Tag Archive for: Gourmet Food

PORTLAND, Ore. – There are plenty of ways to treat mom at Nel Centro this Mother’s Day.  In support of Portland Opera’s “The Magic Flute” opening at the Keller Auditorium, bar manager Nathanial Stout has created an eponymous cocktail made with Nardini Acqua di Cedro, grapefruit bitters and Prosecco, served in a champagne flute.  The drink will be available starting Wednesday, May 5th and continue through the entire month.

In his new menu, executive chef John Eisenhart takes advantage of the abundance of spring ingredients now hitting the market.

New dinner items include:

  • Tortelli with English peas and lemon
  • Black pepper tagliatelle with speck, fava beans and Pecorino Toscano
  • English pea agnolotti with Dungeness crab and fines herbes
  • Lamb shank with couscous, asparagus and Parmigiano Reggiano
  • Northwest halibut with black barley salad and lemon olive vinaigrette

Mother’s Day Brunch highlights include:

  • Brioche French toast with lemon curd and crème fraîche
  • Steelhead cakes with poached eggs and black pepper hollandaise
  • Florentine omelet with spinach, mushrooms, and goat cheese
  • Rotisserie chicken salad with hazelnuts and grapes
  • Quiche Lorraine with mesclun greens

Brunch Cocktails:

  • Blood orange bellini with Prosecco and blood orange purée
  • Nel Centro Bloody Mary with New Deal vodka and San Marzano tomatoes

Mother’s Day Brunch reservations are available by calling 503-484-1099.

Nel Centro is located in the heart of the downtown Portland at 1408 SW Sixth Avenue adjacent to Hotel Modera. Classic dishes of Northern Italy and Southeast France meet David Machado’s passion for culinary tradition and locally sourced, seasonal food. For more information and menu, please visit nelcentro.com.

Nel Centro

Bar manager Nathanial Stout has created an eponymous cocktail made with Nardini Acqua di Cedro, grapefruit bitters and Prosecco, served in a champagne flute.

 

Nel Centro

Tagliatelle

PORTLAND, OR – Pastaworks at Providore Fine Foods will open its Mediterranean-inspired Rotisserie on Wednesday, April 13th at 11:30 a.m. serving slow-roasted, free-range, antibiotic-free chickens rubbed with lemon and rosemary oil. The menu includes options from whole bird to a quarter bird with or without sides, which include the Arrosto Potatoes, Arrosto Salad and a slab of Pastaworks’ focaccia. Prices range from $10-27, and meals can be ordered at the convenient walk-up window facing Providore’s parking lot on the west side of the building. Dining is take-out or available to eat at inside or outside tables. Wine, beer and non-alcoholic beverages are also available for purchase. The window’s regular hours will be from 11:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday.

“My husband Kevin de Garmo and I have long been obsessed with the rotisserie chickens we devoured on our travels along Italy’s Ligurian coast,” said Kaie Wellman, co-owner of Providore Fine Foods and Pastaworks. “When we first saw the building that’s become Providore, we knew we finally had the right space to open the rotisserie.”

Arrosto Menu:

Chickens (free-range, antibiotic-free, rubbed with lemon and rosemary oil)

  • Whole Bird plus all sides $28 without sides $20
  • Half Bird (breast, wing, thigh and leg) plus all sides $18, without sides $14
  • Quarter Bird (one breast wing, one thigh or leg) with sides $12, without sides $8

Sides (a la carte)

  • Arrosto Salad – baby arugula, escarole and radicchio with shaved pecorino romano, herb crumbs and a lemon anchovy vinaigrette. Small $4, Large $10
  • Arrosto Potatoes – potatoes roasted in chicken drippings. Small $2.50, Large $8
  • Pastaworks’ Focaccia – popular housemade focaccia with sea salt and rosemary. Eight slab $2.50, Quarter slab $4

About Providore Fine Foods

Hand-crafted pasta, briny oysters, grass-fed meat, small-farm produce and buttery croissants are just a few of the delicious edibles to be found at Providore Fine Foods, a European-style specialty market in Portland, Oregon, from the owners of Pastaworks. As the new flagship location for the 33-year old Pastaworks, Providore Fine Foods has gathered a group of Portland’s finest food purveyors to share the 5,000-square foot building once home to an automobile showroom.  The new marketplace brings local, regional and international culinary provisions under one roof, including pasta, cheese, prepared foods, dried goods, chocolates and candy, wine, beer, and non-alcoholic beverages at Pastaworks, roast chickens at Arrosto, local, sustainable seafood and meat from Flying Fish Company + Oyster Bar and The Meat Monger, unique local produce at Rubinette Produce, innovative breads and pastries at Little T Baker, and botanical floras at Emerald Petals.

Providore Fine Foods is located at 2340 NE Sandy Boulevard, Portland, OR 97232. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. daily. Follow us on InstagramTwitter, and Facebook. For more information, menus, classes and tastings, please visit www.providorefinefoods.com.

City Market NW is the sister location for Providore Fine Foods and is located at 735 NW 21st Avenue, Portland, OR 97209. For more information and hours, please visit the website.

 

Arrosto

The entrance to Feast@316.
by Seth Sjostrom

Feast. Bolstered by the success of Harvest, Chef Tim McCusker opened his second Camas-based restaurant – Feast@316. Launching on New Year’s Eve with a sold-out dining room, Feast@316 is a steak and seafood house designed to be as open and family friendly as the community it calls home.
 
 “I always want my restaurants to be accessible. Really good food, made from scratch at prices a family can afford,” Chef McCusker explains.
He and his team really do go to great lengths to deliver a high-end culinary experience. A visit to his stockroom revealed a solitary can on otherwise bare shelves. Sourcing as much as he can from local ranches and farms, even the pasta they use is made local and delivered fresh.
 
Most elements of a dish served at Feast@316 come from the toils of Chef McCusker and his team of fine chefs. An elegant, creative dining experience, with a touch of mad food-science whimsy is always expected on a Chef McCusker menu.
 
Chef brings his experience from kitchens across Europe, the Mediterranean and New Orleans to Southwest Washington. Surprisingly, Chef McCusker dials in Pacific fresh cuisine adeptly as well. “I always encourage my chefs, and the restaurants I consult with, to draw from their community. What food is naturally sourced there, what are the flavors of that region and then apply your personal touches to it.”
 
He approaches restaurant design much in the same way. Feast@316 and its family-friendly design echoes Camas’ spirit and rich history. Relic machine parts once part of the paper mill which center to the town’s history are displayed on the walls.  Offsetting each piece of historic industry is richly painted period art by local artist Omar Pleitez.
 
Feast@316 diners enjoy the 16 oz. Cowboy Cut Rib-eye and the
Monkey Glad Hanger Steak.
Recognizable elements from other town fixtures like the Liberty Theater, Lutz Hardware and Camas Bike and Sport have been mixed in to the décor as well. The bar, which offers craft cocktails, sits in view of the open kitchen Feast’s dishes are created in.
 
“I wanted to bring something in that Camas did already have – a steak and seafood house where people come in and feel at home. I wanted the restaurant to be a part of the community,” Chef McCusker says.
 
Bill Kolacek, the General Manager of Harvest and Feast@316 weighs in, “We have worked hard to create Feast as upscale, yet not uptight.”
 
From the Happy Hour menu: Black and Bleu Grinder. This is delicious,
with blackened steak, peppers, onions, topped with house bleu fondue.
Chef McCusker grins, “It is arrogant to think you have to go to the city…like Portland… for fun, exciting food. You can have it right here in the suburbs.”
 
Of the ambiance of Feast, Chef adds, “Here you can share a plate. Enjoy the kitchen. Enjoy being with us and your neighbors.”
 
The success of Harvest and the launch of Feast@316 adds to a long list of culinary accomplishments Chef McCusker pins to his resume. The award-winning chef is most known for his restaurant consulting business, The Rustic Palate. Chef has created menus and designed kitchens and concepts for over 68 restaurants in the last 5 years alone.
 


When asked what’s next, Chef McCusker laughs, “Well, I’m exhausted. Oh yeah… and I’m creating my first cookbook.”
To experience the latest from Chef Tim McCusker, visit Feast@316 in downtown Camas, 316 NE Dallas Street.

 by Seth Sjostrom

OK, so those that know Chef Tim McCusker realize this is no Cinderella story. Though facing a three-time champion in Chef Peter Echeverio would be a daunting task for anyone. If you have the pleasure to know either of these gentlemen, then you understand that both are accomplished chefs, but moreover, both are wonderful people in our community.

 

Taste of Camas
Camas Iron Chef Judge’s Choice winner — made by Team McCusker.

 

Taste of Camas
Team Echeverio’s primary dish. His team won the People’s Choice.

The annual event supports the Camas Education Foundation – a group dedicated to enhancing the lives of all students in the Camas School District. Run completely by volunteers, the group is closing in on one million dollars in grants funded for innovation throughout Camas schools over the past fifteen years.

Chef Peter Echeverio, husband of Camas School Teacher Heidi Echeverio at Helen Baller Elementary, has held the title of Camas Iron Chef three times. With the clock ticking away constantly behind you, a talented opponent on the other side of the kitchen and a new crew each year, knocking down an Iron Chef hat-trick was no easy task to be sure.

This year, the culinary challenger was Chef Tim McCusker, owner of Harvest Restaurant in historic downtown Camas. A self-described gastronomic mad scientist, McCusker is known for creativity and flat-out ingenuity in the kitchen. Teamed with Helen Baller Principal Aaron Parman (that’s right, Heidi Echverio’s school), community member Karen Kennedy and Camas High student Rachel Greene, McCusker rarely seemed rattled in this battle of cuisine.

Echeverio’s team, Dorothy Fox Elementary principal Cathy Sork, community member June Greene (the makings of a Greene family feud) and Hayes Freedom High School student Scott Lakey were equally unflappable. Chef Echeverio’s calm was ever present as he paused frequently to speak to the crowd, discussing the ingredients and his methods throughout preparation.

 

 
Taste of Camas
Dessert from Team McCusker. Delicious!

 

This year, a few curve balls were thrown at the venerable contenders. The first, was including a separate dish for the People’s Choice Awards. Fifty lucky participants would get to enjoy a sample of the chefs’ handiwork and cast their assessment in this new category. Secondly, an optional “secret ingredient” was sprung on the kitchen crews. Assorted flavors of Sparkling Ice by Talking Rain was chilling in a bucket of ice. Then, the big moment. The main ingredient – Black Truffle Coppa (dry cured cappicola – a type of artisan Italian ham) courtesy of The Beautiful Pig.

The timer was set and the teams dashed into action, filling skillets and buckets full of the required ingredients and accoutrements. The chefs pulled their teams in close and began mapping out their meals and assignments. The light hearted chiding began almost as quickly as the cooking did. Chef Tim and Chef Peter enjoyed the day offering their assistance to one another’s team, slapping a “bathroom this way” sign pointing towards a team’s kitchen and suggesting the other had supplied the secret ingredient itself. As an observer, it was obvious each chef’s talent and experience afforded them a level of calm and confidence that prevailed all of the way to the one minute warning which came with both teams comfortably finished with their platings.

Chef Echeverio employed expert techniques with his dishes, injecting solid flavor across his meal. Even walking past his station, you were greeted with aromas that instantly whet your appetite. He noted he had his own secret ingredient – locally owned Choffy, a roasted and ground cocoa bean. This rich, pure ground chocolate was rolled into his herbed cheese roll and looked as delicious as it tasted.

In the other kitchen, Chef McCusker was full swing into his mad-cap science kitchen genius using a fire extinguisher to instant-chill a batch of homemade ice cream. Yes kids, this does work, just make sure you use a spare fire extinguisher. McCusker’s team seemed as surprised as the audience with the dramatic technique but went quickly to work to complete the concoction, wafts of carbon-dioxide smoke pluming in the air.

Mayors Scott Higgins and Sean Guard were on hand with Karen Lasher (who started the CEF-sponsored Iron Chef competition four years ago) to judge the proceedings. But before they were afforded their taste buds and voices, it was the People’s Choice Award. Chef Echeverio presented a coconut rice and chicken with fingerling potato. The flavors were perfectly orchestrated throughout the dish and were a big hit with the crowd.

Chef McCusker’s fire extinguisher turned kitchen appliance coconut/pineapple ice cream (including bonus ingredient Sparkling Ice) was dished out over a sweet savory capicola and peach relish. When the results came in, Echverio’s flavor ousted McCusker’s ingenuity by one single vote. Scoreboard: People’s Choice Award goes to Chef Ecehverio and team.

The main event began with the challenger’s presentation. “I was excited to see the secret ingredient. It is a great protein,” McCusker admitted. Thin slices of Coppa were seared under pressure of a ladle to form little ham cups. Adding bacon, balsamic vinegar, blue cheese to spiced candy pecans finished with a Dijon sauce, Chef McCusker conducted his team to strike a flavorful balance. Using Sockeye Salmon as a secondary protein, chef included a salad made of shredded apple, Navidi’s Jalapeno Salt, cucumbers and red peppers. Knocking the flavor out of the park, McCusker added a vinaigrette made from Strawberry Sparkling Ice whisked with sugar, pepper, salt, honey, oil and vinegar. Hungry yet? We aren’t done.

Next up, reigning champion Echeverio’s squad. Chef Echeverio shared his modus operandi, “I came in with a basic meal pre-planned, hoping to accommodate a variety of proteins with the secret ingredient in mind.” Veering from the expected, Echeverio’s team focused the judged meals on an opening appetizer and a dessert. The “Camas Board Appetizer” was the primary usage of the main ingredient. Show cases a wide variety of flavors that were selected to create taste bud harmony, the coppa was served with a Choffy and herb cheese log and beautifully display of seasoned veggies. For the capper, a Choffy Chocolate Mousse with raspberries was served alongside a Sparkling Ice Bellini with blended raspberries and peaches.

When the judge’s votes were tallied, only one of these great chef’s and their teams could wear the crown…err…apron. A Taste of Camas shocker, Chef Echeverio’s reign came to an end, only moments after winning the People’s Choice. Chef McCusker used all of his years of experience, globetrotting and culinary genius to command a convincing win.

If you have ever met either Chef McCusker or Chef Echeverio or enjoyed a meal prepared by either, then you would know that this day had all winners and no losers. Just two great chefs, great men with dutiful teams, giving back to the community and the schools in the Camas School District.

“It’s always been such a great event,” shares Chef Echeverio. “Both teams did great. I really liked the family and kids oriented activities this year. I hope to see the event expand on that next year.”

Chef McCusker was equally charmed by the Taste of Camas Iron Chef event — “It was a great show – exciting, tense, fun. I had a great team to work with. I think they lied to me. They each claimed to not be very experienced, but they worked the kitchen with great knowledge, even knocking the dishes out before time ran out.”

As for the fire extinguisher ice cream, “Yeah, I love that. The thing is, with some old extinguishers, they weren’t grounded very well. You get a little shock when you discharge them. Principal Parman took it very well.” He added, “I was honored. I can’t wait until next year.”

I couldn’t agree more, I have my fork ready.

Congratulations Chef McCusker and Chef Echeverio. Great job Camas Educational Foundation.

Three-time Iron Chef Peter Echeverio is chef at New Season’s Market in Fisher’s Landing in Vancouver.

Iron Chef Tim McCusker is the owner and executive chef at Harvest Restaurant, 401 NE 4th St., Camas WA 98671, 360-210-4037, therusticpalate@gmail.com.