AltWeeklies Wire

Drip City: Everything Old is New Again in Portland's Coffee Scenenew

The history of coffee in Portland is one of constant, obsessive refinement, of obtaining better beans and pulling better shots. Staying on the jittery edge of the culture requires constant attention. Which is what we've been doing over the past several weeks. And what have we found?
Willamette Week  |  Ben Waterhouse, Ruth Brown  |  04-06-2011  |  Food+Drink

Portland's Best Bars, Pubs and Clubsnew

Willamette Week's Drink Guide.
Willamette Week  |  Staff  |  01-26-2011  |  Recreation

Geeky Micro-Roasters Help Portland’s Coffee Industry Grow Upnew

Coffee roasting is a post-adolescent profession that has defined its responsibilities to farmers and consumers as serious ones, but is unwilling to give up the rough ethic of fun that attracted its practitioners to coffee culture to begin with.
Willamette Week  |  Hanna Neuschwander  |  04-07-2010  |  Food+Drink

50 Ways to Please Your Lover This Valentine's Daynew

We asked a wide swath of Portlanders, both well known and obscure, how they make their loved ones happy, and their answers were far better than we’d ever imagined. And so, we proudly present, 50 ways to please your lover.
Willamette Week  |  Willamette Week Staff  |  02-10-2010  |  Culture

Goats are the New Chickens, Plus Other Must-Know Trends and People for 2010new

We’re undaunted by the challenge of trying to predict who and what is likely to pop around these parts next year. In fact, we embrace it as close as a fifth of Jack at 11:59 pm on Dec. 31. Check out our 14 people and trends you must know when the new decade begins.
Willamette Week  |  Editorial Staff  |  12-30-2009  |  Commentary

Can Portland's Food Cart Boom Continue Through the Coming Winter?new

So far Portland eaters have been able to sustain the crowded mobile food community. But can it last? With winter on the way, the question remains if all 91 new carts opened this year will survive a saturated market and cold months.
The Portland Mercury  |  Patrick Alan Coleman  |  11-13-2009  |  Food+Drink

Upstart Portland Bike Builders Reinvent a Craft -- And Will Soon Race Their Old Heronew

When Mark DiNucci quit building in 1985, he and friends say he was the only person in Portland who built bikes one at a time by hand. Now there are at least 30 Portlanders crafting bikes like DiNucci did, almost all of them opening up shop in the last decade.
The Portland Mercury  |  Sarah Mirk  |  10-02-2009  |  Sports

CouchSurfing International Offers Sofa Safe Havensnew

CouchSurfing.org is a networking forum that helps cushion the experience of finding places to stay for next to nothing. And Portland is one of the most active U.S. cities on the site, as members are drawn from all over the world to experience the friendly City of Roses.
Willamette Week  |  Caitlin McCarthy  |  08-05-2009  |  Travel

Food Service! 24 Hours Inside an Industry That Never Sleepsnew

From the front of house, to the back of house, we've crammed ourselves into Portland's sharp, hot kitchens to get the stories of those who make it happen; the ones who "hate people a little less," the ones who keep Portland drunk and fed. We should have bought them all a beer. I bet they'd settle for a generous tip.
The Portland Mercury  |  Staff  |  07-02-2009  |  Food+Drink

My Brief Encounter with Portland's Swinger Communitynew

I find myself at the front door of a modest-sized home on a unseasonably warm night in late May, notebook in hand, ready to attend my first swinger party. After a knock, a cordial middle-aged couple who host about one party a month, open the front door and greet me. She is wearing a green visor with the phrase "Penis-Centric" written across the brim.
The Portland Mercury  |  Matthew Vollono  |  06-19-2009  |  Culture

Boozing Through the Ages: An Inebriated 'History' of Drinking in Portlandnew

Sure, we can drink. We can drink like champions. But that doesn't make us special. People have been drinking in Portland since it was little more than a hardscrabble tent town cut from the banks of the Willamette.
The Portland Mercury  |  Patrick Alan Coleman  |  01-22-2009  |  Food+Drink

'Apollo': Two-Thirds Awe, One-Third Annoyancenew

Apollo, Nancy Keystone's three-part epic play about Nazi scientists, NASA and the civil-rights movement, premiered last Friday at Portland Center Stage after eight years of development.
Willamette Week  |  Ben Waterhouse  |  01-21-2009  |  Theater

America's Favorite Vegan Cookbook Writer Now Calls Portland Homenew

Isa Chandra Moskowitz's recipes have been a part of vegan potlucks since her first cookbook, 2005's Vegan with a Vengeance. She shares a little about her upcoming book as well as recipes for Quinoa Salad with Black Beans, Pasta Della California and Banana Rabanada.
The Portland Mercury  |  Patrick Alan Coleman  |  06-27-2008  |  Food+Drink

Did Hannah Bea's Close Because of Gentrification?new

When the restaurant does shut down, owner Anita Smith will owe taxpayers $143,000. But don't expect contrition from Smith; she's far too angry at the Portland Development Commission and gentrification for the uncertainty she says is driving the closure.
Willamette Week  |  Beth Slovic  |  06-25-2008  |  Food+Drink

Two Portland Bakeries Say No Eggs, No Gluten, No Problemnew

Bread ain't just bread anymore -- especially if you're part of the city's growing legion of vegans or gluten-intolerant.
Willamette Week  |  Deeda Schroeder  |  06-11-2008  |  Food+Drink

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