Since Lauren moved to Oregon to attend law school six years
ago we have celebrated Thanksgiving and the girls’ birthdays (both born on
November 29th two years apart) at her condo in Portland
(technically, Lake Oswego, which is a swanky little community ten miles south
of downtown). It was a near-perfect Martha Stewart Thanksgiving this year with
the house decorated to the hilt, a loving family gathered together round a
beautifully-set table, and a traditional turkey dinner.
Turkey place card with trivia feathers
There are challenges with entertaining in small spaces that
go beyond limited floor space, although that is a primary concern. Our group of
nine this year outgrew Lauren’s small dining table for six (eight was a squeeze
last year; nine impossible). We found the perfect fix online…a 3-foot square
game table. A little furniture rearranging and we had one long table to seat
everyone together. Verne and I worked our magic in her small kitchen with very
few cross words (I did have one small melt-down we won’t discuss, but that has
become the norm). It helped to have made (and preserved) several components of
our dinner a few weeks ahead. After all, I am the queen of food preservation! And
finally, my crafty daughter had decorated her home beautifully with a “Give
Thanks” banner, a Thankful Tree with the names of family and friends written on
each leaf (it looks a bit like a Peanuts’ Christmas tree), and adorable paper
turkeys with trivia questions written on each of five tail feathers.
Fortunately for all of us the answers were written on the backs of the
feathers. We switched our tradition of “giving thanks” to after dinner (last
year dinner was cold after an hour of sharing and weeping). There was still
plenty of weeping this year, but at least it was on a full stomach. Before I
move on to the rest of our week in Portland, I want to share one of the small-kitchen,
single-oven tricks I learned this year. Our sausage-sage stuffing was cooked in
a slow cooker! Not only did it free up oven space, but the dressing was better
than usual and stayed hot for second servings. Thank you, NY Times daily blog!
For years (pre-Verne Moser) I prided myself in stretching a
turkey for four or five days. Day one hasn’t changed much with the bird and all
the fixings. Day two was re-heated leftovers (always tasted better the second
day with a fraction of the work). Day three was turkey tetrazzini. Day five was
a French (I really don’t think it was very French) onion soup made from turkey
stock. I don’t remember what I did on day four, but I’m sure it was equally
delicious. All that changed 30+ years ago. Verne had a tragic experience on
Christmas Eve when he was a teenager. The man who had raised him for much of
his first 15 years, Sig Hanson, died. For days after Sig’s death neighbors and
friends brought food to the family…turkey! Verne has always used the
association of a holiday turkey with Sig’s death as an excuse for limiting his
consumption of turkey to two small pieces on Thanksgiving. That’s it for the
entire year! So I have given up on getting creative with turkey leftovers. I
buy the smallest of birds and give the rest away with the carcass and giblets a
holiday treat for the barn cats. All that as a prelude to our Friday night
dinner, which wasn’t turkey leftovers…
Thai Peacock dinner
One of the first “favorite” restaurants we discovered in
downtown Portland is called Thai Peacock. It’s directly across the street from
Powell’s Bookstore, another fave. Just a side note, Powell’s takes up a city
block and has over a million books, new and used. They claim to be the largest
bookstore in the world and I believe it. I carry a map of the store so as not
to get lost. As for Thai food over the holiday weekend, why not? For our “Asian-at-heart
daughter” Thai food is always a perfect choice. I call Lauren that because
during a visit to a friend’s home the girl’s mother watched Lauren masterfully
use her chopsticks and said, you are more Asian than my own daughter born and
raised in China. Lauren discovered a dish called Pad Se Ew while she attended UC
Berkeley. A few years later, during her stint at Lewis and Clark Law School,
she served a summer (law) internship in Laos (and traveled to Thailand,
Cambodia, and Vietnam). Her summer adventures, documented in her blog (Adventuresof a Book Worm Abroad), included a one-day cooking class where she learned to
make all the food she loves, Pad Se Ew, Tom Yum soup, curry, and mango with
sticky rice to name a few. Lauren made suggestions for our order and as we
enjoyed several courses of delicious Thai food, we reminisced of her 2010 trip
to Southeast Asia. As parents, the worries were burned into our memory…civil
war breaking out in Chaing Mai the day Lauren left on her trip, cultural
immersion week at a refugee camp for young women, dengue fever, foodborne
illnesses. The list is long. For Lauren, who has no qualms of traveling to
third-world countries, it was probably the best three-months of her law school
experience.
Scott and Ini at Thai Peacock
Birthday Girls at Thai Peacock
Verne and Andy at Thai Peacock
Jana and I are the tea drinkers in the family and she ordered
a pot of Jasmine green tea for the two of us to have with our food. We
commented several times during dinner that it was the best Jasmine tea we’d ever had. We ordered a second pot and
continued to discuss it to the point of being annoying to the rest of the fam,
which only served to encourage us to continue with our accolades (LOL). As we
were leaving I noted that the brand was Smith Tea. We googled it and lo and
behold we found that Smith Tea headquarters and tasting room is located in
Portland. Steven Smith, who died a few years ago at the early age of 65 (hope
it was not due to drinking tea), was the teamaker and cofounder of Stash teas
and the tea shaman of Tazo. Based on the price of the tea, which I ordered, it
is definitely “uncommon…with a curated line of flavors like nothing else in
the world.” In other words, it’s a snooty tea for serious tea drinkers and
definitely a step up from Stash and Tazo. By Sunday, all of the family had left
to go home and we were alone to run a few errands and complete a DIY project in
the afternoon (replace Lauren’s garbage disposal).
We had an errand in northeast Portland that took us very close to the Smith Tea tasting room. All it took was for Lauren to say she would really like to find a tea she likes (she is historically a tea teetotaler) and we were off to experience Smith Tea. And what an incredible experience it was! We spent an hour sipping and slurping a flight of teas. Yes, slurping. We learned that slurping aerates the tea and enhances the taste. This was an experience we will repeat as often as we’re in Portland. What fun!
DIY garbage disposal
We had an errand in northeast Portland that took us very close to the Smith Tea tasting room. All it took was for Lauren to say she would really like to find a tea she likes (she is historically a tea teetotaler) and we were off to experience Smith Tea. And what an incredible experience it was! We spent an hour sipping and slurping a flight of teas. Yes, slurping. We learned that slurping aerates the tea and enhances the taste. This was an experience we will repeat as often as we’re in Portland. What fun!
Smith Tea, a flight of four
Slurping
Beautiful fall day in front of Smith Tea
Have I mentioned that Portland is a “foodie” town? Lauren’s
mission has been to scout out new restaurants for us to try during our visits.
The real challenge has been to get us to try them. We have so many favorites
and our trips are rarely more than four or five days. This particular trip was
longer than most giving us an extra couple of dining opportunities.
The first, which occurred before Thanksgiving, was truly
amazing. Verne and I arrived in Portland on Tuesday afternoon while Jandy (Jana
and her boyfriend Andy) arrived very late Tuesday night. We all met up at
Lauren’s house on Wednesday mid-day and decided to head out to try one of these
new eating establishments that Lauren had been raving about. She suggested
Laurelhurst Market, a combination butcher shop and restaurant in southeast Portland,
as the perfect place for our group and so we called to make reservations. At
the time, it seemed unfortunate that the restaurant only had reservations at
4:30 pm when they opened, but in retrospect it was perfect (fewer people meant
more attention from the wait staff and less noise for the hard of hearing –
everyone but Lauren – in our group). The restaurant is beautiful and
quintessentially Portland. Menus with local seasonal selections were passed
around and it was immediately apparent it would be challenge to order as everything
on the menu looked delicious. We decided to begin by sharing some starters – a
pickle board with about 6 different pickled vegetables, each pickled in a
unique manner and served on an actual board, an order of fried oysters, and two bowls
of French onion soup. These hors d’oeuvres were impeccable, each more delicious
than the last. As we feasted, our waiter decanted the wine we brought and then
poured it out for us. We sipped and sampled our way through this first course
and then began to think about the main event. As I mentioned above, Laurelhurst
Market is a butcher shop/restaurant and focuses much of its menu on steaks.
Each cut of beef is served in a unique style and our waiter was on hand to
discuss each in depth. He asked questions on our preferences, inquired about our
previous experiences with steak and then made recommendations. The result was
an amazing meal for each of us – steak frites for Verne, a flat iron steak with
a golden raisin vinaigrette for myself and Andy, a coulotte steak with a Thai
hazelnut sauce for Lauren, and grilled shrimp for Jana. This is to say nothing
of the sides – Yukon potatoes with aioli, smoked wild mushrooms, and mac &
cheese with a potato chip crust. In the
end, we spent about two hours relaxing and reveling in a glorious meal and
outstanding company. Our waiter was incredible, always ready with a
recommendation and refilling our glasses of water or wine before we realized we
needed it. We ended the meal with fresh beignets and an untraditional “carrot
cake.” As we left the restaurant we all agreed it was one of the best meals we
have eaten in Portland and Jana declared it better than almost all restaurants
in LA as well (high praise indeed!).
Our final new restaurant experience in Portland occurred on
Sunday evening after the others had left. Verne, Lauren and I went to
Nicoletta’s Table in downtown Lake Oswego, an Italian restaurant Lauren had
been interested in trying for the past year. It’s located in a small,
inconspicuous shopping center and is right next door to Lauren’s Mexican food
favorite, Senor Taco. Well, Nicoletta’s Table is simply fantastic. The
restaurant is beautiful and includes an open kitchen plan so that you can watch
the chefs cook as you eat. What more could you want than a show with your
dinner? We started with Nicoletta’s famous mini meatballs in red sauce and they
were perfect. As we ate, our waitress brought us a small rustic bag filled with
fresh focaccia bread and a large delicious cracker. A bottle of olive oil on
the table provided a perfect dip and each bite proved better than the last. For
the main course, I sampled the lasagna (which proved unique and delicious),
Lauren tried the spaghetti Bolognese (another winner), and Verne ate a classic,
spaghetti and meatballs (wonderful). We all agreed that we had found yet
another favorite to add to the list and that Jandy must accompany us to
Nicoletta’s on their next visit.