combines it with Argentinean execution technique and the fact that the meats in South America are also quite celebrated (see any churrascaria, and also that famed Argentina beef raised on grass on the pampas since the 1800s and are considered as some of the best in the world). Why hasn’t this happened before!?

A dinner experience at Ox on a Friday evening started out when we arrived about a quarter after 6pm and were told there was a 60-90 minute wait for our party of two (they only take reservations for parties of more than six guests). They have a separate bar space behind the restaurant that actually involves walking out the front door of the restaurant and back away from the street to reach it (Whey Bar- debuted a few months after the restaurant itself opened earlier this year in the spring). But once you arrive it has the hidden vibe than the loud busyness of the trendy dining space- although depending on how many people are waiting and how long you are waiting, I can see that it can also feel like purgatory. We had asked for first available seating, which 45 minutes later after putting our name on the list, ended up being at the counter bartop area right before the wood fire grill, watching them masterfully turned the crank to raise and lower the grill from the fiery heat and track and flip the various simultaneous dishes all grilling away.

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Over the course of the evening, I had the opportunity to try a few cocktails. My favorite by far was called “Things Done Changed” created with Pisco, Smoked Lemon, Jalapeño, and Egg White- the drink went down so smoothly but through every sip and even lingering after the sip was the subtle smokiness. I suppose it is only right that the star of the cocktails I had is a South American one (based off Pisco Sour).

Ox restaurant dinner cocktail pisco sour Ox restaurant dinner cocktail pisco sour

The others, in order of enjoyment in my opinion, were Devil in a New Dress with Tequila, Red Pepper, Combier Orange, Lime, Mezcal; Falling Leaves with Jameson Irish Whiskey, Apple Cider, Maple, Lemon.

Our dinner service started with complimentary bread with butter and chimichurri sauce. We also enjoyed some extremely creamy amuse bouche of butternut squash soup. Next came the starters of Empanadas, one each of Beef, Green Olive and Raisin, the other with Grilled Poblano Chile, Sweet Potato, Fontina & Chèvre. The vegetarian one was slight sweet but mostly understated, while the beef green olive was a nice mix of salty savoryness, but didn’t need the fried empanada shell. I appreciated them being on the menu as they are very typical Argentina offerings, but it didn’t offer a wow factor at all- they were nice, but something you could find just as good or better elsewhere.

Ox restaurant dinner chimichurri Ox restaurant dinner chimichurri Ox restaurant dinner empanada

Unlike, for instance, the Wood-Fired House Ricotta, Button Mushroom Confit, Balsamic Brown Butter, Grilled Bread. I could have just eaten that straight without the bread, it was wonderful with the light creaminess of the ricotta floating and melting on your palate like a cloud but enhanced with a dark and sex smokey-ness, and then the buttery juicy mushrooms… you will not be able to stop your spoon from visiting until it is all gone. You must get this dish.

Ox restaurant dinner baked mushroom ricotta

Most of the meats and the salads/sides portions comes in small and large portions to choose from, so you can mix together your dinner experience from various menu offerings. We decided to share a meat dish since they seemed pretty large (8 oz being the smallest we saw… well the meat anyway. The shellfish came smallest in 6oz and the maitake mushroom in 4oz). We went with the Grass-Fed Uruguayan Beef Ribeye, which came in 12 oz, medium rare. The sides we selected were a bit of acid and bitter counter with a salad of Belgian Endive, Bosc Pear, Arugula, Dijon Vinaigrette, Aged Farmstead Gruyère, Toasted Pecan, and also a creamy luscious side of Tuscan Kale Risotto with Parmigiano Reggiano, Mascarpone, and Herb Butter.

Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner

The meat was so incredible. Simply prepared but expertly and perfectly done in the flames to the right temperature and perfect tenderness. It offered an outside crispy char to show how it was so loved by the fire but not so much that you can’t savor the drippings that still came from the meat and the flavor of the meat itself. Ox respects the ingredient and nature to resonate memories we didn’t know we have and appeal directly to our primal pleasure cells and- and oh they so do. They so do.

Ox restaurant dinner steak beef ribeye

The dessert menu was too enticing to just pick one to share, so we went with three. Of the three, our favorite by far was the Torte, with  a Warm Hazelnut Brown Butter Torte, Honey-Chamomile Ice Cream, and Honeycomb Candy. The torte was so warm and gooey and comforting, while the ice cream wasn’t too tea-y with the chamomile and the honeycomb gave good crunchy texture to the soft dessert dish. The Cake, composed of Vanilla Bean Tres Leches Cake, Roasted Banana Pudding, Dulce de Leche Alfajor Cookie was very sweet- it should be enjoyed with coffee or a dessert drink that can balance it out. We also had a dessert dish named “Magic” which offered Roasted Pear Sorbet, Bittersweet Chocolate Magic Shell, Bosc Pear and Marcona Almond Salad didn’t quite live up to the magic in its name in my opinion. Maybe if the pears had more strength in flavor and the chocolate had more bittersweetness rather than reminding me of the same chocolate in Dairy Queen- there for texture but not much else. Definitely choose the Torte.

Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner Ox restaurant dinner

I will definitely be back. I want to try their clam chowder with the marrow bone that they have brought perhaps as a callback from their Metrovino days, and more items from their wood oven fired sections like the skirt steak and lamb shoulder and I didn’t try any charcuterie… Don’t mistake Ox for a typical Portland restaurant though- Ox’s prices are a bit spendy but is typical in terms of as you would see from a steakhouse, so if you keep that in mind you won’t have sticker shock. If this was any other large city, these prices and the wait would be expected. But still, at these prices, despite the buzz of this restaurant, I wish they could move to a reservation system that is not just big groups, even if for only part of the space- maybe they need time to figure it out.  I can’t imagine that as time passes at these prices, that guests would continue to be ok with a long wait with little considerations. Even though Whey was a good start it’s pretty small space best left at two dozen people or less, and given Portland’s long dark rainy days coming up now, and not many other options for waiting/getting the call in the area, patience will wear thin. It seems like they have some outside space- if they could tent it and add some outdoor heaters, it could give some respite and expand Whey during the winter for waiting guests instead of only during the summer.

Ox has the benefit of also being very Portland-y in vibe and in unique and bold combinations in what they offer on the menu to demonstrate that Ox has a viewpoint that is worth trying and supporting, and they are definitely up and comers. I observed the Dentons that night working the evening with determination to execute well and consistently do so, and did so in an organized manner while also being hands on and in the trenches with the rest of their staff. You can tell this is their dream come true and they are passionate and willing to about making this work.

Combining the fine dining style they had helped lead at Metrovino while still having a modernist, forward style instead of a traditional steak menu and enhancing with the earthy core of grill cooking and bold South American flavors is a great idea given all the amazing quality of meats available here. I think Ox will still be hopping for quite a while. Even if not everything was a hit out of the ballpark, there were enough impressive home runs that I want to try more and see how they grow- after all, they haven’t even had their 1 year anniversary yet. I’m sure there will be another wait before I can actually be seated to dine thanks to the buzz- good thing there were still a few drinks on the menu at Whey that I want to try. But, I would also return in a similar small party or close to when it just opens for dinner service to make the experience with the wait bearable because they mostly have two-tops. Really the best seats in the house are really at the countertop bar by the fire anyway- just wear layers so you can shed them as needed as you feel that radiant heat and become perfumed by that smoky wood.

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