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Eat & Drink

Kitchen Ink

The only thing local chefs love more than leaving their mark on our food scene is leaving a mark on themselves.

By Liz Crain

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(left) Chef Gabriel Rucker, Le Pigeon; (right) Tattooist Amanda Myers, Infinity Tattoo

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

(left) Chef Gabriel Rucker, Le Pigeon; (right) Tattooist Amanda Myers, Infinity Tattoo

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

New tattoo: A tin of sardines and a can of deviled ham

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

Thank-you meal: Pickled and grilled sardine salad with grilled bread, frisée, radicchio, and pork vinaigrette

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

(left) Chef John Gorham, Toro Bravo; (right) Tattooist Rich Cuellar, Infinity Tattoo

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

New tattoo: A six-year-old butcher knife given to him by a friend

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

Thank-you meal: Sambuca-and-fennel pork sausages with sautéed bell peppers and onions, topped with Parmigiano-Reggiano

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

(left) Chef John Eisenhart, Pazzo; (right) Tattooist Tim Jordan, Optic Nerve Arts

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

New tattoo: Barramundi (a large-scaled Australian river fish and member of the perch family)

View Slideshow » Photo: Chris Ryan

Thank-you meal: Panfried barrimundi with shaved heritage carrots and carrot vinaigrette

For most chefs, cuts and burns are common—mere flesh wounds that come with their chosen trade. But the bodies of many Portland chefs also carry a more permanent decoration: tattoos. Even Anthony Bourdain, host of the Travel Channel’s No Reservations, noted the large number of inked arms wielding knives and whisks in Portland in a 2007 segment on the Pacific Northwest.

Of course, in a town increasingly known for cutting-edge cuisine, perhaps it’s not surprising that the folks behind our food are a little edgy themselves. “Our craft is really artistic,” says John Gorham, Toro Bravo’s chef-owner. “I think a lot of chefs really appreciate art. And a tattoo is this raw art that you get to carry with you wherever you are.” In late November, seven local chefs (and one bartender) added to their skin art at a private and perfectly Portland gathering. Chefs paired off with tattoo artists from four different shops to add a food-inspired tattoo to their bodies; that night, tats still bandaged, each chef prepared a meal for his or her tattooist, inspired by their new ink.


See More Pictures, tattoos, and behind-the-scenes shots in Tattoo PDX.

Thanks for reading!

 

Published: February 2009

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