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It’s difficult to come up with a list of the best things you ate if you haven’t been taking notes at every meal, but this is what I remember really enjoying in 2014 . . .

Pork Chops aren’t your typical Argentinian steakhouse fare, but the ones at Ox are perfectly brined, crisp around the edges and have just enough smokiness from the grill. Their clam chowder, and Argentinan steaks are delicious as well.

Bacon bleu cheese tots at Providence Park. Tater tots with bacon, bleu cheese, onions, tomatos are good, but eating them with a next to you, surrounded by the Timbers Army, all while watching your favorite team in their first home game of the season tastes pretty good.

On the tiny Island of Providencia off the coast of Colombia, are a couple of beach shacks serving fresh seafood. There are only a few restaurants on the island, so the locals come by motorbike, ATV and  horseback to grab their lunch along side the few dozen tourists visiting the island.  The restaurants open for service about 30 minutes after the fisherman drag their boats on to the beach with that day’s catch. After having the beach all to ourselves in the morning, we walked up to El Divino Nino, grabbed a wobbly table in the sand and proceeded to eat fresh lobster, conch, black crab and fried fish all for a few dollars.plato mixto

Lang Baan was not only the best Thai food I had all year, it was probably the best restaurant meal I ate. 12 beautifully structured dishes served over nine courses in the backroom of a Thai restaurant hidden behind a bookcase and a meat grinder. All this for half the price of Roe.

Lang Baan gave us intricately composed Thai food from 300-year-old royal palace recipes. On the more casual end of the Thai spectrum, Marc and Brook threw some rice in a bowl and  covered it in green curry and it was good. Our friends have been spending years perfecting their coconut-based chicken curry. They travel all over Portland to find the ingredients and then spend hours putting it together in what may be a perfect one-bowl dish.  It didn’t hurt that we were there to watch the Timbers play on TV and they won 5-0.

In late November, we flew to Budapest to meet up with friends that are traveling around the world. On our first night in Budapest we stumbled across a night market. There were picnic tables and booths selling beer, grog and food. A band was off to one side covering American pop hits. We grabbed a table and sit down to our first meal together since our friends left Portland in March. We each picked out a food booth we want to try. I went for a cart that’s grilling non-recognizable meat and onions over a charcoal grill and stuffing the meat into folded flatbread. The flat bread was baked in a cast iron oven next to the grill. After stumbling through my order in English (my Maygar is not very good), I chose a goose meat sandwich with cheese and something like sour cream. The goose was rich and moist, the bread warm and fluffy. It may have been one of the messiest sandwiches I’ve ever eaten, but it taste really good enjoyed with friends under the dark cold Hungarian sky.

 

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I tried a new technique tonight for making hot chocolate. The best hot chocolate is done in a sauce pan with a stick blender, it comes out creamy, and frothy. However, most of the time breaking out a saucepan and waiting for the milk to heat up isn’t worth it, so we just stick a mug in the microwave. Microwaving  hot chocolate often  leaves bubbles of powder that never dissolve no matter how much you stir it.

When cooks are blending flour into a sauce, they always make a roux first or a slurry first. Roux and slurries blend flawlessly into hot liquids. So this inspired me to try making a slurry before heating the whole mixture up. It worked out great.

Place the powder mixture into a mug and add roughly  2/3s as much milk. So if you use three TB of cocoa, then use 2 TB of milk. Mix this into a thick paste, until it is evenly blended. Then fill up the rest of the mug and place it in the microwave. When its done, all you need is a quick stir and all the powder will dissolve evenly.

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After a year of exhaustive research, eating somewhere between two and four meals a day,  I can say I’m qualified to develop a list of 2014 food trends.

Burrata
It’s inexpensive to make, it’s stuffed, it’s creamy, it seems exotic. It has all the traits of being a huge hit. You can even bread it and deep-fry it. I expect this cream-filled mozzarella ball will show up on as many Italian menus as fried calamari. This last summer it started showing up as part of caprese salads, but chef’s will find a way to get more creative. Burgers? Deep fried burrata?

Korean
People have been talking about Korean food hitting main-stream America. But thanks to TV, every Iowan knows what a bulgoghi taco is. Next up, Korean dishes making it into non-Korean restaurants and or Korean restaurants making it into non-Korean neighborhoods. On the coasts you are starting to see dishes like bibimbap show up in top restaurants.

Popcorn
Not gourmet flavored popcorn, but popcorn as an ingredient. Popcorn goes great as a garnish on soups. It’s a versatile ingredient that can add texture, crunch or starch. In Ecuador and parts of Peru, it’s the traditional accompaniment to ceviche. Popcorn won’t be a s big as burrata this year, but it will start making more of a presence.

Micro-Specialists
Menus will continue to get shorter. More new restaurants will focus on a specific niche, instead of offering a variety from a given cuisine, chefs will specialize in just one dish, in three to four variations.

Vegetable Entrees
Vegetarian dishes aren’t anything new, but in most places, a non-meat entree is focused around pasta, bread or rice. 2014 will see the move toward vegetables treated like the focal point. Non-meat entrees won’t just be salads and starches.

Prices
People are back to work in the U.S., many are spending money again, tired of penny-pinching and willing to spend a bit more on food. Restaurants will add a 2nd , even a 3rd extravagant item to their menu. Consumers who restrained from luxury, except on special occasions will start to be a bit more open-walleted when it comes to date-night.

 

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