There is a window on SE Hawthorne that sells waffles. It is called the Waffle Window. I guess the name of your restaurant doesn't really matter when this magnitude of deliciousness is on the menu. This is the Three B's waffle that Christopher ordered and I sampled. Repeatedly. Or maybe I ate about half of it. Brie, Bacon and Basil. I think that is orange marmalade on the side. Whatever it was, it was awesome.
Chicken and Waffles at Screen Door has some serious competition. Although C&W can take all comers when it comes to sheer massiveness.
In other news: I'm moving into an old bungalow in South East down by Reed college next Monday, and I can't wait! Living in a tiny NW studio with a kitchenette (a generous term in this case) was killing me. The new place has a gas range and teal 50's fridge. I will be taking merciless advantage of both. Posts of experiments and concoctions from my new digs coming soon.
Thanks for reading!
Rose City Food Blog
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Saturday, November 20, 2010
First post
I am from Texas, I am a Texan. As far as I have moved from my hometown of Houston (1834 miles to be exact), I still consider myself a Texan. Somehow I found my way up to Oregon for college and have moved even farther north to find myself in Portland -- living among people that my grandmother still considers Yankees.
When friends discover my roots, the first question after "why don't you have an accent?" is "why did you come to Oregon?" as if I am crazy, that there is nothing here worth discovering and I should turn back now before I discover that the river is too deep to ford and Sue has died of dysentery.
I have given a lot of consideration to that question, since I have never been able to offer a very good answer. Maybe mountains are in my blood. My father is from rural northern Montana and he has to go back every several years to reset. Maybe I wanted a fresh start and to set out on my own, to get a piece of that Western expansion that seems so American and exciting. Either way I'm really not sure how I got here, but I know why I stayed. I stayed for the food.
Since moving here I have tried things that I was never exposed to in Texas. Beets that weren't from a can, Marion berries, Salmon Jerky. And fruits that I had always loved were taken to a new level when purchased on a whim from a fruit stand on the side of the road: cherries, apples, peaches, berries.
As the season of feasts is upon us, and food is raised to the center of everything, I feel that it is an appropriate time to start this blog, and it seems only right that I should start by returning to the Bayou city to visit my parents for Thanksgiving.
Thanks for reading!
When friends discover my roots, the first question after "why don't you have an accent?" is "why did you come to Oregon?" as if I am crazy, that there is nothing here worth discovering and I should turn back now before I discover that the river is too deep to ford and Sue has died of dysentery.
I have given a lot of consideration to that question, since I have never been able to offer a very good answer. Maybe mountains are in my blood. My father is from rural northern Montana and he has to go back every several years to reset. Maybe I wanted a fresh start and to set out on my own, to get a piece of that Western expansion that seems so American and exciting. Either way I'm really not sure how I got here, but I know why I stayed. I stayed for the food.
Since moving here I have tried things that I was never exposed to in Texas. Beets that weren't from a can, Marion berries, Salmon Jerky. And fruits that I had always loved were taken to a new level when purchased on a whim from a fruit stand on the side of the road: cherries, apples, peaches, berries.
As the season of feasts is upon us, and food is raised to the center of everything, I feel that it is an appropriate time to start this blog, and it seems only right that I should start by returning to the Bayou city to visit my parents for Thanksgiving.
Thanks for reading!
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