Cool Hunting in Portland

Schulte & Herr, Scratch Baking, Novare Res and Catch a Piece of Maine were all featured in an article about Portland on Cool Hunting.

At the same time, the harbor brings in some of the best seafood in the world, and alongside the scenic seaside and tucked away among the tourist traps are plenty of crackerjack restaurants, sandwich shops, bakeries and watering holes steeped in the local, unassuming character of Maine. Here, a handful of my favorite food and drink spots from four years as a local and frequent trips back to check out what’s new.

This Week’s Events: Latte Art Competition, Portland Brew Festival, Twilight Dinner

Tuesday — it’s Growler Nite at Bunker Brewing.

Wednesday — the Monument Square Farmers Market is taking place.

Thursday — Bard Coffee is hosting the monthly barista Latte Art Competition, Cultivating Community’s ninth Twilight Dinner of the summer is taking place (tickets available online), and The Great Lost Bear is showcasing beer from Cisco Brewing, Browne Trading and Aurora Provisions are holding a wine tastings, and the Maine Food Producers Alliance offering a class on food testing.

Friday — it’s the first day of the 2nd Annual Portland Brew Festival.

SaturdayLeRoux Kitchen is holding a wine tasting, the Deering Oaks Farmers Market is taking place, and it’s the last day of the 2nd Annual Portland Brew Festival.

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.

Review of White Cap Grille

The Maine Sunday Telegram has published a review of the White Cap Grille.

Dining reviews practically write themselves when the experience is outstanding, and although less fun (since restaurants do represent a person’s livelihood), they are equally easy to compose when the experience involves a spectacular failure. The creative stumbling happens in the middle, when a meal is “meh.”

Since “meh” does not translate as a technical term in any culinary dictionary, let me explain.

Another Review of Eventide

Portland magazine has published a review of Eventide.

We learn that Winter Point Selects from West Bath are the most popular and order three, along with three Gliddens from Damariscotta, two Shallow Bays from Newcastle, two Ayock Salts from Washington State, and two Blackberry Points from Prince Edward Island. Hands down, these are the best oysters we’ve had. Accoutrements (red wine mignonette, kimchee, and angelica ice) are fanciful and fine, but we find the oysters need no enhancement.

Book Review of Chef’s Table

From Away has published a book review of Portland Maine Chef’s Table.

Finally there’s a book that compiles favorite recipes from some of the most prominent, popular, accomplished cooks on the Peninsula. Portland, Maine Chef’s Table: Extraordinary Recipes from Casco Bayis perfectly packaged with glossy photos of the food, profiles of each restaurant, and insight from the chefs themselves. It is the cookbook that Portland deserves.

Review of Eventide

The latest issue of Maine magazine includes a review of Eventide Oyster Company.

According to [co-owner Arlin] Smith, the restaurant’s crudo dishes are almost as popular as the oysters, and standouts include a lightly cured arctic char served resting in a pool of raw egg yolk, and topped with creme fraiche, piquant capers, and sweet briny salmon roe. The dish is the garnished with “fried bagel”. Equally impressive is the buttery Tuna Nicoise, a raw piece of flesh crowned with a garnish of chopped hard-boiled egg and red onion most commonly found on caviar, and further complimented with a wonderfully salty and sweet taste imparted by dehydrated black-olive powder.

Unfortunately, the article is not available online, but you should be able to find a copy of Maine on local newsstands.

Tandem Coffee Roasters

LiveWork Portland has published a profile of Tandem Coffee Roasters,

While Portland already has a wealth of high-quality local coffee shops, the trio noted that there weren’t many roasters focused on high-end wholesale coffee for the city’s restaurants, and they moved here early this spring with plans to establish their own roasting company in a year or two. But when a real estate broker showed them the mid-century brick industrial building on Anderson Street — a former office for a scrap metal recycling business — they decided to go for it, and open up a small retail coffee shop of their own in the light-filled corner room at the front of the building.

Check the LiveWork Portland blog later today for a profile of Tandem’s East Bayside neighbor Bunker Brewing.