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Best of PDX

A Foodie Farewell

An Eat Beater says sayonara and shares a few things she’s learned.

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Annadonut

Me, 28 weeks pregnant and relishing every second of a Tonalli’s buttermilk bar.

Dearest Eat Beat Readers:

It is with a heavy heart and a rumbling belly that after 10 months of chronicling our fair city’s culinary scene, I must say goodbye. Although I’ve loved every interview I’ve conducted and forkful of food I’ve consumed in the name of “work,” it just so happens that in a few short months I will be finished cooking up something of my own: a baby. And as energetic as my wee girl appears to be (repeatedly pushing off my ribs and slamming into my hip bone, probably because of all the doughnuts…), sleep deprivation and 24-hour diaper changing isn’t exactly conducive to seeking out the latest and greatest gourmet superstar, happy hour, or cheap date. Luckily the very astute Allison Jones has stepped in, and, of course, there is always the incomparable Karen Brooks and a cadre of guest writers with tireless taste buds.

I grew up cooking and baking, love to eat, and spent numerous years working in restaurants while I became a writer, and Eat Beating has been a truly special joy of mine. So without further ado about this adieu, I will leave you with a few thoughts about things I’ve learned along the way.

Best of PDX

Want a sure-fire way to get Portland peeps riled up? Rank their food options. And if you really want to see cartoon steam coming out of their ears, make sure you’re ranking their sweet carbohydrates, such as chocolate chip cookies, biscuits, and—drum roll—doughnuts! My analysis of 10 area doughnut shops had more readers than any post that has ever appeared on Eat Beat. And the comments included downright patriotic outrage over the rings, bars, and holes I failed to name. Looking back I can say that Tonalli’s (2805 NE Alberta St) still reigns supreme when it comes to classic doughnuts—although I am personally obsessed with old-fashioneds, this story made me try their melt-in-your-mouth buttermilk bar and it’s my new favorite. I also crave the apple fritter at Coco Donut and want to try all the more unusual flavors at Sesame Donuts. I also went to Helen Bernhard after being chastised for failing to do so in my doughnut round-up, and, while tasty, I don’t think it’s as good as the three I just named. I look forward to your shock and awe.

Cheap Eats/Cheap Date

Pho, pho, pho, pho, pho. A steaming bowl of this flavor-packed noodle soup is probably the most food you will ever be able to get for the least cash. It is also my favorite-est thing to eat in the world, and a singular pleasure in a city where a broad range of quality ethnic cuisine is not the strong suit. In my opinion, the best to be found, both fleshy and veggie, is at Pho Gia (1944 NE Sandy).

First Impressions

Although a number of the places I sought out to write about where new to me, the all-new establishment that really stands out is the all-vegetarian Natural Selection. I wasn’t expecting it to be anywhere near as good as it was. The food has so much thought, heart, and attention to detail, and their chocolate pots de crème is truly sublime. Plus, the staff is knowledgeable and attentive. And they have real, heavy silverware. This is the kind of place that is making us feel more like a multi-faceted culinary city like San Francisco or New York, rather than just an adorable but narrow-minded comfort-food-and-entrails foodie town.

Five Questions

There is nothing that compares to getting an insider’s POV. Every single one of these interviews I did was a thrill. But if I would never be able to drink wine again unless I pick three that stand out, I’d have to say Ken Forkish, Paul Gerald, and Aubrey Lindley.

Happy Hour of the Week

Rather than any one happy hour that shines above all the others, what I was surprised to learn was just how many of these discount dining experiences there are. If the timing works for you, you can eat and drink like a king all over town pretty much every day of the week. But 23Hoyt is pretty special in this arena.

Vegetarian Viand

Despite being a lifelong vegetarian, I didn’t cover this topic that much. Partially because there wasn’t a whole lot to say. We may have a hippie-dippie mystique, but there just aren’t a lot of solid (i.e. not crappy), totally vegetarian restaurants in town, although Blossoming Lotus is a true joy (I have eaten their Southwestern Bowl with golden tofu three times in the last two weeks). It doesn’t bother me much because most local eateries do a damn fine job of providing tasty veggie options that aren’t just fettuccine alfredo (DOC, Foster Burger, Screen Door), but I do think it’s a sign that we need to broaden our horizons a tad. Castagna has brought molecular gastronomy to the table; now let’s give some love to our multitude of veg-heads.

The Scene

Local, seasonal, creative, casual, and youthful, plus Portland is a pretty cheap foodie city all-around. Many of us can afford to eat at even the city’s best restaurants (e.g. Le Pigeon, Toro Bravo, DOC, Nostrana, Pok Pok, Ken’s Artisan Pizza, Olympic Provisions, Lincoln, Paley’s Place), if perhaps not all the time. This has a lot to do with local eateries prizing impeccable quality and innovation over white tablecloths and sky-high prices. You can build a gorgeous space, but we’ll pass it over (to wit, the late Ten-01 and Fenouil). However, build a gorgeous meal in an environment where we can wear our faded jeans and fleece coats, and we’ll keep coming back. Portland may be dreary much of the time, the economy is tenuous, and the drivers are the worst on the planet, but I’ve drunk the culinary Kool-Aid and I am hooked for life.

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Tags: Happy Hour, Cheap Eats, five questions, Vegetarian Friendly, First Impressions, The Best, lists

Cheap Eats

Talk Soup

SoupCycle brings seasonal, sloshy meals on wheels to the Portland masses.

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Soupcyclebefore

BEFORE

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BEFORE

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AFTER

I can say from experience that when you’re so busy that you feel like you’re going to start bleeding from all your pores, it’s really helpful to know that at least one hot, healthy meal a week is a mere bicycle ride away—especially when you’re not the one on the bike.

Founded in 2008 by Jed Lazar and Shawna Lambert, SoupCycle is a local “Soupscription” service in which an environmentally-friendly bicycle delivery person drops (mostly organic) soup, salad, and bread at your doorstep or desk every week. In the beginning there were seven Portland customers (close friends and neighbors); now there are nearly 500 regulars in P-Town and Corvallis, and the company delivered their 30,000 quart of soup last week, representing over 10,000 petroleum-free miles.

Scanning the laundry list of soups they have in their arsenal (they’re also adding a new one every month in 2011), I was drawn in by the simplicity of the recipes (no laundry list of unpronounceable ingredients) and the fun names, such as South in Your Mouth, a vegan, spicy New Orleans-style sweet potato, corn, and jalapeño bisque, or the immensely popular Democratic Republic of Peanut Chicken, a thick African stew with bell peppers, tomatoes, and garbanzo beans.

This past week I tried the hearty vegetarian Barbecue Split Pea, and thought it was the bee’s knees. The soup was seasoned well and provided a pleasing ratio of mush to al dente peas and bright, orange carrots. I also liked that the chef had a delicate touch with the barbecue sauce, manifesting in a subtle hickory smoke essence rather than that noxious liquid smoke flavor that’s so common. The accompanying salad of all-organic mixed field greens, grated carrots, and sunflower seeds was crisp, plentiful, and benefitted from a lovely pop of sweetness from dried cranberries. The dressing was made with nutritional yeast, which you can really taste; but if, like me, you psychotically love that taste, you will enjoy the nutty, cheesie zest it imparts.

Wondering how a company that makes soup can survive in the summer?

Answer: A) They add cold soups like a radiant fuchsia beet borscht, gazpacho, and a chilled cucumber with mint and dill to their offerings; B) They also offer creative pasta salads (like Chicken Tarragon with the Wind, made with dried cranberries and barley) mid-May to early September; and C) Who’s kidding who that Portland is hot all summer long?

Getting your soup on is soup-er easy: Log on to their website, make sure you live or work in the delivery area, select the vegan, vegetarian, or meaty option, and your weekly meal plan—a quart of soup, green salad, and bread for two is $19 ($20 for the flesh version), but you can modify that order up or down each week if you wish. They call you a couple days later to confirm the payment method, you leave a cooler if you won’t be around (only a problem if you are, in fact, too busy to purchase a cooler, but a plastic box filled with a couple sacks of frozen peas seems to do the trick…), and voilà! You are dining on soup made with veggies from local farmers, supporting a local business, protecting the environment, and inspiring someone else to get a little exercise.

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Tags: Cheap Eats, bicycle, Vegetarian Friendly, soup

First Impressions

Flesh-Free Fine-Dining at Northeast’s Natural Selection

Portland vegetarians and vegans, rejoice! There’s finally a higher-priced (and delicious) eatery just for you!

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Natural Selection’s vegan Quinoa & Sunchoke Risotto Cake ($10).

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Natural Selection’s vegan Quinoa & Sunchoke Risotto Cake ($10).

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Natural Selection’s vegetarian Roasted Maitake Mushroom ($11).

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Natural Selection’s vegan Strawberry Rhubarb Shortcake ($8).

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Natural Selection’s vegetarian Chocolate Pots de Creme ($8).

I’ll admit it: I had reservations about my reservations at Natural Selection (3033 NE Alberta St), chef/owner Aaron Woo’s new higher-end vegetarian/vegan eatery. Why?

Despite being a life-long vegetarian—a girl who refused the flesh at the age of two—I think Woo’s more casual meat-free restaurant next door, Vita Café, is downright terrible. I’m sure such a verdict on my part will inspire hate mail, but every time I’ve tried to give that joint another chance, my food is bland and carelessly slapped together, the kind of flavorless, uninspired feed that justifies carnivores looking down on my kind. Cooking up simple chow is no excuse—there are plenty of low-key places in town that make a mean vegetarian sandwich alongside their reubens, cubanos, and turkey clubs.

Regardless, Natural Selection ostensibly aspires to grander things (a supper-club with a European feel, only available Wed-Sat) and every establishment deserves to be judged on its own merit, so, last Wednesday, there I went.

And there went a lot of other people (i.e Democrats of all ages) as well. The place was packed, so we had to sit for a short while. The hostess was extremely apologetic, but it gave me a chance to get a good look. Warm and woody, with mirrors and minimal art on the walls, it’s a classic (and borderline cliché) Portland establishment, open kitchen and all. That said, when you enter, the off-kilter set-up feels a little weird. Tables line the right side, while the kitchen and wait-staff station dominate the opposite, providing a less than elegant eyeful of the floor mats and garbage cans while you wait.

But that’s all easy to forget thanks to the distractions once you sit down. The menu consists of a column A (vegetarian) and a column B (vegan), each with four courses (appetizer, salad, entrée, and dessert). I recommend the four-course fixed price dinner for $35, which allows you to mix and match from both columns. A majority of the items are gluten-free and labeled as such, and there’s a note at the bottom that advises you to inform staff about additional allergies—which comes as no surprise, as Portland peeps seem to have more food issues than everyone else on the planet. There’s also a carefully-curated selection of spirits, beers, wines, and non-alcoholic drinks, including a delightfully sweet-tart house-made pomegranate soda.

Our meal began with a perfect amuse-buche—a creamy, salty bite of romesco between fried polenta cakes with a sprinkle of herbaceous chervil. It was a sign of things to come: a meal that was far more nuanced, refined, boldly flavorful, and, yes, tasty than I was expecting.

The vegetarian appetizer paired a delicately crispy on the outside, soft on the inside roasted maitake mushroom ($11) with the crunch of al dente asparagus. The accompanying fingerlings were a tad dry, but that was easily remedied by dragging them through the sweet-and-salt combo of balsamic reduction and an earthy mushroom jus. The miraculously buttery vegan app—a quinoa and sunchoke risotto cake ($10)—was equally enjoyable.

We chose to skip the vegan salad, as it didn’t strike me as anything new, but the vegetarian salad was a knockout. The crispness of the shredded raw Brussels sprouts paired beautifully with luscious hunks of ruby grapefruit and sunchokes, bitterness expertly balanced by salty parmesan and toasted pinenuts.

My major (and only real) complaint is the entrées. The vegetarian sweet potato and pear cannelloni ($15) gets an A for creativity, and an F for execution. It was shockingly sweet and mushy, like a grainy pie-spice pudding. The vegan beluga lentils and agave glazed carrots ($14) was tasty enough, but reminded me of the boring meals I toss together when I’m busy. At least, however, it offered the protein I was missing in the other dish.

But things quickly improved. The palate cleanser that followed—a refreshing and sophisticated mint and lime ice served in a chilled martini glass—was akin to an edible version of wandering through a summer garden.

And the dessert… Obviously, it isn’t difficult to do a vegetarian dessert if eggs and dairy are at your disposal. But this chocolate pots de crème ($8), with its deep cocoa flavor and essence of boiled cream, was one of the yummiest things I have ever eaten, a strong challenger to the butterscotch budino at Nostrana. I wanted to climb inside it. The vegan strawberry rhubarb shortcake ($8) gets a less lavish review due to the dense, doughy pastry, but the berries were delicious, as was the lavender coconut cream.

I wouldn’t plan to hit up Natural Selection if you’re looking for a quick bite, as our meal took nearly three hours. But I was truly impressed, plan to return, and would recommend it. It’s a clever concept, stylishly executed, and is a strong start to filling the gaping veg-friendly high-end dining hole that we have here in Portland. (See our own EAT BEAT debate on the subject.) With only eight items that are a bit protein-deficient and priced rather high if ordered individually, I do wonder how long this conceit can last; but it’s a joy to dine on dishes that have clearly been lovingly created—and to leave an almost perfect meal without feeling like I need a nap.

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Tags: Restaurant Openings, Northeast Dining, Vegetarian Friendly, vegan, First Impressions

Eat Here Now

Alberta Arts’ Vegan Viand

Dovetail Bakery produces vegan pastries that even carnivores will covet.

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Dovetail

Four scrumptious animal-free pastries from Dovetail Bakery (left to right): Carrot Millet Muffin with Apricot Jam; Winter Pear Darling; Blueberry Muffin; and Aunt Miriam’s Sticky Bun.

On a recent rainy morning, I popped into Dovetail Bakery, a small, cozy Alberta Arts space where Morgan Grundstin-Helvey and her lovely staff make all the vegan magic happen. I was greeted by the divine scent of caramelizing onions, as well as a quiet gaggle of ladies elbow-deep in flour and listening to cool indie tunes. A few pairs of customers were chatting over cups of strong Courier coffee or pots of tea and plates of crumbs. Piled up on trays in a glass case next to the register sat an assortment of mostly over-sized vegan cookies, muffins, scones, and cinnamon rolls, all decidedly not healthy-looking in the best possible way. (Which is not to say that they are necessarily unhealthy, of course; it’s just that all too often animal product-free baked goods can look like lumps of coal or piles of sawdust held together with tree sap.)

Sadly, even with a pregnant pastry-tasting partner, I had to limit myself to indulging in only four treats.

The Carrot Millet Muffin with Apricot Jam ($2.75) is both delicious and intriguing. Perfectly moist with tons of shredded carrot and plentiful pie-spices, it doesn’t stray into too-sweet territory, and the millet makes for a surprisingly pleasing crispy crunch throughout. The Winter Pear Darling ($2.50) is delectable as well. Essentially a scone, the Darling has an almost chalky dryness that quickly gives way to the moistness that is consistent in all of Dovetail’s pastries. With slices of juicy pear tucked inside, this scone also avoids overdoing it with the sugar, and, instead, allows you to actually taste the high quality flour and a subtle ginger and spice flavor on the back end. (FYI, they also offer a wheat free scone.)

As for Ms. Grundstin-Helvey’s renderings of classic baked goods, the Blueberry Muffin ($2.75) was fantastic—probably my favorite of the day. Unbelievably soft, it’s hard to place whatever the secret dairy-and-egg-substitute ingredient is; perhaps it’s applesauce or mashed banana, but it tastes exactly like buttermilk. Filled with plump berries and sporting a wonderful crusty top, I would never guess it was vegan. Another highlight: Aunt Miriam’s Sticky Bun ($3.50). The bread is soft with a chewy density, far superior to most “normal” sticky buns and cinnamon rolls I have eaten. I have to admit—sticky buns are one of my favorite things on earth and I do actually miss the butter in the goo, but the toasted pecans and vibrant flavor of toasted sugar and cinnamon are plenty pleasing.

These were tasty tidbits on the day I ventured in, but the offerings are always subject to both season and whimsy. Check out Dovetail’s website for a cheat-sheet on what might be available today, as well as other locations around town where you can gobble up the goods.

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Tags: Northeast Dining, Vegetarian Friendly, Bakery, vegan

Vegetarian Viand

Tricycle-Powered Biscuits & Gravy

The brand new Biscuit Bike dishes up hearty vegan fare in the Hawthorne district and beyond.

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Kevin Clover’s 100-percent mobile Biscuit Bike will also make appearances at events including bike races, marathons, street fairs, festivals, and your private party.

After making a sweet (and savory) inaugural appearance at the 2010 Belmont Street Fair on September 12th, the Biscuit Bike is now lowering its kickstand at 3315 SE Hawthorne, in front of House of Vintage, weekends, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The menu features three savory options, including the Biscuit Bike Biscuit (an herby biscuit with soy sausage and mushroom gravy), the Blue Biscuit (a “bacon” biscuit with blue “cheese” sauce), and the Nacho Biscuit (a jalapeño biscuit with nacho “cheese” sauce), all for $5. There are also two sweet treats: the Chocoliscuit—a biscuit with chocolate sauce, for $5; and the Jammin’ Biscuit—a biscuit with jam, agave nectar, and Earth Balance, for $4. Northeast Portland’s Black Sheep Bakery supplies all the biscuits, as well as the gravy, blue cheese sauce, and chocolate sauce. The nacho cheese sauce is a find from Chicago Soydairy.

When I popped by this past Saturday for the cart’s home-base debut, I tried all three savory options (I was sharing with my husband). After sampling the goodies, two things really stuck out. First, the biscuits were quite an accomplishment—moist and rich, not too fluffy, not too dense… it’s hard to believe there wasn’t butter involved. Second, all three of the options were seasoned to perfection and had great flavor, a rarity in vegetarian and vegan fare, as most cooks think veg-heads would be fine dining on a plate of sawdust. My husband and I agreed that the Biscuit Bike Biscuit was the best, thanks to the delicious, earthy gravy with chunks of mushrooms and veggie sausage. The Blue Biscuit was also yummy, with its thick, creamy, garlicky sauce that tasted exactly like real blue cheese salad dressing. As for the Nacho Biscuit, the spicy biscuit is fabulous and the sauce sure did have the flavor and consistency of real nacho cheese—which I happen to hate more than just about anything edible on the planet. So, that one gets an A for accuracy, but I likely wouldn’t order it again myself.

I enjoyed my meal, but while I was certainly full when finished, I kind of wished there had been a little something else in the bowl. Some sautéed veggies or fresh tomatoes and onions would have added more texture and moderated the definitely-good-but-intense flavors. That said, this was only the Biscuit Bike’s second week in operation so it’s probably fair to think of the initial limited menu as a “test drive.”

If you’re thirsty, the cart also offers two kinds of Townshend’s Brew Dr. Kombucha on tap, which is pretty awesome when you consider that the kegs, as well as the counter, cooler, and propane stove, are attached to a working bike. A12-ounce cup by itself is $3, or you can get one combined with a biscuit order for $2. And you can get a dollar off your entire order if you show up on—you guessed it—a bike.

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Tags: Food Carts, Southeast Dining, Food News, Cheap Eats, Vegetarian Friendly

Cheap Eats

Hip-Star Vegan Vittles on NE Alberta

Affordable and awesome animal-free cuisine at the Bye and Bye, oh my!

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The Bye and Bye dishes up what I consider the best vegan dinner in town; please feel free to post a comment about how right I am.

When I first moved back to Oregon nearly three years ago, and settled in the Alberta neighborhood, my husband and I stumbled upon this cool bar called the Bye and Bye. In addition to a good selection of beer, wine, and creative cocktails, we liked it for three reasons: 1) It was cheap; 2) It offered a large indoor space, plus a front and back patio, which meant lots of tables so there was actually a place to sit; and 3) It dished up alarmingly delicious vegan comfort food that worked for both me, a fancies-herself-a-foodie vegetarian, and my husband, the kind of guy who likes to eat tongue burritos and tripe.

Since then, I’ve convinced other meat-heads to join me there, and every single one of them has left satisfied, if perhaps a bit surprised. What makes this food work for so many is that it’s expertly seasoned, hearty without being heavy, and these guys understand that even vegetarians like to eat protein. Among the various entrees and sides, here are three group faves:

BBQ Tofu Platter: It comes with creamy, smoky, dare-I-say buttery black-eyed peas, tangy collard greens, and toasted Grand Central baguette. It’s my burger-obsessed sister-in-law’s favorite dish because the tofu is prepared just as it should be — pleasantly springy rather than chewy or squishy — and the sauce is rich and savory instead of too sweet. (I am guessing the secret ingredient is nutritional yeast.)

Spaghetti: It’ a steamy bowl of noodles, house-made marinara, veggie meatballs, and garlic bread. I’m all about that red sauce because the tomato and herb flavors are so bright, and it’s mildly spicy. Even my friend Camas, founder of the Portland Meat Collective, loves it.

The Old Timer: This here is a veggie dog nestled in a bun and then suffocated with bean-and-fake-meat chili, non-dairy cheddar, ketchup, mustard, and onions, and it comes with a side, such as chips and salsa or sautéed brussel sprouts. The chili is spicy and spiced perfectly, but the creamy cheese and condiments keep it from being overwhelming. It’s exactly what you need if you’re hungover. Or about to be.

All the entrees are $7 or $8, and if you leave still feeling hungry, you have a tapeworm. Happy hour runs from 4-7 p.m., and includes $1 off dinner entrees, well drinks and select draft beers, $2 chips & salsa, and a $4 edamame bowl. They serve a limited late-night menu from 10 p.m. to close, which includes the Spaghetti, the Old Timer, and a Chili Pie I’ve yet to try, but sounds divine.

The menu at the Bye and Bye hasn’t changed that much over the past few years, so it’s not like I’m sharing anything that new. But I feel like this tasty tavern just hasn’t gotten the public cred it deserves. And lest you think I can only wax poetic about all things dietetic, I’ll offer the following “criticism:”

The music is too (expletive) loud. Not deafening, mind you; instead, it’s at just the right level (where you just can’t quite hear anything anyone is saying, including yourself) to induce a psychotic break. Seriously, all you sexy tattooed and/or bearded guys behind the bar — turn it down.

(Aside: the bartenders are also extremely friendly, chill, fair, and efficient.)

Regardless, the Bye and Bye is now consistently packed. This means they’ve become quite successful, of course, which usually bodes well for what a place is doing with their food n’ booze. And I have to say, it tends to be an unusually attractive crowd, the kind of pretty peeps that remind me of my years living in L.A.’s hipster haven, Echo Park. I truly mean this as a compliment.

But if you don’t want to look at the people, look at the walls while you eat your Weeping Tiger (a tofu cutlet, avocado, and jalepeño sandwich), because they’re covered in colorful paintings that are actually interesting. Ninety-percent of them are by a 50-year-old Cuban named Juan Casas. According to a bartender, Casas is quite the character. You won’t find him online peddling his paintings, but he is at the Bye and Bye every morning except for Wednesday, cleaning. He drives a red truck.

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Tags: Northeast Dining, Cheap Eats, NoPo, Vegetarian Friendly

No Meatables

Portland’s Top Three Veggie Burgers

One gal’s opinion of meat-free “burgers” even carnivores should love.

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Observe

The Observatory’s Quinoa-Mushroom Veggie Burger — my number 3, although the folks on Yelp would beg to differ.

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The Observatory’s Quinoa-Mushroom Veggie Burger — my number 3, although the folks on Yelp would beg to differ.

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Heather’s Veggi “Burger,” from Veritable Quandary — I got the aioli on the side because I think mayo is vile, but this one really pulls the flavors together.

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The Farm’s Farmhouse Veggie Burger — not the most appetizing picture, but this is what happens when something is so delicious that you put gorging on it ahead of art.

When waxing poetic about burgers, the veggie versions are usually little more than a punch line. It’s understandable — most restaurants offer the same old over-cooked Boca or Gardenburger, or they think that veg-heads will be sated with any patty that contains beans or soy, even if it’s crumbly, pasty, or flavorless.

But there are exceptions to this rule, and I have three “best-of-the-best” local examples to prove it. Of course, “best” is a subjective term and I’m sure there are plenty of people who would disdain the ranking of my choices, or the fact that they exist on my list at all. Please feel free to comment and tell me how terribly wrong I’ve been.

1. The Farm Café: Farmhouse Veggie Burger ($11)

The patty in this veggie burger “sandwich” is an intoxicating combo of eggplant, breadcrumbs, cheese, and spices. Served on an airy rustic bun with caramelized onions, lettuce, thick slices of heirloom tomatoes, Dijon mustard, and seasonal pickles, it just has “such good flavor! Each bite is exciting!” as my sister-in-law put it. Eggplant is unusual in veggie burgers, but this meaty vegetable imparts a fabulous rich, umami quality. Perfectly caramelized on the outside, the patty is moist without being oily — it’s almost like a heartier eggplant parmesan in burger form. It also comes with fries or a salad. I like the meaty fries because they necessitate The Farm’s house-made ketchup, which contains curious and yet lovely flavors like curry and clove.

On a recent excursion, I paired my burger with a glass of medium-bodied 2008 Willamette Valley pinot noir from the NW Vine Project, an ultra-affordable secondary label from highly-regarded Northwest winemakers like David O’Reilly and Andrew Rich. This fresh, structured pinot has an initial bite but quickly becomes smooth, and doesn’t get lost once you attack your burger.

2. Veritable Quandary: Heather’s Veggi “Burger” with Lentils, Wild Mushrooms & Hazelnuts ($14)

This veggie burger may be the priciest I’ve eaten, but it’s also the biggest and the fanciest. Lightly seared on the outside, the patty is more like a dense hunk of meatloaf, expertly seasoned and earthy. It’s topped with buttermilk blue cheese, caramelized red onions, and truffle aioli and served on a thin grilled focaccia that tastes like the buttered toast you might find at a diner (I mean that as a compliment!). At first I was weirded out by the lack of fresh veggies, but for some insane reason, the lemony truffle aioli made me forget about it. This is the kind of sandwich that really sings when all the components are consumed together.

It comes with a mix of mostly bitter field greens in a light coat of salt-and-pepper vinaigrette, a fitting foil for the decadence of the burger.

3. The Observatory: Quinoa-Mushroom Veggie Burger ($8)

This version seemed to be the town favorite when I did a cursory search on Google, but I just don’t think it’s as interesting as the first two. Regardless, it’s certainly tasty as well as the most “real burger”-like. The crisp patty mostly maintains its structural integrity, and offers a deep, almost mineral flavor, reminiscent of molasses. Dished up with fresh lettuce, tomato, and onion on a Grand Central sesame seed brioche bun, you can also add cheddar, Swiss, or blue cheese for a dollar. And a generous portion of thick, salty house-made fries ensures you won’t go home hungry.

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Tags: On the Menu, Wine, Best Burgers, Vegetarian Friendly

Cheap Eats

Fantastic Pho on NE Killingsworth

Get your pho fix for $5 at 33 Ave Pho.

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All the signage you get for 33 Ave Pho, open 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., daily — we think.

33 Ave Pho is the kind of hole-in-the-wall find that you’re not sure you should tell your friends about because they might tell their friends and then the place will get overrun and never be the same quirky, quiet, delicious, ridiculously cheap place it was when you first found it. And, chances are, they won’t find it on their own.

Located in the back of the recently expanded mini-mart connected to the 76 gas station on the northeast corner of 33rd and Killingsworth (3323 Northeast Killingsworth Street), 33 Ave Pho offers a simple menu of Vietnamese teriyaki (beef, pork, chicken, shrimp, or tofu), salad rolls, spring rolls, shrimp wonton soup, and pho — an infatuation-inspiring beef or chicken noodle soup which, at $5, is the most expensive dish they serve.

I went there for lunch yesterday thinking I wasn’t very hungry, and ended up wolfing down a gigantic plate of the tofu teriyaki — a mountain of perfectly-cooked rice, steamed vegetables, and chunks of chewy-on-the-outside-soft-on-the-inside fried tofu coated in a salty, sweet sauce with lots of cracked pepper and shallots. It was straight-forward and not exactly pretty, but also the tastiest, most satisfying vegetarian dish I’ve had in months.

That aside, most folks were there for the pho — huge bowls of rice noodles, paper-thin strips of round steak, and tender meatballs in a clean, bright broth made from oxtail, knucklebones, onions, ginger, and spices like cinnamon, cardamom, and star anise, which simmers for hours before it’s served. You get to add your own mung beans (bean sprouts), basil, and wedges of lime, as well as Sriricha and/or Saambal for heat, soy sauce for salt, and Hoisin for sweetness.

Yesterday, surrounded by shelves filled with cat food and charcoal, everyone was slurping the soup, including a burly construction worker, an uber-fit postal worker, a Japanese teen wearing skinny jeans and headphones, and my meat-eating husband, who once informed me that pho was the one food he’d want if he was ever stranded on a desert island. The husband’s opinion of 33 Ave Pho: “What makes it so good is its simplicity. The broth is clean, bright, and authentic — not the gamey-tasting sweet-and-sour soup that some places substitute for the real thing.”

There are two ways to order: sit at one of the three tables in the brightly-lit “dining area” and wait until one of the incredibly friendly Vietnamese women working the gas station register can come over and help you, or wait at the counter that contains nothing more than a rice cooker and pictures of the menu items so that you can point if your waitress doesn’t understand you.

Getting your food won’t take long at all — and at least you can shop for gum and lottery tickets while you wait.

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Tags: Northeast Dining, Cheap Eats, Vegetarian Friendly, Vietnamese Food, Secret Find

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