Portland's Having a Glow-Up: Haitian Heat, Thai Brisket Curry, and Why Everyone's Suddenly Obsessed cover art

Portland's Having a Glow-Up: Haitian Heat, Thai Brisket Curry, and Why Everyone's Suddenly Obsessed

Portland's Having a Glow-Up: Haitian Heat, Thai Brisket Curry, and Why Everyone's Suddenly Obsessed

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Food Scene Portland Portland’s plates are having a moment, and it smells like charcoal-grilled chanterelles, koji-aged fish, and really good coffee. In the Northwest, Portland has long been the scrappy sibling to bigger food cities, but the latest wave of openings is pushing it firmly into destination territory. At Kann, chef Gregory Gourdet channels Haitian flavors through the lens of Pacific Northwest seasonality, turning local carrots, brassicas, and Dungeness crab into dishes that glow with Scotch bonnet heat and smoky depth. Bon Appétit has repeatedly singled out Kann as one of the most exciting restaurants in the country, and listeners can taste why with the restaurant’s grilled griyo-style pork and plantains built on Oregon pasture-raised meat and regional produce. Portland’s love affair with fire continues at restaurants like Eem, where Thai barbecue meets Texas techniques and Willamette Valley vegetables. According to the Portland Mercury, Eem’s white curry with brisket has become a signature dish, rich with coconut, deeply perfumed, and anchored by slow-smoked beef that tastes like it came out of an Austin smokehouse, not a rainy Oregon city. That collision of cultures is very Portland: playful, a bit irreverent, and deadly serious about flavor. Newer tasting-menu spots and wine bars lean into hyperlocal sourcing. Restaurants such as Han Oak and its sibling ventures showcase Korean flavors filtered through Oregon’s larder, from hand-cut noodles in brothy, seaweed-driven soups to dumplings stuffed with local pork and seasonal greens. Local outlets like Eater Portland note that chefs across the city are spotlighting heritage grains from nearby mills, Pacific coast seafood, and foraged ingredients like morels, nettles, and wild berries, weaving them into everything from sourdough focaccia to delicate crudos. The city’s famous food carts are not sitting this renaissance out. Pod developments now cluster carts serving Lao, Venezuelan, and Filipino dishes next to natural-wine bars and micro-roaster coffee stands, creating open-air food halls where listeners might chase a blistered wood-fired pizza with halo-halo or smashburgers with tangy, local pickles. Culinary events such as Feast Portland and smaller chef-collab pop-ups give these talents room to experiment, often pairing local brewers, cider makers, and distillers with chefs who treat the region’s hops, grains, and fruit as an extended pantry. What makes Portland’s scene unique is this relaxed intensity: chefs obsess over provenance and technique, then serve it all in rooms where flannel shirts and tattoos outnumber jackets and ties. For food lovers, Portland is where serious cooking meets laid-back spirit, and every plate tells a story of rain-soaked soil, immigrant influence, and a city that never stops tinkering with what dinner can be. Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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