Chili & Chowder Challenge Results

Today’s Portland Daily Sun includes a report on the 16th Annual Chili & Chowder Challenge that took place over the weekend. According to the article, Fire & Ice, Fish & Chop House at the Marriott Hotel took home both the People’s Choice and Judge’s Choice for Chill, Gilbert’s was the judge’s preference for chowder but the attendees preferred the chowder from Free Range Fish and Lobster. The article in the Sun focuses on the family back story behind Free Range’s lobster stew recipe.

Geoff Denley said his family had a hand in inventing the doughnut. More recently, the Denleys and business partner Joe Ray introduced a family recipe for a lobster stew that wowed crowds at the 16th annual Great Chili and Chowder Challenge in Portland.

Also in the Wednesday Sun is an article about the business challenges being faced by the owner of the Back Cove Deli on Ocean Ave.

Two weeks ago, Chris Dougherty’s financing fell through and the Back Cove deli owner was back at square one.

PPH: Kombucha & Herbal Tea

The Food & Dining section in today’s Press Herald examines two alternative types of tea.

Meredith Goad interviewed Chris Hallweaver from the Maine Kombucha Co. who gave her a starter to take home,

Floating near the top was the scoby. Floating near the bottom were little pieces of something. On bottles of Hallweaver’s tea, there’s a note that helpfully explains that these little bits of intestinal goodness are supposed to be there. Yes, you’re supposed to swallow them.

And Avery Yale Kamila talked with Sarah Richards owner of Homegrown Herb & Tea about her ayurvedic herbal tea.

“This is high season for me,” Richards said on a recent morning before she opened the shop. “This is when people are sick or trying to avoid being sick.”

PPH: Kombucha & Herbal Tea

The Food & Dining section in today’s Press Herald examines two alternative types of tea.
Meredith Goad interviewed Chris Hallweaver from the Maine Kombucha Co. who gave her a starter to take home,

Floating near the top was the scoby. Floating near the bottom were little pieces of something. On bottles of Hallweaver’s tea, there’s a note that helpfully explains that these little bits of intestinal goodness are supposed to be there. Yes, you’re supposed to swallow them.

And Avery Yale Kamila talked with Sarah Richards owner of Homegrown Herb & Tea about her ayurvedic herbal tea.

“This is high season for me,” Richards said on a recent morning before she opened the shop. “This is when people are sick or trying to avoid being sick.”

A Tie at the Cajun Cookin' Challenge

Tuesday’s Portland Daily Sun includes a report on the unprecedented outcome of the recent Cajun Cookin’ Challenge: a tie between Silly’s and Bayou Kitchen. The owners of the two establishments are pondering a second cook-off to determine the winner.

Silander said he wants to offer a challenge to Silly’s for a friendly cookoff to settle the matter.

“It’s a really busy month for me next month, but I’ll think about doing a callout and see if Silly’s wants to do something as far as a challenge goes. What I would try to do would be sell tickets, have say 25 or 30 people, five judges, maybe somebody from Louisiana … and all the proceeds would go to the Katrina Fund,” he said.

A Tie at the Cajun Cookin’ Challenge

Tuesday’s Portland Daily Sun includes a report on the unprecedented outcome of the recent Cajun Cookin’ Challenge: a tie between Silly’s and Bayou Kitchen. The owners of the two establishments are pondering a second cook-off to determine the winner.

Silander said he wants to offer a challenge to Silly’s for a friendly cookoff to settle the matter.

“It’s a really busy month for me next month, but I’ll think about doing a callout and see if Silly’s wants to do something as far as a challenge goes. What I would try to do would be sell tickets, have say 25 or 30 people, five judges, maybe somebody from Louisiana … and all the proceeds would go to the Katrina Fund,” he said.

Thai-o-rama: Sala Thai

Prompted by item 7 on Margo Mallar’s 2009 culinary bucket list a group of Portland food writers are working together to eat and write our way through all of the Thai restaurants in Portland. This gives us a reason to try out the full breadth of Thai food in the  city and gives everyone a way to read multiple points of view of the same restaurant at the same time.
Sala Thai on Washington Ave was our first stop and five food writers have published so far; I’ll add links below as other posts appear. The reviews seemed to be mixed:
Portland Food Heads writes “the folks at Sala Thai are putting out solid food that happens to be worthy of attention” and enjoyed the Pad Thai which “Happily, Sala Thai does the dish correctly.”
Appetite Portland and her husband didn’t enjoy the Pad Thai but did wrote that they “fared much better with the Tamarind Duck. Served in a tangy (if not exactly spicy) brown sauce, the duck was well-seasoned, perfectly roasted, and boasted just the right amount of fat.”
Columnist Margo Mallar from the Portland Daily Sun visited Sala Thai for a pair of lunches. She reports disappointment in the texture of her Pan Fried Noodles but enjoyed The Ginger-Scallion Tofu, “nicely marinated soy curds in a sauce that was well balanced between pungent and mellow.”
Edible Obsessions has gone experimental in her form by posting the notes of her visit. If I’m able to decipher her hand writing it looks like the she found the atmosphere “odd but nice…without being campy” and that the most notable dish was gorgeous with lots of vegetable but packed more of a heat punch then expected.
The Blueberry Files ordered a mix of plates including her favorite Thai dish Laab Gai. She writes “while I wasn’t disappointed, this Laab Gai didn’t quite live up to my (admittedly high) expectations. It could have used more veggies underneath, and while I got a great lemongrass zing every other bite, I wasn’t blown away by the seasonings.”
Where is Jenner’s Mind rated her meal at Sala Thai as “good, but standard. all the food was flavorful, but other than the dumplings, nothing stood out”. With regard to the dumplings she wrote, they were “pan fried to a beautiful crisp, and topped with little bits of fried garlic. i tried to scoop up as many bits of garlic onto my dumpling before dipping it into a slightly sweet tamarind sauce.”
For my part I’d say the food was good overall, but what stands out more for me were the friendly attentive service and the atmosphere, PFH called it “not unlike sitting down in sitting down in the living room of an elderly relative” and I’d agree.

New Issue of Maine Magazine

The new issue of Maine magazine includes an interview with Lee Farrington, the chef behind the highly anticipated new restaurant Figa. There’s no word yet on Figa’s opening date.
The magazine also includes a trio of Joe Ricchio articles: a selection of cup cakes from Maine bakers, a look at some of the restaurants participating in Restaurant Week next month and a report on David Chang’s visit to Portland.
The articles aren’t online yet but the magazine is starting to show up on newsstands. I picked up my copy at the Rosemont Market in the East End.

This Week's Event

Monday — Baker Stephen Lanzalotta is teaching a Piatto per Tutti cooking class.
Tuesday — chef Eric Simeon at Grace is tapping into his Creole roots to cook up some specials for Fat Tuesday
Wednesday Black Tie Bistro is teaching a cooking class and a wine tasting is taking place at Old Port Wine Merchants.
Thursday — Leavitt & Sons is holding a wine tasting, there will be a wine dinner at Sea Glass restaurant and the Slow Food Book Club will be meeting to discuss American Fried by Calvin Trillin.
Saturday — the new Winter Farmers’ Market is kicking off, a wine and herb jelly workshop is taking place at Wolf Neck Farm, and the Port Clyde Fresh Catch shrimp CSF is doing their biweekly Portland drop-off.
Sunday — Casey Turner from El Rayo Taqueria will host a showing of the movie Dinner Rush at the Museum of Art.
For more information on these and other upcoming food happenings in the area, visit the event calendar.
If you are holding a food event this week that’s not listed above, publicize it by adding it as a comment to this post.

This Week’s Event

Monday — Baker Stephen Lanzalotta is teaching a Piatto per Tutti cooking class.

Tuesday — chef Eric Simeon at Grace is tapping into his Creole roots to cook up some specials for Fat Tuesday

Wednesday Black Tie Bistro is teaching a cooking class and a wine tasting is taking place at Old Port Wine Merchants.

Thursday — Leavitt & Sons is holding a wine tasting, there will be a wine dinner at Sea Glass restaurant and the Slow Food Book Club will be meeting to discuss American Fried by Calvin Trillin.

Saturday — the new Winter Farmers’ Market is kicking off, a wine and herb jelly workshop is taking place at Wolf Neck Farm, and the Port Clyde Fresh Catch shrimp CSF is doing their biweekly Portland drop-off.

Sunday — Casey Turner from El Rayo Taqueria will host a showing of the movie Dinner Rush at the Museum of Art.

For more information on these and other upcoming food happenings in the area, visit the event calendar.

If you are holding a food event this week that’s not listed above, publicize it by adding it as a comment to this post.