A Summer Dinner at Gruner: Savory Alpine food served with apathy

A Friday early evening dinner at Gruner started with the fried smashed fingerling potatoes that came with a special sauce that was essentially the equivalent of ranch dressing. Thankfully, the Gruner bread service which includes a soft rye loaf and pretzel bread more than made up for this starter of crispy texture but greasy flavor.

On the bread plate I enjoyed the contrast between the butter and doughyness of the rye and the more firm salted texture of the pretzel, and it delivered on both presentation to match the modern clean atmosphere as well as flavor and texture that reinforces the Gruner philosophy of classic German foundation with a contemporary perspective. Yes, they offer bratwurst and sauerkraut and schnitzel, but with intentions towards also adding layers of avant-garde sophistication. It’s too bad the waiter seemed reluctant to provide it- the appetizer came out before another server passing by asked if I would like some… and then 5 minutes later my waiter came by and asked if I would like some bread, as if he had heard the offer from the other server and now had to reluctantly follow through with this inconvenience.

Gruner, alpine food, fried smashed fingerling potatoes, Portland restaurant Gruner, alpine food, bread plate, rye loaf and pretzel bread, Portland restaurant

The entree of braised chicken alsacienne with hen of the woods mushrooms, fava beans, riesling, crème fraîche, crisp shallots & tarragon, served with quark spätzle offered juicy flavorful chicken with a crispy outside and moist savory inside with spatzle which had a nice soft very light texture, though I wished the spatzle had a bit more crispness in spots (similar to gnocchi, a little sear is a gratifying detail).

The housemade soda offering of cucumber dill verjus was a sparkling crisp contrast for the meal. The beverage softened the fact that my waiter never brought me back my boxed up leftovers. After waiting for a while, I flagged down another server in order to ask if the box existed or was the other half of my entree thrown away. At 6pm the place wasn’t even busy yet- only 3 other tables in the dining room, a few people at the bar counter, though all the seats outside were filled, being premium people watching spots in the warm but not hot yet August weather.

I really enjoyed the food and the concept, despite the hesitant and apathetic service I received. I think next time I’ll try for the bar, as the only smile from the staff during the entire meal was from the hostess and bartendress. Most of the care from the staff I saw was in concern for making the various empty chairs in the rest of the restaurant and place settings perfectly straight. I saw them adjusted here or there by multiple hands the entire visit, and they did look quite neat and orderly.

housemade soda offering of cucumber dill verjus, Gruner, alpine food, Portland restaurant braised chicken alsacienne with hen of the woods mushrooms, fava beans, riesling, crème fraîche, crisp shallots tarragon, served with quark spätzle, Gruner, alpine food, Portland restaurant

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Gruner new year eve menu, Ringing in 2012 with Luc Lac

We started the new year with a stomach full of alpine cuisine thanks to a prix fixe dinner at Gruner before heading to Luc Lac Kitchen for the beverages portion of the evening and to ring in the countdown. While downloading pictures from our Christmas vacation, I left the camera out of my purse, and had to resort to my dying phone camera.

The meal started out with the hors d’ouerves of a polenta “sandwich” with fontina & speck, beet-­pickled egg with caviar, fried-­smashed potato with smoked trout & crème fraîche, radishes with dill & pumpkin seed oil. These three little bites, along with my pairing of a sparkling rose, were a nice fancy start, of which my favorite was the polenta sandwich. We also were given complimentary bread, which included the quite doughy pretzel (housemade) and a seedy soft country bread.

 

Next were appetizers of a salad of blood oranges, quince, pickled beets, radicchio,
endive, citrus vinaigrette and also tarte flambee “bonne anee”- alsatian pizza with sweet onions, maine lobster, smoky bacon, fromage blanc & chives.

 

This was followed by entrees: the vegetarian kabocha squash dumplings, buerre noisette, black trumpet mushrooms, fried sage leaves, parmesan; and also the meat-centered sudan farms rack of lamb en chamois red wine marinade, potato-­parsley root gratin with gruyere cheese, brussel sprouts. We commented on how I surely got my money’s worth of the prix fixe with that meat dish, while the dumplings though delicate and delicious were more sparse in amount. Desserts we selected the chocolate trio and an alpine cheese selection (brillat savarin with truffle), muesli cracker, quince preserves.

 

Luc Lac Kitchen was offering a tremendous deal of a New Year’s Eve- from 10-12pm, you could get in with a cover charge of $10 a person ($15 at the door) that would get you unlimited amounts of their four house cocktails, and the food were at happy hour prices of a mere $2 for small plates or $3 for their salads. Since I had so enjoyed the cocktails on my previous dinner visit, I was excited to try the new debut house cocktails. Yes, we tried them all:

  • Socola Tam: Bacardi 8, coconut cream, cocoa, toasted curry marshmellow. My favorite of the four, maybe because part of the prep is lighting it on fire for this warm drink that is all liquid chocolate and curry like a chocolate truffle.
  • Xanh Zing: tequila blanco, disaronno, jalapeno-basil, lime, disaronno foam, mescal spritz. A nice balance of tart and sweet, though I could have enjoyed a little bit more jalapeno myself, I understand not everyone likes spicy drinks.
  • Saigon Sling: bombay sapphire, benedictine, cherry heering, jack fruit, lime, ango bitters. I can’t believe they had enough little glass punch teacups for everyone as this was an extremely popular request all night
  • Little Ho’s Muscle Milk: drambuie, mandarin, lemon, condensed milk, full egg, champagne, ango bitters. Delicious but I couldn’t help picturing how many eggs were being ingested whenever I saw a glass of this leaving the bar

Above, you see me with the Socola Tam, then the Xanh Zing, and then the Little Ho’s Muscle Milk and Saigon Sling. Being fresh from dinner and fighting off a cold, I passed on any more snacks, but the ones I saw at the tables around me looked great. I just didn’t have any more room even as the chicken wings, mussels, and garlic string beans, even as they continued to called to me- I’ll get to them one day.

There was enough people to feel a cheery anticipatory atmosphere for the countdown while still allowing for speedy service of snacks and drinks and being comfy by enjoying seats at the tables and barstools (the cutoff was around 50 some people I believe) instead of having to stand around. It felt like a luxe private cocktail party.

Happy 2012!

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A Lunch at Gruner: Burgerquest continued

A lunch at Gruner of grilled burger on a potato bun with smoky bacon, fontina (also had the choice of cheddar instead), pickled onions, bread & butter pickles, aïoli & arugula, served with fried smashed potatoes.

Gruner lunch, alpine food, Portland Oregon, grilled burger on a potato bun with smoky bacon, fontina

The Cascadia meat patty was very rich thanks to its high fat content- dripping down my hands actually. I wasn’t quite a fan of the poppy seed potato bun as the top bun kept the crunchy but soft top but then the bottom bun it acted like a sponge that soaked up those drippings and became super soggy at the bottom like it needed to be wrung out it was too full of juices. I believe the buns are made in house (like the breads they offer at dinner)- maybe it needed more resting time upside down to get the bottom half to stand up for the burger, or a cut that gave more bread proportion to the bottom.

Definitely the bun experience I had was a surprise since I had heard such raves about it, and I didn’t really need that much extra fat percentage in the burger- I think Portlanders just love fat even more then I do (even though I do too). I can still see why this burger made the BurgerQuest top 10 list of burgers in Portland, but in my opinion it wasn’t as good as the Toro Bravo burger (also available at Tasty N Sons which is where I had it) despite Nick Zukin’s ranking in Willamette Weekly. I can’t articulate well why this burger with 25% fat was too much, although the Toro Burger at 20-22% is not and delicious to me, except the mouthfeel and drippings just went past a tipping point to me.

I loved the bacon, fontina (which seemed to be a better match given the Alpine cuisine Gruner serves), peppery arugula and there was something special about that currywurst ketchup that I wanted to slather over everything. I was disappointed by the very small portion of smashed fried potatoes which I had to carefully spread out for some crunch with a small dip of ketchup since there were only 5 slivers of them.

Gruner lunch, alpine food, Portland Oregon, grilled burger on a potato bun with smoky bacon, fontina

What looked very lovely was my co-worker’s much healthier lunch of green beans, blackberries, goat cheese, hazelnuts, duck, black currant vinaigrette, crispy shallots. This inspires me to make my own version at home one day and try a green bean salad creation instead of a sauteed version.

Gruner lunch, alpine food, Portland Oregon, green beans, blackberries, goat cheese, hazelnuts, duck, black currant vinaigrette, crispy shallots

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Gruner – mmmmmmm Spätzle

A dinner at Gruner started with a plate of mixed rolls- the rolls and the butter were room temperature, I had been hoping for warm pretzels, so these made the “adequate” grade for me though I was certainly pleased they threw in pretzel bread as part of the complimentary bread plate. The seedy bread could have also benefited from being a little warm (ok, what bread doesn’t), but it was still soft and doughy. I wish the butter that came with had been a sweeter butter, but the seedy bread and butter were nice.

gruner, portland or, alpine food, pretzel bread gruner, portland or, alpine food, pretzel bread

After a lot of internal debate since I knew the day before that I could join a Foodie group going to Gruner, I finally decided on the potato croquettes as my appetizer instead of the smashed potatoes (which I will save to enjoy with their burger)- those smashed potatoes have been written about quite a bit. These crisp polenta croquettes stuffed with raclette cheese made me long for more cheese inside but were executed well to be very crisp and light with no taste of oil

Gruner, alpine food, polenta croquettes stuffed with raclette cheese Gruner, alpine food, polenta croquettes stuffed with raclette cheese

The main entree I had was spätzle with braised chicken, mushrooms, fava beans, riesling, crème fraîche, tarragon & crispy shallots. At first glance, the $21 entree appears really small on the plate. After first bite though, I was in love- these were amazing, with the softness but firmness of the spätzle, the tender juicy bites of chicken, sweetness from the riesling but yet creaminess as well from the creme fraiche in the sauce, a bit of textural interest with the addition of the crispy shallots and the earthy morels. Each bite melted in my mouth faster then I wanted it to and was a swirl of those flavors that I wished for more of as I scraped the plate. I love risotto and gnocchi, and this is a bit like it, but even better.

Gruner, alpine food, spätzle with braised chicken, mushrooms, fava beans, riesling, crème fraîche, tarragon & crispy shallots Gruner, alpine food, spätzle with braised chicken, mushrooms, fava beans, riesling, crème fraîche, tarragon & crispy shallots

I would get that again without hestitation- by far over some of the bites of other entrees I got to try. The choucroute garnie of bratwurst, saucisson, cider braised pork belly, house-cured pork tenderloin, sauerkraut, sweet mustard, yukon gold potatoes- had great juicy meats and the mustard was great, and that sweet rich pork belly is well worth the extra $9 (otherwise it is exactly the same plate as the house-made sausages dinner entree).

But, there was a mountain of sauerkraut that came with it and only a few small yukon gold potatoes- it seems like it could have come with a bit more potatoes to go with all the meat. The concept itself is great if you are having some beer steins or crisp white wine along with, but it is left a bit wanting in my opinion as a standalone dinner entree. I am not that big of a fan that I could enjoy that much sauerkraut because the acidity gets to me- maybe I personally would have mixed it with more veggies like cabbage and carrots. Or, maybe having several kinds of mustards could have also made this more interesting rather then overwhelming as you progress through the dish and still kept the traditionalism of a “meat and potatoes”.

I didn’t have any complaints about the taste I had of the entree of hasenpfeffer — sweet & sour rabbit marinated in red wine and braised with spring onions, carrots, juniper, black pepper & rosemary, with chive-potato dumplings. It was hearty and rich meat with puffs of the potato dumplings in essentially a bowl of stew- but just wasn’t what I was looking for now that it is June but would love in January.

Gruner, alpine food, marionberry jam filled donuts Gruner, alpine food, marionberry jam filled donuts

I was done in terms of fullness after my entree, and have never been a huge dessert fan anyway (unless its a savory dessert) so only have to report second-hand about the desserts we had at the table. The warm marionberry jam filled donuts were raved about so we got multiple orders and looked wonderfully like jumbo sized donut holes with a blizzard of sugar, but seemed like could benefit from a lot more marionberry jam to fill the middle instead of just a little squirt at one end.

The poppy seed shortcake with strawberries, lemon curd and whipped cream stood out from the tartness of the lemon curd with the fresh strawberries and whipped cream- the poppy seed shortcake didn’t add much to me.

The service and atmosphere started with a very modern clean look when I entered- a little bit Ikea but what do I know of “Alpine” style- but the service always came with a smile whether it be as if delighted I had come to join the party as they showed me to the table, or the waiter as he came over almost like a good friend who worked there, giving us insider secret info as he reported that there were only two lamb entrees left, or only so many the biscuits left and did we want him to set some aside, etc. He even cheerfully waited as our party of 8 did math and would take one credit card as a time as we calculated and presented us with half a dozen pens so we wouldn’t be wanting.

Even though it was my first time visiting Gruner, I felt like I was being treated like a regular. Of course I’ll be back again. They have a burger with my name on it… and I hope to also check out their new venture, Kask, a more casual concept just next door that focuses more on handcrafted cocktails, local microbrews and indie wineries along with charcuterie, terrines, local cheeses and breads.

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