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Cheap Eats

Good Cheer at The Press Club

Wine and words, music and a meal, or coffee and a little quiet time in Southeast.

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The Raymond Carver: Smoked salmon, spinach, roma tomato, shallot, & fresh dill.

Hours: Sun-Thurs, 11am-11pm; Fri & Sat, 11am-midnight.

In an era in which magazines are folding left and right (and Borders is about to go bankrupt), it’s refreshing to write two blog posts in a row about local establishments that promote good old-fashioned ink-and-paper reading. My post on Friday introduced Oui Presse and now the spotlight belongs to The Press Club, a Southeast haven for Stumptown, food, booze, wi-fi, local art, live music, and what their Facebook page bills as Southeast’s “largest and most eclectic collection of magazines,” estimated at 100-plus.

Located at 2621 SE Clinton St, it’s a relaxed, comfortable place to take a date or laptop, or simply peruse the latest issue of Cooks Illustrated while having a bite to eat. The menu includes a wide range of salads, soups, snacks, and both sandwiches and crêpes named for notable authors. This isn’t fare to inspire the next great American novel, but the hearty portions and affordable prices ($3.50-$10.50 max) could certainly sustain the struggling writer whose magnum opus is well on its way.

Many of the sandwiches include “interesting” ingredients like brie, prosciutto, fried eggs, and walnut pesto, and all are prepared on Pearl Bakery breads. A few days ago I had the E.B. White—two thick, gooey triangles of soft focaccia oozing with provolone, mozzarella, parmesan, asiago, romano cheese, and a subtle kick of chili-infused oil. Yes, maybe it was just a glorified grilled cheese, but four days later it’s that sandwich I’m craving rather than anything I had during a gorgeous dinner at Castagna the next night. My dining partner had the Raymond Carver crêpe and noted that the pancake itself was cooked through but still soft and delicate, and the filling was well-balanced—a not-so-simple achievement when it comes to smoked salmon.

For those in need of liquid succor, The Press Club has a hefty wine and beer list, and recently acquired a full liquor license so that they can now serve spirits.

They’re also rather generous with the specials: Happy Hour, Mon-Fri, 3-6pm; Happy Mondays ($5 house cocktails), 6-11pm; Half-priced glass pours on Tuesdays, 6-11pm; $5 Bloody Marys on Sundays, 5-11pm; and The Liquid Lunch—two cocktails and a cup of soup for $12, Mon-Fri, noon-3pm.

Rainy climate aside, Bukowski would most certainly approve.

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Tags: Southeast Dining, Cheap Eats, Southeast, magazines, wifi

Introducing

The Buzz: Oui Presse

Southeast’s latest coffee shop offers Stumptown, scrumptious pastries, and rad magazines.

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Oui

Ken’s morning bun and house-made coffee cake and chocolate chip cookie.

Mon-Fri, 7am-6pm; Sat & Sun, 7am-5pm.

A French newsstand-inspired coffee shop, Oui Presse, opened for business two days before Christmas at 1740 SE Hawthorne Blvd, and is now peddling Stumptown, pastries, magazines, and a carefully-curated selection of household goodies, ranging from Pigeon Toe Ceramics to locally made canvas dopp kits.

A charming, airy space with plentiful seating and minimalist décor, the sip, snack, and read concept is the vision of proprietress Shawna McKeown, a graphic designer and former associate publisher of the Willamette Week (she left this past summer). McKeown wanted to offer magazines because they provide “affordable inspiration.” The shop currently carries about 50 titles, including hard to come by rags like Anthology and The Art of Eating, as well as fan favorites like Dwell, the New Yorker, and Seventeen, but the eventual goal is to bump that number up to 150.

In the nibbles category, Oui Presse presents a small selection of pastries from Ken’s Artisan Bakery, including the delectable orange zest-infused morning buns, crusted with rock sugar. A self-proclaimed toast fanatic, McKeown also plates up slices of Ken’s blonde country boule with unsalted butter and local jam. The bakery bigwig also happens to be McKeown’s boyfriend, but she’s quick to add that she would serve his bread even if they weren’t dating and I don’t think there are many people in Portland who would belabor that point.

That said, McKeown herself is no slouch with an oven. Her chocolate chip cookies are buttery disks of soft, sweet goodness with an ever-so-slight slight caramel crispness at first bite. And the coffee cake is divine—not sweet but loaded with spice, butter, and sour cream, it’s super moist and boasts a crumbly topping peppered with toasted hazelnuts. Yum!!!

Bonjour, Oui Presse. It’s good to meet you.

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Tags: Coffee and Tea, Pastry, Openings, magazines

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