Under Construction Updates

Portland Psst! has published a round-up on changes of ownership at The White Heart, Thanh Thanh Bida and Awful Annie’s, as well as news that Po’Boy’s & Pickles (see sample menu) is replacing the D’Angelo’s on Forest Ave and G’Vanni’s Bistro (see sample menu) is going to occupy the spot on Exchange Street vacated by Walter’s.
The agenda from next week’s City Council meeting also provides a first look at the menu for Boda. For a more complete list of all the upcoming venues take a look at the Under Construction List.

First Look at Shima

Portland Food Heads has stopped by for a first look at Shima.

And so was my luncheon experience at Shima; not great, not at all bad, and certainly not without elements of potential. I see no reason to “rate” a restaurant after they’ve been open for a week, and I’m not even going to attempt to. I would say that with chef Shima’s confidence in serving the type of food “he likes to eat” will allow the restaurant to carve out a small niche for itself in a city already filled with options for Japanese.

Restaurant Worker Art Show

The Portland Daily Sun has published a report on the art show taking place next Monday at One Longfellow Square. The show will feature creative work produced by Portland area restaurant workers.

Local waitstaff, bartenders, chefs, cooks, bussers, dishwashers, prep cooks, hostesses and hosts will present their photography, sculpture, ceramics, paintings, drawings, sketches, films, music and more. The gallery segment of the event will start at 6:30PM and feature over a dozen visual artists from the southern Maine restaurants. At 8 p.m., various documentary presentations, performance art and musical performances will begin featuring local favorites Brenda and Over a Cardboard Sea.

Bangkok Thai –> Boda

According to an article in today’s Portland Daily Sun, the owners of Bangkok Thai are planning on turning it into an Asian fusion restaurant to be called Boda.

The restaurateurs are closing Bangkok Thai, their popular lunch and dinner restaurant at 671 Congress St., and converting it into a new Asian fusion eatery similar in some respects to their other Congress Street restaurant, the Green Elephant Vegetarian Bistro. Boda should be open in December.

“The food will change every two weeks, and we’ll have five to 10 items every night, that’s all. We’ll make it simple but good quality,” said Wongsaichua.

Maine at Work: Senior Brewer Mark Boissonneault

The Press Herald has kicked off a new series, Maine at Work,with a look at the work life of Mark Boissonneault, a senior brewer at Shipyard.

And, to my horror, there was math.

Boissonneault showed me his recipe sheet for the day’s batch of Shipyard Export Ale, and I instantly had a flashback to high school algebra. There were numbers with six or seven numerals after the decimal point, and equations where “bitterness values” are assigned to various kinds of hops. (The bitterness value is calculated by multiplying the alpha acids by the weight of the hops, by the way.)

This is way too much math, I thought. I need a drink.

Maine Beer Co.

A Blog About Beer has published a profile of Maine Beer Co.

I really see great things in the future for the Maine Beer Co. They are providing Maine-made beer unlike every other beer made here. In Portland, it’s either all English-style ales or the Belgians of Allagash, but there wasn’t anything like the great beers being made in the Midwest and West Coast of the U.S., something Maine was severely lacking. Until now. If they can keep pumping out beers equal in quality and taste to the Spring Peeper and their first experimental (and Brown IPA which was on tap at Novare and the GLB a week or two ago) beer, they have nowhere to go but up.

Open Creamery Day

Edible Obsessions has posted a report on yesterday’s Open Creamery Day.

Too many makers are quick to get their products to market, creating a more mild cheddar, but Jim [at Winter Hill] ages his wheels at least 8 months before offering it up to their customers–you can find their raw milk, yogurt and cheese at Rosemont in Portland or, better yet, become a regular customer and pick up directly from them–and you can tell the difference. Not only is it raw, the color is absolutely striking in it’s deep golden yellow paste.