Eleni Touhouliotis

Eleni Touhouliotis (photo by Frank DiMarco)

Eleni is a delightful woman, but don’t let that fool you into thinking that she is not serious.  She is serious about her restaurants, serious about good health, and most importantly, serious about good food.  In fact, it’s not just about food — it’s about life. At her restaurants in Sellwood and in the Pearl, she prepares Cretian-style food with an abundance of olive oil, garlic and fresh vegetables. With a full array of traditional, delicious and healthy options, one can explore the menu, or simply ask for her favorite dish, a kalatsounia (spinach, fresh dill and green onions rolled inside a covering of philo dough). The Eleni’s restaurant website reminds us that the traditional Cretian diet, with its emphasis on fresh vegetables, olive oil and small amounts of meat, is the healthiest diet on Earth. Eleni eats this way at home, and luckily for us, now we can enjoy Eleni’s restaurants as she shares her healthy cooking heritage with us.

When Eleni Touhouliotis left the island of Crete in 1974 and embarked on her journey to the United States, she brought with her a Greek cookbook which had been authored by her cousin. Not only was Portland a new place — without the culture and family of home — Portland was missing a few other important things.  Let’s just say that our ability to find a tasty olive, or fresh flat bread has dramatically improved since the 1970’s. We don’t need to tell you that Portland has truly blossomed into a wonderful place to experience great food. Portland turned out to be the right place for her, she was embraced, and has stayed.

Eleni is known as a hard worker, and has worked in Portland restaurants since her arrival.  Throughout the years, she has served delicious, healthy Greek food in her home.  Finally, the right opportunity came along and she is now sharing the food of her home with all of Portland, sharing her appreciation for the experience of eating together, and sharing good health and strength in community.

Greek food in Portland is now better than ever since she opened Eleni’s in the Sellwood area six years ago (Eleni’s Estiatorio), and a second one, Eleni’s Philoxenia, at 112 NW Ninth Ave.

SAMPLE MENU SELECTIONS

OREKTIKA appetizers

Fasolia Kai Rizi – $9
Scarlet runner beans and black beans sautéed with a combination of three rices, green olives, peppers, onions, garlic and fresh mint.

Melitzanes Yemistes – $10
Grilled eggplant stuffed with roasted zucchini, peppers, onions and garlic.  Baked with feta cheese and a roasted tomato and red pepper purée.

Horta Me Skordo – $9
Raddichio, baby spinach and chard sautéed with roasted garlic, fresh chile and kasseri cheese, sprinkled with dill and fresh lemon.

Spanakotyropita – $9
Spinach and Greek cheeses wrapped in filo dough and baked until golden.

Garides Me Manitaria – $9
Tiger prawns sautéed with mushrooms, green onions, garlic, white wine, crowned with a pinch of kasseri cheese.

Soutzoukakia – $9
Cascade Natural beef meatballs seasoned with fresh herbs, garlic and onion, served in a roasted tomato and red pepper purée.

SALATES salads

Selino Salata – $10
Shaved celery root, gran apple, pistachios and chives in a spicy lemon vinaigrette.

Lahano Salata – $10
Thinly sliced cabbage, shaved fennel and toasted almonds, tossed with olive oil, fresh lemon juice and smoked paprika.

KYRIA PIATE main courses

Makaronia Me Lahanika – $12
Diced eggplant, seasonal mushrooms, peppers, squash, spinach, kale, olives, capers and garlic sautéed in olive oil, finished with fresh herbs and served over spaghetti.

Makaronia Me Kima – $12
Cascade Natural ground beef simmered with peppers, onions, tomatoes, zucchini and garlic.  Lightly spiced with cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg and served over spaghetti.

Moschari – $18
Braised Painted Hills beef prepared daily with nightly features.

www.elenisrestaurant.com

Eleni’s Philoxenia – Pearl District
112 NW 9th Avenue
Portland, OR 97209
tel:  503 227 2158

Eleni’s Estiatorio – Sellwood
7712 SE 13th Avenue
Portland, OR 97202
tel:  503 230 2165

Dinner Only
Tues – Sat / 5 – 10

• Full Bar
• Exceptional Greek Wine List
• Warm Atmosphere
• Daily Specials

 

Nostrana: Trip the Bite Fantastic

 

Cathy Whims started dancing in college. The dance type was jazz infused with modern dance and ballet. The school was Portland State University. This former Latin major gone dance major was smitten with the grace and performance of dance movement. Cathy remembers her last dance class – the focus was African American literature and dance. The goal was to study the story the literature told through the rhythm and syncopation of the writing.

Even as she embarked on a career as a restaurateur and a James Beard award-winning chef, she always maintained a foot in the dance world. Eventually, Cathy found herself a restaurateur and James Beard award-winning chef. Yet she always maintained a foot in the dance world. Today, Cathy dances, specifically hip hop.

Cathy pointed out that there are actually many parallels between dance and the nightly orchestration of a restaurant. This was a fascinating connection – one I had never pondered. “There is a rhythm in the movement of a kitchen and restaurant floor,” Cathy posed.

She continued explaining that the fluidity of one body moving around another, both in the kitchen and on the floor, is crucial. A well run restaurant, at the height of an evening, runs at top speed, like the pinnacle of a dance. It’s exciting and compelling, a time when required syncopation requests bodies to work around each other in a perfectly choreographed dance to greet and seat customers or deliver piping hot plates. It’s this feeling in the body where speed and control balance during self expression which addicts dancers and waiters alike.

As a dancer, one gets addicted to the feeling of speed and control of self-expression. Wait staff are addicted to being slammed, the busy-ness of a dinner rush, and keeping up on orders. When an evening is not syncopated, both dancers and waiters know the night is bound to go badly quickly. And like a dance performance, an evening at a restaurant is not fixed in posterity; each night requires a re-execution of an interactive dance where chefs and waiters perform while customers react.

Who knew dancers and waiters were kindred souls? And then, there’s the passion.

Cathy does everything passionately. As a dancer, she read through hundreds of books on dance at Powell’s, often until close. Nostrana has not been spared this dedication. As much as Cathy wants to read a novel, it is hard for her not to devote time to reading cooking literature – because there is always room to perfect, right? When you’re at the top of an artistic profession the pressure rises and you have to maintain form – a reminder to self of the passion that once lead to the chosen path, project or profession. As Cathy put it, when the alarm goes off, we all have to reinvigorate ourselves with something inspiring to keep us in the game.

I asked Cathy to choose a musical genre best depicting an evening at Nostrana. Her quick answer was “jazz,” improvisation within a structure which always changes and never repeats.

Cathy closed the interview with the statement, “All good dance art is pure,” which she likened to the food served at Nostrana.  Like good dance doesn’t require ornate costuming, nor does good food. Cathy takes pride in removing all the unnecessary fuss so the fresh ingredients speak. What one sees on the plate is integral, a showcase of only what is there, and what needs be there.

For Cathy, cooking is about keeping a dish true to its origins and ingredients. This approach is an unveiling and a stripping away. Paul Bertolli described the process “Cleaning the Fresco,” also the title of a chapter title in his book “Cooking By Hand” [2003]. In his words it means, “food grounded in a tradition yet enlivened by the act of greeting the process and the ingredients anew.” Boiled down, it means honoring yet advancing food traditions at once.

“It’s quite similar to modern dance and modern ballet,” states Cathy. With this comment she was, literally, off to a show.

Welcome, guests, to Teatro Nostrana. Please follow me to your seats. Tonight’s show? Insalata Mista, Squash Ravioli paired with a glass of Rosso di Montepulciano performed by Cathy Whims. Enjoy the performance.

Otto’s: Meat Nirvana

 

Ottos Sausage Kitchen has been making delicious hot dogs, sausages and meat products for over eighty years.  Currently in their fourth generation, the establishment is still family run by the grandson of the founder, Jerry Eichentopf, his wife Gretchen, and their daughters.  They continue to make wieners, sausages, pork links, pastrami, jerky and more in the same way that Jerry’s grandfather, Otto Eichentopf, did when he opened Otto’s in 1927.  At age 21, Otto immigrated from Germany. By age 31 he had settled in Portland and the next year Otto’s Meat Market was opened in the Woodstock neighborhood.  Otto had a son named Edwin who worked alongside his father as was customary in traditional German families. Edwin had Jerry who joined the business after high school.  Jerry says that not much has changed in the last century of sausage making.  Their grinder is the same one they’ve had for the past 70 years and the latest innovation came about 50 years ago and was the pump on the casing devise so that they no longer had to crank the sausage stuffer by hand.

As expected, they start with the best raw ingredients with beef and pork from Carlton Farms and add just seasonings – no fillers, gluten or additives of any kind. The meat is ground until it reaches a smooth consistency and then it is stuffed into the casing made of sheep intestines.  At this point, fresh sausages are ready to be sold and the others are ready to begin the smoking process.  The sausages are hung up on a big rack so that each and every part of the sausage open to the smoky air.

The Smoker
At this point the sausages are placed into the smokehouse for two hours.  The smokehouse at Otto’s is very special and is the same smokehouse that was built by Jerry’s grandfather, Otto, back in 1936.  It is sealed with a heavy black door and inside everything is coated with a dark black tar substance – the same substance that attaches to your lungs if you are a smoker.  There is a subterranean fire that comes up from below creating the smoke that makes the meat so delicious.  The fire is fueled by cured alder wood, which produces smoke that is easier on the eyes and convects a mild flavor in the meat.

After smoking for a couple of hours, the sausages are placed in a hot tub of water where the internal temperature of the meat raises to 160 degrees and becomes safe for human consumption. After the hot tub the sausages are placed into a cold tub of water for about 15 seconds at which point the process is complete.  The sausages will still be heated up on the grill so that they get the grill marks and reach a more desirable eating temperature.  These are the sausages that you can purchase at the grill located on the sidewalk outside of Otto’s.  They are sublime and a must for any meat fan!

Name: Otto’s Sausage Kitchen
Street: 4138 SE Woodstock Boulevard
City: Portland
State: OR
ZIP: 97202
Website: www.ottossausage.com
Phone: (503) 771-6714
Neighborhood: Woodstock
Quadrant: SE
Twitter:
Happy Hours:
Hours Open: Mon-Sat 9:30 AM - 6 PM and Sundays 11 AM - 5 PM
Chef:
Family Friendly (Y/N): Y
Patio (Y/N): Y
Private Dining (Y/N): N
Valet (Y/N): N
Lunch (Y/N): Y
Live Entertainment: N
Facebook:

Higgins Restaurant

Greg Higgins

Greg Higgins is a “salt of the earth” kind of guy.  He’s a guy’s guy who is comfortable in the quiet progress of preparing meals alongside his fellow kitchen mates.  He’s a burly dude and has been sporting a scruffy goatee perhaps influenced by his upstate NY roots and his love of ice hockey. Outside of the kitchen, Greg can be found in his garden or relaxing with his wife and dog.

Greg has had huge commercial and critical success but he’s done it in an authentic, sustainable way.  He was one of the first chefs to link the process of feeding his guests with community outreach to the local farmers and fishermen.  He could have easily licensed his name, opened up a chain of restaurants, expanded into other markets, released a bunch of books or become a Food Network star but that’s not Greg.  Greg is happiest in his garden or his kitchen.  Plus, he legit, he’s anti-waste, rides his bike to work, and would never be a part of any type of mass marketing.  He prefers to be a low impact human being.

Greg started working with food as a kid in the family garden and as a teenager at the local creamery in Eden, New York.  He studied art at Hartwick College but, like many students, worked at a restaurant in the evenings.  This was his first taste of cooking for public consumption and fueled his post college European excursion where he learned about food in Europe. Like fellow American chefs at that time, returning to the states after working in Europe meant the challenge of procuring the European level of food quality and selection. The United States, and especially Portland, was still at a time when a frozen piece of beef and a frozen lobster tail constituted fine dining. Greg picked Portland, as most chefs do, for the agriculture – specifically the grapes.  The Oregon wine industry was just starting but it was putting out wine that was on par with our friends in France.  Greg had to go out and find local farmers and suppliers for his new gig in Portland, which was to open up and start the Heathman.  After over a decade at the Heathman, Greg was ready to start Higgins with partner, Paul Mallory.  They opened in 1994 and are still going strong.  Greg won the James Beard award for our region in 2002 and is Portland’s version of Alice Waters.

We had the pleasure of standing in his kitchen on an early December day.  It was the middle of a shift change and there were about twenty kitchen staff milling about the open faced, galley kitchen.  The kitchen staff at Higgins is about as mellow and down to earth as Greg.  They wear hipster t-shirts promoting Steve’s Cheese and are not pretentious.  The menu was in holiday mode, just having finished Thanksgiving, they were focused on heavier, richer dishes that everyone will be shunning come January’s weigh in.

Watch, as Greg prepares a goose stock reduction for a smoked goose breast and confit salad.  He explains what he’s doing to prepare the reduction, tells us a bit about the geese and shares his Christmas plans.

Rich Meyer


Rich Meyer’s dedication to culinary art is exemplified not only through the exquisite flavor of his dishes but also through his personal history.  For the last 13 years Meyer has dedicated himself to Higgins Restaurant & Bar, where he now serves as Chef de Cuisine. He completed culinary training at the Western Culinary Institute and started his informal education as a boy catching and cooking seafood on the shores of New York. Meyer enjoys the “freedom of expression” encompassed in his career, working with cured meats and seafood, and shaping his creations to the ever-changing climate of the Northwest.

Community

Photo by Nick Hall

Greg is one of the founding board members of the Portland chapter of Chefs Collaborative.  Chef’s Collaborative is a network of chefs who are focused on the sustainable food system – educating and advocating sustainable practices.  Right now Chef’s Collaborative is focused on saving Bristol Bay in Alaska.  There’s talk of putting in one of the world’s largest open-pit mines in the very place where the salmon spawn.  If the mine opens then it will ruin up to 45 square acres of the most beautiful, tranquil and abundant places on earth.  In Portland, what we can do to help is barrage the government with emails and phone calls to let them know that we, the people, do not want this to happen. You can also support with donations that are used for education, outreach and lobbying efforts.

http://www.savebristolbay.org/

SAMPLE MENU SELECTIONS

STARTERS & SALADS

Black Mediterranean Mussels             $11.50
steamed in white wine and plum sauce with sesame crisps
Gratin of Hood Canal Oysters             $14.50
with hazelnut-smoked salmon in a red wine matelote
Bruschetta                                               $14.50
of forest mushroom and bean & herb purée with a walnut & red wine vinaigrette
Higgins Charcuterie Plate                    $13.75
with house-made pickles
Warm Marin Wash-rind Schloss Cheese           $12.50
with roasted fingerling potatoes and house-made pickles
Select Pacific Oysters                              $16.50
on the half shell with carrot-thai chili granite
Salad of Gathered Greens                       $7.25
toasted hazelnuts and herb vinaigrette

DINNER
Rigatoni Pasta                                            $19.50
with spicy fennel sausage, broccoli, garlic cream, and pecorino romano cheese
Oregon Dungeness Crab & Bay Shrimp Cakes                    $29.50
with basmati rice pilaf and saffron-ginger beurre blanc
“Whole Pig Plate”                                     $27.50
sausage, braised belly, ribs, rillons, and crepinette, with molasses baked beans, braised greens, and piccalilli
Cotriade of Coho Salmon            $27.50
manilla clams, and mussels, with leeks and poached fingerling potatoes
Magret & Confit of LIberty Duck          $36.50
with dried cherry and Kirschwasser glace, braised greens and spatzle
Risotto                                                        $23.50
of habanero-smoked oysters with leeks, celery root, chevre cheese, and a Meyer lemon vinaigrette

• Northwest Cuisine
• Full Bar / Bistro Menu
• Exceptional Wine List
• Exceptional Beer List
• Organic Dining
• Reservations Accepted
• Menu Changes Weekly