Portland still has the lead in streetcars, but Seattle is catching up. (Photo: MvB)
You don't have to wonder what's showing at the Portland Art Museum (Photo: MvB)
Legs & silhouette from "The Body Beautiful" at Portland Art Museum (Photo: MvB)
Portland Art Museum has organized a number of "Body Beautiful" responses. Here's Duane Hanson's "Dishwasher." (Photo: MvB)
The entertaining layout of the Portland Art Museum helps you see things from different perspectives. That's Marino Marini's "Piccolo cavaliere." (Photo: MvB)
Rainy day Lincoln, in Portland's Park blocks (Photo: MvB)
In Portland, they have street signs that tell you what color the building is. (Photo: MvB)
Kask's charcuterie (Photo: MvB)
The venison terrine at Grüner (Photo: MvB)
Herb stuffed quail and elk jagerwurst on a bed of braised lentils and Swiss chard at Grüner (Photo: MvB)
The Benson Hotel offers a lot of bed for the money. (Photo: MvB)
Portland Bikecraft 2012 comes with a beer-bike (Photo: MvB)
Portland Bikecraft 2012's taco-bike, of course (Photo: MvB)
The leather handlebar look at Portland Bikecraft 2012 (Photo: MvB)
Holds your coffee and yoga mat, plus some other junk -- seen at Portland Bikecraft 2012 (Photo: MvB)
Wooden bike fenders from Sykes Wooden Fenders ($150 for front and back set) at Portland Bikecraft 2012 (Photo: MvB)
What is it about being caught in a torrential downpour in another city that makes that moment seem portentous and dramatic, rather than Ugh? Better minds than mine have no doubt inquired, so I’ll just move along to the observation that this is one reason why Portland’s proximity to Seattle (three-and-a-half-hours by Amtrak Cascades) is so fortuitous. It’s just different enough down there that weekend jaunts retain an air glamorously-serifed Travel.
Occasionally, Amtrak will offer fares as low as $32 roundtrip for coach — perhaps in competition with the new Bolt Bus service. In that case, you buy the tickets, and wonder what you’ll do there later. Portland will rarely fail you. Outside of specific draws, like bands at the Doug Fir or Trail Blazers games at the Rose Garden, there will always be some new food and drinking spots to visit, and gondolas to take.
This time out, I splurged for a stay at the more opulent Benson Hotel, thinking I might take advantage of their El Gaucho adjacency, perhaps nip down the street for a barrel-aged nightcap at Clyde Common. But Portland friends had other ideas. Had I been to Kask? How did I feel about dinner at Grüner?
Well, clearly, I have not been reading Esquire‘s bar recommendations, but after downing a few ingredient-rich rum-based concoctions, I have no reason to quibble with them. The bartender was knowledgeable, quick, and forthcoming about said ingredients. The ambiance — candlelight with hand-cranked slicing at one end of the bar — proved the dream of the 1890s saloon was still alive in Portland.
Around the corner at Grüner, the style is Pacific Northwestern German; the turnip soup Savoyard was almost startlingly rich and creamy, the herb-stuffed quail and elk jagerwurst uniting two vastly different realms of taste. The bed of lentils, braised, offered a light crunch. I probably did not need to get the venison terrine with zwack-infused cranberries, pickled beets, and persimmon; the taste of the venison wasn’t as bold as the quail and elk, and would have been a better part of a different dinner. Do try the buckwheat spätzle.
This time out, I had the idea that I’d revisit the Portland Art Museum (open every day except Monday, $15 adults), whose collection feels more intimately Northwestern than the great and powerful Seattle Art Museum. Their collection also looks to the East, just as SAAM does, with illustrated Japanese screens (and visiting Noh masks), and Chinese and subcontinental art, but you can also spend hours with American Indian works (traditional and contemporary), as well as in rooms showcasing members of the Northwest School.
Their big visiting exhibition, through January 6, 2013, is The Body Beautiful in Ancient Greece, from the British National Museum, but if you’ve seen Elles at SAM, there’s some Cindy Sherman for you, too. A whole afternoon slipped past me there.
Because it was Portland and because it’s good for your heart, I also popped into Bikecraft PDX, which just happened to be going on that weekend. (I think it’s safe to say that of any given weekend in Portland, there is never not any bike-event that is going on.) I hadn’t brought my bike on the train this time (just $5 each way), but it was still fun to stop in and see the craftiness on offer. Paul Sykes, of Sykes Wood Fenders, was there with his tantalizingly NW-retro wood fenders. Elly Blue, of Taking the Lane, was there. You could buy things for your bike, or things for you made out of bike parts, like tire-rubber wallets and belts.
I bought a copy of Hop in the Saddle, a biking guide to Portland’s craft beer spots, and we set off for the Green Dragon, where one of the bartenders turned out to be a Seahawks fan, and joined us in watching a triumph over the Bears in OT. I can recommend the Fearless Loki Red Ale for someone who wants an ale without that IPA kick in the bitter. The Sunday afternoon train for Seattle left at 2:50 p.m., which this time of year means you get sunset (or cloudset) on the way. If the WiFi on board is working, you can start posting DSLR photos of Portland scenery before you even return.
Rothko self-portrait (Photo courtesy of Portland Art Museum)
Rothko untitled (Photo courtesy of Portland Art Museum)
Contrast at the Lan Su Chinese Garden
USS Blueback submarine at OMSI
The kitchen on the USS Blueback
An example of the fascinating LEGO art at OMSI
The groaning Gruner burger...beware the volcanic eruption!
Inside Oven & Shaker
Nostrana salad at Oven & Shaker
Oven & Shaker's margherita pizza
Oven & Shaker's pizza with bosc pear, taleggio, speck, and leeks
Porcini and black garlic soup with sage pesto at Little Bird
Little Bird's charcuterie plate: At 12:00 is chicken liver mousse, to the right is pork rillette, then smoked pork tenderloin, next crispy trotter croquette, and finally an amazing foie gras brulee with apricot-Sauternes jam
Aviary's hamachi tartare with scallion, fuji apple, and mentaiko
Aviary's chestnut soup with crème fraiche, brussels sprouts, and bottarga
Aviary's zucchini charlotte with green beans, oil-cured olives, smoked tomato consomme
Inside Aviary's zucchini charlotte
Aviary's four cup chicken with taro root, dried apricot and truffle, and wood ear mushrooms
Aviary's crispy pig ear with coconut rice, chinese sausage, and avocado (fascinating!)
Salt & Straw ice cream: honey balsamic strawberry with cracked pepper on the left, pear with blue cheese on the right
Get in the spirit at Beaker and Flask (photo courtesy of Torsten Kjellstrand/Travel Portland)
Beaker & Flask's pork cheeks with braised peppers and onions, pickled octopus, and aioli
Beaker & Flask's fried chicken livers with radicchio, Brussels sprouts, squash, chestnut cream, and sherry gastrique
Beaker & Flask's roasted cauliflower with candied hazelnuts, Calabrian chiles, and parmasean broth
Welcome to Coava
A beautiful breakfast pairing at Coava (croissant from Nuvrei)
Inside Nuvrei's croissant
Drip coffee service at Coava
Almond croissant with chocolate at Nuvrei
Croissant and kouign amman at Little T American Baker
Inside Little T's croissant
Chocolate doughnut decadence from Little T
Mi Mero Mole's quesadilla of lengua en mole Coca Cola
Inside Mi Mero Mole's quesadilla
Accanto's nettle soup
Accanto's tripe alla Romagna with poached eggs
Accanto's duck hash with root vegetables, broccolini, and poached eggs
St. Jack's mackerel salad starter
St. Jack's fried tripe with caper and red onion mayonnaise
St. Jack's fisherman’s stew with scallops, oysters, clams, trout roe, and leeks
St. Jack's Lyonnaise onion tart, with caramelized onions, leeks, and goat cheese—topped with a poached egg
St. Jack's coconut gateau with meyer lemon curd, coconut, tarragon sorbet, and blood orange supremes
Bunk's massive muffaletta sandwich
The Hilton Executive Tower (photo courtesy of Hilton Portland & Executive Tower)
Racing around to Portland restaurants has become an annual June ritual of late, but with a rare Rothko exhibit in town until May, my partner and I were rarin’ to go to the Rose City sooner than usual this year.
Outings to the Portland Art Museum, the Lan Su Chinese Garden, and OMSI would provide immense stimulation for the eyes, while visits to bakeries, coffee shops, and restaurants around town would again prove to be a feast for all the senses.
Rothko and Other Sites in the Rose City
Marcus Rothkowitz was born in Russian-controlled Dvinsk (now Daugavpils, Latvia) in 1903. Fleeing Czarist Russia, his father and eventually two brothers emigrated to the United States, settling in Portland. Marcus, along with his mother and his sister, came to the U.S. in 1913. Rothko would eventually graduate from Portland’s Lincoln High School, move to New York and become an artist, and have his first solo show in 1933—at the Portland Art Museum.
Now, nearly 80 years later, the Portland Art Museum is hosting an exhibition of 45 of Mark Rothko’s paintings, dating from the late 1920’s (including some early figurative works) to shortly before his death in 1970. One of America’s foremost artists of the twentieth century, he was typically described (much to his dismay) as an abstract expressionist. Standing before some of the large canvases, it’s hard to not be drawn in to the bold colors and the emotions that lie beneath them.
The Rothko exhibit will be at the Portland Art Museum until May 27. If you wait until the last-minute, you can also catch the start of the Portland Rose Festival.
We were too early to enjoy the glory of the International Rose Test Garden, but we did visit the Lan Su Chinese Garden, which is an oasis of tranquility inside the city. If you have time, you might choose to take tea here, overlooking the pavilion and the lake.
And for childhood fun, we went to OMSI: the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry. Here we watched Born to Be Wild, an IMAX movie about orphaned orangutans and elephants, and the extraordinary people who rescue and raise them. We also enjoyed a tour of the USS Blueback submarine, the U.S. Navy’s last non-nuclear, fast-attack submarine. The submarine was featured in The Hunt for Red October, and a tour is more fascinating than expected in learning about the seamen’s life below the sea. (Tough conditions, but the food was actually pretty good, according to the guide.) Other highlights at OMSI were an interactive wellness exhibit and an intriguing LEGO art gallery.
Restaurants Provide a Feeding Frenzy in Portland
(Note: Check the gallery, above, for lots of food photos, and more.)
The ever-increasing number of quality restaurants always makes Portland a culinary destination. Seattle’s great, no doubt. But our southern neighbor has been on the rise. In fact, for two years running, Portland has outscored Seattle in the number of nominations for James Beard Foundation Best Chef: Northwest Award.
One of the chefs is Chris Israel of Gruner, where I took a solo meal. I was struggling with order options, watching what was coming to other tables. Some portions looked small, so based on my server’s recommendation, I went with the much-talked about Gruner burger. This big boy exploded like a Mount Hood eruption, juices almost hitting the people at the adjoining table. Good flavor in the house-ground beef, though overall the burger was just a little too salty for my taste—perhaps due to the otherwise delicious Nueske bacon. The Fontina cheese was a nice addition. And I liked the fried smashed potatoes (and homemade ketchup) on the side, though three seemed just a little skimpy.
Another of Portland’s Beard-nominated chefs is Cathy Whims. Based on past experience, I knew that Nostrana is a fabulous place for Italian food, so I decided to try her new Oven & Shaker. It’s a fairly simple concept made even simpler at happy hour, when you can enjoy low-priced pizzas. How about a Nostrana salad (love the radicchio) with a Margherita pizza ($7) and one with bosc pear, taleggio, speck, and leeks? The pizzas are cracker thin, so they’re not as filling as they look. Tasty and with interesting topping options, though I recall liking the pizzas at Nostrana even better.
Incidentally, Naomi Pomeroy is the other Portland Beard nominee. I enjoyed a meal at her restaurant, Beast, during a previous visit. The same with Le Pigeon, whose chef, Gabriel Rucker, was last year’s national winner for the James Beard Rising Star Chef of the Year. This time I checked out his new restaurant: Little Bird. It’s more of a quintessential French bistro—and it’s extremely popular, so reservations are highly recommended. My food was fabulous, particularly my porcini and black garlic soup with sage pesto, and a charcuterie plate highlighted by foie gras brulee. Amazing. So many chefs and food lovers I met in Portland rave about this charcuterie plate, and Little Bird in general.
Staying with the bird theme, another meal was at Aviary, which suffered from a kitchen fire last year but is back in business. Even with a reservation, the wait was long, but that helped me build up my appetite. The food was pretty solid, full of interesting flavor combinations—often with Asian influences. I enjoyed hamachi tartare, chestnut soup, zucchini charlotte, four cup chicken, and my favorite dish of the night: crispy pig ear with coconut rice, Chinese sausage, and avocado. This dish had lots of interesting flavors and textures. I’d like to replicate it at home, though I’d probably use regular rice instead of coconut rice for less sweetness.
I managed to save just a little stomach space for ice cream at Salt & Straw, just down the block from Aviary. Their line was long pre-dinner, and it only got worse as the night wore on, winding around the corner at the eleven o’clock hour. But I waited and was rewarded with scoops of pear with blue cheese, and honey balsamic strawberry with cracked pepper. This was some of the best ice cream I’ve had in ages. (Yes, I sampled their famous bone marrow and smoked cherry ice cream, but I’ll take my bone marrow straight out of the bone with parsley, thank you.)
After Oven & Shaker and Salt & Straw, it made sense to make one other “ampersanded” stop: Beaker & Flask. This late night stop offers even more fabulous food, accompanied by fascinating drinks. I enjoyed my Salt & Pepper—with gin, Peychaud’s bitters, grapefruit, lime and salted rim—and noshed on three dishes: (1) pork cheeks with braised peppers and onions, pickled octopus, and aioli, (2) fried chicken livers with radicchio, Brussels sprouts, squash, chestnut cream, and sherry gastrique, and (3) roasted cauliflower with candied hazelnuts, Calabrian chiles, and parmesan broth. That parmesan broth was packed with flavor, and my favorite dish of the group.
Late nights with drinks mean mornings with coffee, and what better place than Coava? The setting is special, the beans are the best (and always changing, depending on supply), and the workers know what they’re doing. I tried a drip coffee (La Guachoca, from El Salvador, strong with caramel and cacao notes) from their metal filter, as well as an Americano (San Rafael, from Guatemala, more fruity). Both were great. Afterward, I sent a Seattle friend who’s a finicky coffee drinker, and he’s already addicted, now ordering Coava’s beans by mail. Many people say this is the best coffee in Portland, and their awards just might prove it.
At Coava, I had a Nuvrei croissant. It was flaky, but a little soft and airy. (Maybe it wasn’t as fresh as it should have been, delivered and sitting in the case?) Far better was the almond croissant with chocolate that I got right at the Nuvrei bakery. I also tried a croissant from Little T American Baker, which was crispy on the outside, but not quite flaky or buttery enough. Better here was the kouign amman. And best was the chocolate doughnut, which the worker recommended as the best bite for anyone who likes chocolate.
I ate that doughnut right after a brunch nibble at Mi Mero Mole—the new Mexican restaurant by Nick Zukin of the beloved Kenny & Zuke’s, where I’ve had a pastrami and chopped liver sandwich in the past. At Mi Mero Mole, after much contemplation (and dismay that menudo was off the menu), I settled on a quesadilla of lengua en mole Coca Cola. The quesadilla was well-prepared, and “light” enough for me to enjoy the lengua filling, but the mole was just a touch too sweet. The worker appreciated the feedback, saying the mole is a work-in-progress. Mi Mero Mole es muy interesante, and worth watching.
For a bigger brunch one day, I went to Accanto. It’s a pleasant, cheery space for a daylight meal. Nettle soup was a good starter, followed by tripe alla Romagna with poached eggs and my favorite dish of the meal: duck hash with root vegetables, broccolini, and more poached eggs. The root vegetables were cooked just right, each bite providing a slightly different burst of flavor.
One final meal to discuss: dinner at St. Jack. This corner restaurant is extremely cozy, especially the two-top in the front window. (It was a little weird to watch the workers sit on the sidewalk smoking toward the end of the night.) It’s another Portland restaurant serving solid food, from a perfectly cooked mackerel salad starter to fried tripe with caper and red onion mayonnaise to a very rich and delicious fisherman’s stew (the trout roe in the stew completes the dish). Best of the night, though, was the Lyonnaise onion tart, with caramelized onions, leeks, and goat cheese—topped with a poached egg. The sweetness of those caramelized onions could have almost qualified this as dessert, but since the restaurant is a patisserie by day, I saved space for a fun coconut gateau with meyer lemon curd, coconut, tarragon sorbet, and blood orange supremes.
Oh…and to go? Next to Little Bird is Bunk, where I asked for a road-worthy sandwich, concerned about durability and perishability. My muffaletta was massive (see the coin for scale in the photo gallery, above), making my next leg of my trip a stomach-filled one—much like my entire time in Portland.
Rest at the Hilton Portland & Executive Tower
Featuring another ampersand, the Hilton Portland & Executive Tower consists of two buildings diagonally across from each other: the Hilton Portland main building with 455 guest rooms and suites, and the Hilton Portland Executive Tower with 327 boutique-style guest rooms. The Executive Tower would be our base for stay, providing comfort and convenience. It’s an easy and free ride from the Amtrak station to the hotel (we actually walked it in about 15 minutes) using MAX Light Rail, which also provides easy 45-minute ride to the airport for $2.40. There’s no need for a car in Portland, as it’s a very walkable city, with public transportation easy to negotiate for more distant places. And just steps from the Hilton you’ll find the Portland Art Museum, Pioneer Place Shopping Mall, food carts, and plenty of restaurants.
If you don’t want to go out, there’s a restaurant in each of the Hilton buildings. Porto Terra Tuscan Grill & Bar is in the Hilton Executive Tower, while Hilton Portland is home of Bistro 921. In fact, Bistro 921 is where I was introduced to Hilton’s new national breakfast menu. Check here for photos and description of some of those dishes, as well as a few of the lunch offerings at Porto Terra.
Today brings an update on the James Beard Award nominations, as the large field of semifinalists got narrowed down to finalists.
With winners to be announced on May 7, Seattle can be proud that perennial candidate Tom Douglas is again in the running for Outstanding Restaurateur. But again this year, Portland outflanks our city in terms of finalists in the Best Chef Northwest category:
Matt Dillon, Sitka and Spruce, Seattle
Jason Franey, Canlis, Seattle
Christopher Israel, Grüner, Portland
Naomi Pomeroy, Beast, Portland
Cathy Whims, Nostrana, Portland
This is again a tough field. I give early odds to Franey as the favorite, though Cathy Whims could provide an upset. I’ve enjoyed her food at Nostrana, and plan to check out her new Oven & Shaker in the next few days. Look for a report on that and my volcanic hamburger at Grüner in the next few weeks.