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Interview

5 questions for: writer, baker, and pizza pie maker, KEN FORKISH

The local pastry and pizza master (and now book author-to-be!) weighs on what to eat, where to go, and why eaters love living in Portland.

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Photo: Alan Weiner

Ken Forkish and an oven.

Photo Credit: Alan Weiner

Week after week, Portland peeps are willing to wait an hour for a pie at Ken’s Artisan Pizza. Day after day, their Ken’s Artisan Bakery baguettes are half eaten before they make it home. It’s hard to believe that it all began over a decade ago when proprietor Ken Forkish decided to abandon his career in high tech, sell his Jaguar, and build a bakery—his very first food job. In one year his bakery saw visits from Alice Waters, Jacques Pépin, and André Soltner. And now, as of last week, the bread head (he learned his baguette methods at the San Francisco Baking Institute, he says, and the secret is using the best flour and never taking shortcuts) has a book deal with Ten Speed Press—it will be a cookbook with stories, as well as lots of great photos by Alan Weiner, and should be out in time for the holiday season, 2012.

Can’t wait? We got Ken to fork over his thoughts on his fabulous food and our culinary scenery.

1) How has the bakery scene changed since you got here?

When I opened my bakery in 2001, the two artisan bakeries in town were Pearl and Grand Central. Rosie’s small bakery on SE Division wasn’t well supported and closed, and Black Bear had just closed. Now we have Tim Healea’s excellent Little T American Baker in SE, Sweetpea vegan bakery, Greg Mistell’s Fleur de Lis bakery in NE, Julie Richardson and Matt Kappler’s Baker & Spice in SW, Two Tarts in NW, Nuvrei in the Pearl, and others. Pix was only at the Farmers Market when I opened, but now we also have excellent chocolateries with Verdun, Sahagún, Cacao, and Alma Chocolate. Where else in this country would you find this variety of quality bakeries, pâtisseries, and chocolateries in a town our size? It’s vast change since I opened 10 years ago, when the Atkins and South Beach diets were vilifying all-things starch. Now we embrace all the good stuff! I’m still working out my own plans for what’s next, but I’m thinking of opening a new restaurant in a year or two.

2) Portland seems to be having a gourmet comfort food renaissance—pizza, fried chicken, burgers, etc. What’s your two cents about what’s going on with the local culinary scene?

I’m a very big fan. I travel a few times each year and always look forward to returning home to restaurants where having quality food doesn’t require an increase in the formality of the dining room. When I opened my bakery, the kitchen talent was all in fine dining; now the talent is also in more relaxed places serving high quality food that embraces our seasonal produce, in an atmosphere appealing to a broader range of people. Look at the busiest restaurants in town: Toro Bravo, Tasty n Sons, Pok Pok, and Laurelhurst Market food and definitely not white tablecloth. What we have here is an embrace of the casual, a Portland-specific idea of what a restaurant needs to look and act like, a growing population supporting our homegrown restaurants as a principal form of entertainment, and an economy that allows younger chefs to open and run their own restaurants. I think the infusion of youth in the ownership ranks was a necessary force in our town’s dining out evolution.

3) What’s your perfect pizza experience?

Tricky question! My perfect pie changes with my mood or the season. I prefer simple toppings of the highest quality: perfect cherry tomatoes in the summer, or, right now, our Finnochiona pizza made with Olympic Provisions salami—you can taste the quality of the meat and the cure, and we counterpoint the fennel seed in the salami with shaved fennel on the pie. As for a drink-and-pizza pairing, more often than not I’ll go to a Sangiovese such as a good Chianti or a Rosso di Montalcino from Siro Pacenti, but I’m also happy with a nice Pinot from Cameron, Chehalem, Grochau Cellars, Evesham Wood, or J. Christopher, or a Barbera from Piedmont. Nothing wrong with a cold Pilsner, either, or a good rosé. Afterward, give me ice cream or my pizzeria’s lambrusco-rhubarb sorbetto and a cookie, please. If I’m feeling groovy, maybe a shot of grappa at the end.

4) How did you learn to make your ridiculously addictive canelés?

I didn’t learn canelés from anyone, but 15 years ago I had a French girlfriend and she introduced me to canelés at Poujauran’s boulangerie in Paris. They tasted of honey, almonds, and cake, with a perfectly crispy outside, and I was immediately intrigued. I searched them out at other Paris shops and became acquainted with the variety of styles, from lightly baked and custardy in the middle (not my thing) to a little more cakey in the middle and crisp on the outside. For a small fortune, I purchased a bunch of the copper molds at E. Dehillerin in Paris and went to work with a couple different recipes until I found the texture and flavor I like. Key is lining the inside of the molds with melted beeswax before pouring in the batter. Keep your eyes open for the next issue of The Art of Eating, in which Molly Wizenberg wrote a feature on canelés. She interviewed me along with Pierre Herme (!). Okay, he’s the king of pastry and I’m this little guy in PDX, but I got a kick out of being a source for the same article.

5) Where are you loving eating right now?

I have many favorite restaurants, from long-termers like Paley’s Place, Higgins, and Park Kitchen, to the usual suspects like Pok Pok, Toro Bravo, Grüner, Le Pigeon, and Little Bird. Lincoln, Ned Ludd, Nostrana, and Biwa are also high on my go-to list. Of the newer openings, I’m particularly fond of June, and Kin on NW 14th wins my “best restaurant that’s least appreciated” nod—I’m currently craving Kevin’s pork buns. Then there are two restaurants that get no press but have loyal followings and I love them: Ciao Vito and Bastas both have excellent Italian food and wine lists. When I eat out, the wine list is something I enjoy in addition to the scene, the food, and the décor. Just saying.

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Tags: Books, Interview, five questions, Pizza, Bakery

Food Carts

Celebrate the Release of Cartopia

Check out tomorrow night’s free book release party and revel in Portland’s food cart revolution.

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Cartopia

This Thursday, November 18, from 6 to 10 pm, urban design devotees and “micro-retail” foodies (a.k.a. food cart freaks) should make their way to Southeast’s Art Department for a gala release party in honor of the new book Cartopia. Free and open to the public, this event is your opportunity to milk the book’s authors— Kelly Rodgers, the principal of Confluence Planning, and Kelley Roy, a curator at the Art Department and founder of Sassafras Consulting —for cart-insider info, meet cartrepreneurs and other cartivores, munch on appetizers from Feastworks, indulge in liquid grape and grain from Teutonic Wine and Hopworks, groove to the tunes of various street buskers, and figure out your future with a reading by Dino Tarot. (Sign up for Portland Bicycle Tours’ pre-release-party Food Cart Bike Tour and you can get $5 off the book’s $25 price!)

“Cartopia is a book for those who are curious to know why the food cart phenomenon happened in Portland, says Rodgers. “It is a discovery of the underlying factors that created it, including the city’s regulations, its independent nature, its food culture, and its history of civic spirit. It is also a celebration of the actual vendors, the urbanism, and the food.”

Guided by an urban planning POV (check out the forward by Portland Monthly editor Randy Gragg), it provides brief but broad and colorful explanations of street food’s role in shaping urban design as well as the loosey-goosey laws, tanking economy, and distinctive food scene that made our tiny metropolis the hub of the food cart rage. Tons of photos and a guide to finding pods and notable loner carts in the city’s five districts make it a great read while sitting on the bus, MAX, or, of course, toilet.

You’ll have to read the book yourself to get all the goods, but we asked Roy to give us the dish on any lesser-known carts that deserve more cred, as well as what kinds of carts she’d like to see hitting the streets in the future. Here’s what she had to say:

5 Carts that Don’t Get Enough Air Time

1) Sip, located at SE 21st and Tibbetts—delicious juices in the summer and homemade soups in the winter.
2) Lucille’s Balls, in the Good Food Here pod—the best balls in town!
3) Jocelyn’s. It took over the old Spud Locker location at SW 2nd and Stark and I have been hearing great things about it.
4) Slow & Low has an amazing pork confit sandwich.
5) The reindeer guy at 5th and Oak.

12 Carts Kelley with an Extra ‘e’ Would Like to See

1) Japanese street food, such as okonomiyaki—a Hiroshima-style pancake with typical toppings like cabbage, pork, squid, octopus, and cheese, or even yakisoba or udon noodles, a fried egg, and a generous amount of okonomiyaki sauce (similar to Worcestershire sauce but thicker and sweeter).
2) Swedish cuisine, such a meatballs, lingonberries, bords, etc.
3) Bacon. I am really surprised that nobody has done a cart with a menu featuring bacon for every meal.
4) Oysters! I would love to stop and get a dozen oysters on a cold winter night.
5) I know Trey at the Swamp Shack is serving them but I always thought a beignet and chicory coffee cart would be fun.
6) Fans have been trying to get the Victory Bar’s Eric Moore to open a Crackeroni cart that serves his baked spaetzle with gruyère cheese, crispy shallots and a side of applesauce.
7) Cape Malay —specifically a bobotie, a curried ground beef and egg custard dish.
8) Basque cuisine.
9) Taiwanese street food, such as hot pot.
10) Classic candy, such as Atomic Fireballs, Lemonheads, candy necklaces, etc.
11) A cart that showcases Northwest mushrooms.
12) Scrambles.

~

You can purchase Cartopia at the release party as well as Powell’s and at portlandfoodcartsbook.com, but the KRs will also be selling copies, somewhat fittingly, out of a 1972 Chevy Step Van bookmobile throughout the holidays and into 2011—follow them on twitter (@FoodCartsBook) to find out where they are now.

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Tags: Food Carts, Food News, Books, design, Launch Party

For Food Lovers Only

The Food Lover’s Guide to Portland

Writer Liz Crain takes on Portland food

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Today I finally made it to the Pioneer Courthouse Square outpost of The Portland Farmers Market, where I ran into my friend Liz Crain, who’s riding high having just published her first book, The Food Lovers Guide to Portland—a just-bigger-than-pocket-sized compendium of the PDX eating scene that’s sure to resonate with the minds, hearts, and bellies of us all. Here’s what she has to say about her book, all the research that fueled it, and the people who inspired it all.

Mike Thelin: You’re in an elevator: Describe your book.

Food Lover’s Guide to Portland covers the people and businesses that make Portland food and drink so special. Although it includes restaurant and bar recommendations, the bulk of the book focuses on Portland producers and purveyors — so the coffee roasters, beer brewers, butchers, green grocers, farmers, ranchers and then some. Rather than a quick take on these people, businesses, and organizations, I include loads behind-the-scenes, straight-from-the-source information that you won’t find anywhere else. It’s a comprehensive culinary guide geared toward native Portlanders, transplants and travelers.

So, how many places do you profile?

About 250 businesses and organizations, 150-plus restaurant and bars, and 20-plus essays on everything from local rabbit and bison to honey spirits, wild mushrooms and clamming.

You have many interests. Why a book on Portland food?

I’ve been writing articles about food and drink in Portland since 2003 and so stepping up and writing a book about Portland food culture just made sense. Portland is such a unique food town and I thought it deserved a comprehensive food guide. I also happen to love guidebooks—hiking, travel, gardening and culinary.

What were the best discoveries you made while writing and researching this book?

There were so many considering I devoted most of 2009 to researching and writing the book. Some people, businesses and organizations new to me that I fell in love with include Courier Coffee, Kookoolan Farms, Dovetail Bakery, The Frying Scotsman, the Tea Monk, Cacao, Boedecker Cellars, Friends of Family Farmers, Home Orchard Society and Portland Fruit Tree Project. That really just scratches the surface though.

Any plans for a sequel?

I’ll probably do a second edition in a couple years. It’s hard to keep up with all the places opening every day so I think we’ll want a new edition sooner than later.

Was there a message you wanted to convey to the world about the Portland food scene?

That our fabulous restaurants, food carts and bars, which get a ton of local and national press, owe so much to the local food and drink artisans, producers and purveyors. There are loads of celebrity chefs these days but how many celebrity producers and purveyors do you know? I think these Portlanders are just as important to our food culture and that’s why I celebrate them in my book. They have a lot to teach us.

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Tags: Books, Interview

Franking it up

Meet Your Future Franks

Authors, New Yorkers, and future Portland restaurateurs in Portland tonight for book event.

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I find it not ironic at all that the very week during which New York restaurateurs Frank Falcinelli and Frank Castronovo land in Portland to pimp their new book, I find myself in their native Brooklyn, working from a coffee shop called Variety where Stumptown is served and everyone around me looks as if they were airlifted from Albina Press in North Portland. That’s because Portland and Brooklyn are siblings. Although as New York’s most populous borough, Brooklyn is home to more people than the entire Portland area, there is a similarity in aesthetic (DIY), mode of transportation (bikes), clothing (the tattoo), and method of keeping warm (the beard). And given the number of transplants to and fro, I think it’s fair to declare Portland as Brooklyn’s best new hood. Take that Greenpoint!

This, and the friendship and business relationship between Stumptown founder and Portland/Brooklyn resident Duane Sorenson, is probably why the well regarded owners of Frankie’s Sputino, Prime Meats, and Cafe Pedlar have chosen Portland as the future location of their first restaurant outside of New York. And though that won’t happen until well into next year, the best opportunity before then to meet the Frank duo and see what they’re all about is tonight in Portland at Stumptown Coffee Roasters Downtown location on Third Avenue between Ash and Pine.

The Franks have written a book called The Frankies Spuntino Kitchen Companion and Cooking Manual, and you can pick up a signed copy, enjoy food from Portland’s Olympic Provisions and all the beer and coffee you can drink for a measly $25.

Frankie’s Stumptown Book Event
Thursday June 24th, 6pm
Stumptown Downtown: 128 SW 3rd Avenue, Portland
Tickets can be purchased at brownpapertickets.com and at the door.

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Tags: Events, Books

Food News

Read. Cook. Eat.

Culinary Book Fair is a real page-turner

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Photo: Dan Cronin

Janeen Sarlin (author of Princess Teas Parties and Treats for Little Girls) and Albert Schmid, CCP (author of The Kentucky Bourbon Cookbook) are friendly neighbors at the book fair.

View Slideshow » Photo: Dan Cronin

Janeen Sarlin (author of Princess Teas Parties and Treats for Little Girls) and Albert Schmid, CCP (author of The Kentucky Bourbon Cookbook) are friendly neighbors at the book fair.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Andrew Dornenberg and Karen Page (authors of The Flavor Bible and What to Drink with What You Eat) have a friendly chat while signing books.

View Slideshow » Photo: Dan Cronin

Cherie Mercer Twohy (author of The I Love Trader Joe’s Cookbook) was all smiles at the book fair.

View Slideshow » Photo: Dan Cronin

Lisa Schroeder, CCP (author of Mother’s Best) answers questions and makes casual conversation with readers.

Last week’s Culinary Book Fair was one of the few events at the IACP Conference that was open to the public. Naturally, it was a veritable smorgasbord of famed cookbook scribes. While the catalog of books to peruse is long, we have compiled a short list of authors that stood out from the rows.

Ruth Reichl’s For You Mom, Finally

This follows Reichl’s memoir from last year, Not Becoming My Mother. Both contain her beautiful, heartbreaking prose about the love that a daughter has for a stern, eccentric mother. Reichl has been honored with four James Beard Awards for her culinary writing (Gourmet, NY Times, LA Times) and cooking (chef and co-owner of Berkeley’s Swallow Restaurant in from 1974 to 1977).

Janeen Sarlin’s Princess Teas Parties and Treats for Little Girls

Sarlin’s excitement about entertaining is hard to ignore. Her most recent book involves nine charming tea party themes for your own princesses at home. From Fairy Princess Tea to Cowgirl Princess Tea, Sarlin has excellent advice for throwing a party that no little girl will forget.

Albert Schmid, CCP’s The Kentucky Bourbon Cookbook

With his second book, Schmid teaches us how to consume bourbon for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and during the after-dinner drink. From salad dressings to cake, the reader quickly learns countless uses for this fiery American favorite.

Lisa Schroeder, CCP’s Mother’s Best

Not to be confused with the author who pens novels for kids and teens, this Lisa Schroeder writes about her passion for food. She brings her slow-cooked recipes her own Mother’s Bistro & Bar and Mama Mia Trattoria from her commercial kitchens to the reader’s home.

Cherie Mercer Twohy, CCP’s The I Love Trader Joe’s Cookbook

Mercer Twohy distilled her love for Trader Joe’s into a cookbook with over 150 really tasty recipes, with ingredients that can be found at everyone’s favorite snack-friendly grocery store. And it’s certainly convenient to browse recipes where you can one-stop shop to find all the ingredients. I wonder if there are any recipes for peanut butter pretzel bites?

Please share your thoughts in the comments!

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Tags: Food News, Books

Public Events

Reading and Eating

Four public events at IACP Conference

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Banquet chef Garrison Price creates a dish including Oregon beef short ribs, rhubarb-red onion marmalade, and saraparilla reduction. Short ribs provided by Oregon Beef council and Oregon Cattleman’s Association.

View Slideshow » Photo: Stacy Austin

Banquet chef Garrison Price creates a dish including Oregon beef short ribs, rhubarb-red onion marmalade, and saraparilla reduction. Short ribs provided by Oregon Beef council and Oregon Cattleman’s Association.

View Slideshow » Photo: Dan Cronin

Nong’s khao man gai makes a simple but flavorful bite of fresh chicken on rice, topped off with a grated ginger and lime sauce.

View Slideshow » Photo: Stacy Austin

Serratto Chef Tony Meyers chef displays dish of fresh black cod on corona beans, local heirloom carrots, roasted peppers and smoke paprika.

View Slideshow » Photo: Dan Cronin

Delicious pork lettuce wraps from Biwa.

View Slideshow » Photo: Dan Cronin

Kumamoto oysters from Washington-based grower and shipper, Taylor Shellfish Farms.

View Slideshow » Photo: Stacy Austin

Close up of fresh oysters.

After a full day of satisfying their epi-curiousity, IACP conference goers attended the opening reception at the stately Nines Hotel. The sixth floor became food central as local dishes and beverages were abundantly available. Visit our web-exclusive slideshow for a view of the exotic edibles.

Only a few events are left for the public to attend, so if interested, buy tickets now.

The Culinary Book Fair is Friday at the Oregon Convention Center from 1:30 to 3:30. For $10 in advance or $15 at the door, over 50 cookbook authors from across the globe will be in the house. Buy tickets here.

Epic dinner and silent auction to benefit The Culinary Trust on Friday at 6:30 in the Leftbank Annex. For $145, enjoy a five-course meal prepared by some of Portland’s best culinary minds. Buy tickets here.

In partnership with the IACP Conference, the Heathman Restaurant and meat purveyors Nicky USA will host a dinner showcasing quail, rabbit, buffalo, and elk. Janie Hibler, local author of Wild About Game, will emcee.

The Food Film Festival, co-sponsored by the IACP and Foodista.com, has a whole slate of food-related movies on Friday and Saturday. Admission is $10, plus a service fee. Buy tickets here.

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Tags: Food News, Books

Literary Foodie Heaven

Culinary Book Fair

Interview with local food author, Ellen Jackson

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Photo: Steven Jackson

Tomorrow the IACP annual conference begins right here in Stumptown, and for those looking to get a piece of the action, the Culinary Book Fair is Friday at the Oregon Convention Center. For $10 in advance or $15 at the door, the Book Fair is a steal, as one will have the opportunity to chat with authors and have their books personally signed. The list of authors is impressive, including Madhur Jaffrey (Indian actress and food writer) and Judith Jones (publisher of Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking).

Also in attendance will be local favorites, Ellen Jackson and Piper Davis, who authored The Grand Central Baking Book. I conducted a short interview with Jackson, on how it feels to be at such an event. Check out our conversation below…

First, how does it feel to part of a signing that includes the likes of Ruth Reichl and Page/Dornenburg?

To find myself in the company of a handful of my culinary heroes—chefs and authors who not only fill my bookshelves but have informed my career as a professional chef and a writer—is both humbling and affirming. And definitely my most memorable book signing to date.

Tell me about your book in 100 words?

The Grand Central Baking Book embraces a return to seasonality and simplicity in the kitchen. Inspired by the Davis family (founders and owners of the neighborhood bakeries more than 35 years ago) and with a fiercely loyal fan base, our book features recipes for sweet and savory baked goods complemented by workshops and professional baking techniques to ensure your success in the kitchen. From iconic bakery favorites like Jammers and Glazed Vanilla Bundt Cake to delicious Davis family staples including Clover Rolls and Black Cherry Kuchen, our book is filled with tasty reasons to bake.

Why attend this book fair?

Whether you’re a collector of cookbooks, a lover of good food or a devoted groupie, this book fair is an incredible opportunity to rub elbows, nibble and schmooze with a veritable who’s who of the food literati. Bring dog-eared favorites for signing or discover new titles from old favorites, but don’t miss this chance to connect the people who inspire you, keep you company in the kitchen and share your love of food.

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Tags: Books

Books for Hungry Minds

Newish Book Great Overview of Contemporary Cuisine

Global gastro compendium of top chefs includes Portland’s Tommy Habetz

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Coco

Being a food writer has its perks. On top of many expensed meals (Still the reason I haven’t seen my abs since early 2007), I receive quite a few food-related books in the mail every week. While most end up in the Salvation Army donation pile, some find their way to my permanent collection—on the bookshelf alongside favorite authors like Waverly Root, Jeffrey Steingarten, and every cook’s best friend Harold McGee. I received one such keeper earlier this winter. It’s called COCO: Ten World Leading Masters Choose 100 Contemporary Chefs (Phaidon).

A compendium of Earth’s 100 top contemporary chefs, the format of the book goes like this: Ten chef members of the global fooderati each chose their ten favorite contemporary chefs. The Michelin star-studded jury includes “deconstructivist” Ferran Adria of the soon-to-be-shuttered-but-no-one-agrees-for-how-long El Bulli, slow foodie Alice Waters of Chez Panisse, noodle maven David Chang of New York’s rising Momofuku empire, New Nordic natural cuisine alchemist Rene Redzepi of Copenhagen’s Noma, and the excess-loving Seattle-born New York chef and restaurateur Mario Batali, who owns more restaurants than I can count.

This volume includes mention of Portland hoagie lord Tommy Habetz of Bunk Sandwiches. (This tidbit was first reported by Karen Brooks of the Oregonian back in December.) Being the huge fan of Tommy’s work that I am, his inclusion alone would have saved COCO from the Goodwill bins, but that alone isn’t why I like it. Thanks to a jury comprised of individuals of many diverse (even disparate) cooking styles, the final roster of chefs and restaurants offers the most entertaining and approachable overview of what’s happening in global cuisine that I’ve seen. By giving an ice cream van, a sandwich shop, and Michelin-starred restaurants all equal treatment, it’s refreshingly unpretentious and captures the energy of contemporary cooking. Plus, it contains about 400 recipes. For these reasons, it has occupied front-and-center bedside table real estate for about two months.

Tommy’s entry onto the list came thanks to Mario Batali, his mentor and former boss. Batali is renowned for several things: his ten-or-so restaurant projects with restaurateur Joe Bastianich, his proclivity for bright orange Crocs, and his resemblance to my mental stereotype of a Viking.

This book is only $49.95, but is a nice introduction to what’s being enjoyed by eaters around the world. And of course, it’s nice to see one of our own among the world’s best. Bunkity.

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Tags: Portland Chefs, Books

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Frank Bruni on Portland Oregon

The ex-New York Times writer on writing, eating, Portland, and not getting fat.

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Frank Bruni

During his stint as the New York Times restaurant critic, Frank Bruni could kill a restaurant in a paragraph or less. Last month, Bruni threw in the napkin, ending his five-year run as New York’s most influential professional eater.

For reviewers, anonymity is requisite. But for Bruni, it’s no longer required as he’s been on television promoting his excellent new book, Born Round, The Secret History of a Full-Time Eater.

In this video, Bruni chats up Charlie Rose on the topics of food writing, eating, and America’s hottest food cities.

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Tags: Food News, Books

PCA

PCA Event To Host Top Northwest Food Writers

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Come kick it at Gracie’s

The thought of summer ending is tough to comprehend when it’s 93 and sunny, but one knows the rainy season is coming when the dining events go indoors. And here’s one of the inaugural indoor events of early fall that fans of food and food writing won’t want to miss.

The Portland Culinary Alliance, our city’s fraternal association of culinary professionals, will host several renowned food writers on Saturday October 3rd from 8:30 am to 2:00 pm at Gracie’s Restaurant at the Hotel Deluxe. (729 SW 15th Avenue) The event is called Eat My Words: Literary Food Writing That’s Good Enough to Eat, and the roster of visiting writers and local chefs lives up to its title.

Check it out:

Molly Wizenberg, author of A Homemade Life: Stories and Recipes from My Kitchen Table
Matthew Amster-Burton, author of Hungry Monkey
Diana Abu-Jaber, author of Crescent and The Language of Baklava
Shauna James Ahren, author of Gluten Free Girl
Jennie Shortridge, author of Eating Heaven and Love and Biology at the Center of the Universe
Erica Bauermeister, author of The School of Essential Ingredients

Each author will perform a reading and offer food-writing tips to would-be gastronomical scribes. Following the program, a crew off local chefs will prepare a lunch, featuring recipes provided by each author. Chefs include Mark Hosak of Gracie’s, Benjamin Bettinger of Beaker and Flask, Gregory Denton of MetroVino, Jeremy Frice of Departure, and pastry ace Lee Posey of Nel Centro.

After reading about this line-up of authors, and the fact that it includes lunch plus snacks and coffee from the very amiable pair of Adam and Jackie Sappington of Country Cat, I expected it would be a $200 day. But no! For the general public, tickets are only 65 bucks, and you only have until Friday to register. You can register here.

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Tags: Food News, Books

julia

Julia Child Finally a Best Seller

It’s amazing what a dose of Hollywood can do.

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Our Julia

It took 48 years and a little help from Hollywood, but the New York Times reports that Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking sold 22,000 copies over the weekend and will debut at number one on the New York Times best-seller list under the “how-to” category.

Of course, success for Ms. Child, who died in 2004, comes on the coattails of the excellent film Julie and Julia. In case you’ve been visiting another planet during the past couple of weeks, you can read all about the movie here.

Anyone who already owns a copy of Child’s debut book knows that Julia Child is no Rachel Ray. Her recipes are complicated to the novice cook and serve as a great introduction (and authority) on the types of classic French techniques that much of modern cuisine is based on. That such a book would become a best seller in a country with a food system dominated by big agriculture, fast food, and shortcuts is remarkable. That said, it will stay remarkable only if book buyers actually use it. We’ll have to wait and see.

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Tags: Food News, Books

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