Difference between revisions of "Portland, OR"

From GoonsWithSpoons
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 58: Line 58:
  
 
==Thai/Laotian==
 
==Thai/Laotian==
 +
 +
==Vietnamese==
 +
 +
* [http://www.yelp.com/biz/jade-bistro-teahouse-and-patisserie-portland| '''Jade Teahouse''']
 +
** '''Location:''' Selwood
 +
** '''Dish you recommend:''' Stir-fried eggplant, salad rolls.
 +
** '''Comments:''' The prices are also ridiculously low for the quality of the food you’re getting here. Lots of southeast Asian dishes at an incredibly low price.
 +
** '''Price range:''' Low ($5-14)
  
 
==Vegetarian==
 
==Vegetarian==
  
 
Eateries that pride themselves on being totally or at least mostly vegetarian focused go here. While many Indian places could fit as well they should stay in Indian.
 
Eateries that pride themselves on being totally or at least mostly vegetarian focused go here. While many Indian places could fit as well they should stay in Indian.

Revision as of 02:36, 17 November 2011


Portland, OR When most people think of Portland, images of rain, hipsters, and bicycles, the city has actually become quite a food mecca. With over 650 active food trucks in the city limits, a plethora of specialized restaurants, and a major focus on farm to table/sourcing locally, Portland is one of the largest food-tourism destinations in the country. In fact, tourists spend more money on food than any other activity.[1] This coupled with the fact that you can get incredibly high quality meals for quite a low price means that we are serving up a serious amount of grub.

Portland has this odd thing where people really try and one up one another by creating something ultra specialized that you probably have never heard of (it’s a part of the hipster culture, right)? The beautiful thing about this is that most of these creations are absolutely fantastic and don’t completely bomb. Fortunately you can get quite high-end meals for not that high-end of a price. In fact, even the highest end restaurants will set you back under $80/person with alcohol. There is a lot of great food to be had in the low-mid range, though.

Contributors residing here:

General

Breakfast

Burgers and Fries

Chinese

Dim Sum

Desserts/Bakeries

European

Food Carts

Portlandfoodcarts.png

The city is home to over 650 food carts. This number was rapidly growing for quite awhile, but eventually slowed and has hovered at this number for about a year now. Carts offer delicious, gourmet meals at a substantially lower price than restaurants due to reduced operating costs. The problem is that food carts often close or change locations, so finding them can be a bit of a pain. Here are a few of mattdev's personal recommendations.

Greek

Indian

Italian/Pizza

Mexican and Central/South American

  • Santa Cruz
    • Location: St. Johns
    • Dish you recommend: Chicken burrito, fish taco, lengua, carnitas, anything really.
    • Comments: This place is probably the best Mexican food I’ve had outside of Mexico. Prices are absolutely ridiculous for the quantity of food that you get. $4 for a football sized burrito? Hell yes!
    • Price range: Low ($5-14)

Middle Eastern

Thai/Laotian

Vietnamese

  • Jade Teahouse
    • Location: Selwood
    • Dish you recommend: Stir-fried eggplant, salad rolls.
    • Comments: The prices are also ridiculously low for the quality of the food you’re getting here. Lots of southeast Asian dishes at an incredibly low price.
    • Price range: Low ($5-14)

Vegetarian

Eateries that pride themselves on being totally or at least mostly vegetarian focused go here. While many Indian places could fit as well they should stay in Indian.