September 2021

As much as I long for New York bagels and pizza, the same can be said for Portland’s pre-pandemic restaurant scene. Sure we were once considered the restaurant city of the year (2018) when Bon Appetite’s bestowal proclaimed us as the best small town/city for dining in the nation. Yet post pandemic it’s a mixed bag of regrettable losses (Drifter’s Wife, Piccolo, et al) tempered by merely a few denizens of the exotic lacquered worlds of food and dining. Some of the new ones are not up to snuff and others go relatively unnoticed for a variety of reasons (Knotted Apron and Broken Arrow are examples). My advice: If you’re planning on opening a restaurant check all the boxes before asking diners to spend $100 for a mediocre meal. Of course we want to support the local economy, and perhaps no other industry has had a tougher time than restaurants. But, hey, if you’re offering more than diner food (which I love), it behooves chefs to do it extremely well. That goes for the dining space environment, too. The space has to be Covid preventive (spacing and masks and proof of vaccination ) and beyond all comfortable and pleasing to the eye.

Basically, Portland dining is not what is was when it offered so much variety and quality to choose from. When I go out to eat it’s to the same old places because few others beckon as though the proverbial come-hither finger is limp. All understandable from closures, limited indoor seating and hard to get reservations. If it weren’t for outdoor dining options, I’d be sitting at home tinkering with the next chicken thigh recipe. And while take-out is the live-saver for restaurants, tepid take-home food is never as good when it lands on your kitchen counter.

Perhaps it’s my limited time dining out these days: My discretionary income isn’t what it once, and I limit myself to dining establishments in which I feel comfortable. That’s defined by good spacing between tables or good opportunities for outdoor dining and good air filtration systems inside, that sort of thing. The places that I miss the most regardless of pandemic losses, are Five Fifty-Five in its heyday or Caiola’s for its irreverence and delicious food. That and the ability to sit at the bar for dinner -at many places-was always a treat and a preference. With Chaval the replacement mainstay in the West End and a treat to go to, its indoor dining options are still limited with mostly the patio (the prettiest in town) and sidewalk dining on the ticket. Their bar was the best one in town besides Fore Street.

As for post Pandemic dining, are we really “post?” See this remembrance.

The bar flanked by dining room

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I went there this past Friday because I read a Facebook post that this was going to be its last weekend. It has been one of my favorite places in Portland to enjoy not only great food-truck fare (courtesy of star chef Matt Ginn of EVO fame) but the view had been fantastic last year. I noticed this at my first visit of the season several months ago when the food truck marina was not up to its past scenic glories that it had in its first year. The bar area had been moved down a bit, the dining bar shelf that ran along the water’s edge was gone, and the bar still hadn’t been constructed yet.

The problem was that the city mandated that all structures at the site couldn’t be movable, that they had to be constructed in a less permanent nature and it took a long time to get the city staff to coordinate its rulings because of pandemic absenteeism at City Hall.

Here is my story from last year when the marina bar opened. See link

This was the scene at the newly opened EVO X food truck marina in June of 2020

The marina and its patrons and food from scenes in June of 2020

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