Kirk and Cathy get a day off today as Ed wants to talk about his and Tina’s first and last meals in Portland.
On our trip, we flew into Portland and out of Portland, but the lion’s share of our visit was spent on the road going to Central Oregon, Southern Oregon, and the Oregon coast. After we flew in and before we flew out, we had the same problem, we wanted to eat somewhere close to our motel and to PDX.
Mekong Bistro:
The area along 82nd Ave. in East Portland is a treasure trove of small restaurants of various ethnicities. Intrigued by the thought of Cambodian food, we found the Mekong just off 82nd:
The restaurant was a large space with an inviting bar, though not very busy on this Monday night:
The menu was huge, a whole page of happy hour specials, and several pages of Cambodian, Lao, Thai, and Vietnamese choices. Of course, we wanted to focus on the Cambodian, but first, to take the edge off our appetites, we ordered chicken wings off the happy hour specials:
A real winner. Fresh from the fryer, crust perfectly crunchy, meat tender, moist, and flavorful. Though almost too hot to handle, we couldn’t stop ourselves from munching away. The dipping sauce was meh, mostly sweet, but nothing could detract from the wings themselves.
Our first bowl of Cambodian soup was sour pork and watercress:
Okay, that’s a pretty lousy picture; this’ll give you a better idea of what was in the soup:
The rich broth had a complex sour profile and the pork and watercress were well cooked, but not overcooked.
The sweet and sour fish soup had different flavors:
This photo shows many of the ingredients:
Bean sprouts, greens, squash, pineapple, and perfectly cooked excellent quality fish. The fish had no off or muddy flavors, tasted very fresh, and had been lightly grilled or fried so that the pieces of the filet stayed together. Really excellent.
The soups had come with a small bowl of ordinary rice, and the bill – gotta love no sales tax in Oregon – was quite reasonable:
Our friendly waitress, who was Lao, explained that the bistro is owned by a Cambodian/Lao couple, which helps explain the wide range of menu items. I would happily go back and wish I had an opportunity to work through more of the menu.
Mekong Bistro, 8200 NE Siskiyou, Portland, OR 97220; (503) 265-8972.
Dar Salam
Looking for our last Portland meal, Tina found Dar Salam, pointed out it had good ratings and that we hadn’t had Middle Eastern food anywhere on the trip. Sounded good to me and the restaurant looked inviting that morning in a modest neighborhood on NE Alberta:
We were early, no doubt the first customers of the day, and were both impressed by the pictures and memorabilia of Iraq that covered two walls of the restaurant:
Looking at the photos closest to us, you can see a wide range of vistas and individuals in Iraq. So many of the images seem to have a personal meaning and there was a poignancy just looking at the decor. It reminded me that exile from one’s friends, family, and native land is often very sad. Americans picture Iraq the way we see it on TV, full of violence, dust, rubble, and chaos. It wasn’t always like that:
Tina and I each ordered a soup. Her chickpea and onion soup (leblebi) was wonderful and healthy, flavors brightened by lemon juice:
I had the adis, an extremely smooth soup based on red lentils spiced with garlic and zatar:
Both soups were outstanding.
A large warm pita bread arrived next:
The joys of fresh Middle Eastern flatbreads. I pity those poor people (like us in Yuma) buying their pita bread in Kroger’s or Albertson’s. The bread came with a small bowl of all of olive oil and zatar:
Truth be told, neither Tina nor I used much of the flavored oil because the mezza plate showed up:
We loved it. The tzatziki was fresh and tangy. The hummus smooth and perfectly flavored. The baba ghanouj was perfect, extremely smoky and extremely flavorful. Good enough for a close-up:
The falafel was crunchy, rustic, and flavorful:
Overall the meal was as good as I could imagine. A perfect expression of Iraqi cuisine. Everything is prepared from scratch by the owner and his mother, truly prepared with love. I wish I could return and explore the whole menu.
And the bill was downright cheap:
Dar Salam, 2921 NE Alberta St., Portland, OR 97211, (503) 206 – 6148.
Your post makes me want to revisit Portland! We went back in '12 and really liked the diverse restaurants out on 82nd in the SE Quadrant (especially Ha & VL, a Vietnamese restaurant that rotates what type of soup they serve on a daily basis). Great meal prices too and no sales tax is nice!
Posted by: caninecologne | Tuesday, 18 July 2017 at 07:48 PM
There's a range of choices in PDX, from food carts (which Dar Salam once was) to high end. VL was on our radar; don't remember why we misses it.
Posted by: Ed (from Yuma) | Tuesday, 18 July 2017 at 08:04 PM
Great looking chicken wings! I like how Dar Salam is decorated.
Posted by: Soo @ hungryones | Wednesday, 19 July 2017 at 10:24 AM
Soo, I liked the decorations too. Above the bar there was a sign "Baghdad....Portland".
Posted by: Tina | Wednesday, 19 July 2017 at 12:06 PM