Cider & Charcuterie Pairing

After scoring a free ticket to the Cider & Charcuterie pairing, I decided to skip my workshop on making the perfect cheeseboard and attend this instead. As my friend and I waited patiently outside, I kept myself occupied with daydreams of fresh apple ciders and savory meats. Luckily I was not disappointed when the doors finally opened and we sat down in our seats. We were each given a plate with four different types of Prosciutto and over the course of the tasting, we were poured four various kinds of cider.

Prosciutto sampler plate/Photo by Ashley Welch

Eden Cider is based out of Vermont, they use unique apple varieties that are all grown in Vermont as well in a holistically grown orchard (think compost and comfrey spray). Some examples of the apples they use include a french variety called Calville Blanc d’Hiver and a baking apple called Northern Spy. The apple with the top acid and sugar content is a British variety called Ashmead’s Kernel. All of their ciders are unfiltered and unpasteurized, in order to let the flavor of the apple varieties really shine through. La Quercia is a company based in Iowa that focuses on making cured/aged meats out of heritage breed pigs. They believe that an animal who leads a better and healthier life, will in return have a better taste; so there is an incentive for treating animals with respect and dignity.

Sparkling Dry Cider/Photo by Ashley Welch

Our first pairing was honestly my favorite; prosciutto made from wild foraging pigs with a diet of acorns, paired with a sparkling dry cider (produced via the champagne method). I’m struggling to find words to describe how good it was, because nothing will really do it justice. Umami, savory, earthy, sweet, dry…I can try, but these words can’t portray the flavor correctly.

Top left: Berkshire Top Right: Acorn Bottom left: Ridgetop Bottom right: Tamworth /Photo by Ashley Welch

For our second pairing we sipped on a semi-dry cider (made by disgorging the yeast and adding in some ice cider) and nibbled on a Tamworth breed pig prosciutto. The cider was full of interesting tropical notes, but the prosciutto didn’t impress me much (though the two did pair well together). Interestingly enough, our next beverage was not a cider, but an Apertif. Made with basil and anise, this Apertif was paired with pasture raised Ridgetop  prosciutto. Both of which were delicious.

Up close and personal with the prosciutto/Photo by Ashley Welch

Finally, the long awaited Berkshire prosciutto was paired with Eden’s heritage Ice Cider. Made with fifteen varieties of apples and left with 15% residual sugar in the bottle, it was the perfect way to end the tasting. So good in fact, I obtained my own bottle for my birthday and drank it with my partner as the sun was setting the other night; it paired deliciously with my Beni Wild Harvest 66% chocolate.

 

Zero Waste Family Meal

The first ‘course’/Photo by Ashley Welch

The Zero Waste Family Meal was held on the final day of the conference and was a great way to celebrate with those we had learned with throughout the weekend.

A closer look upon my appetizers/Photo by Ashley Welch

All of the food waste produced at the conference was recycled into new food. At first glance, it may seem somewhat disgusting. But eating trash turned out to be one of the more glamorous experiences of my life.

More Charcuterie/Photo by Ashley Welch

The food seemed scarce at first, but as time went on I was overwhelmed with the amount of food being served. Alcohol flowed freely and everyone was deeply engaged in joyous banter.

Flowers decorating the picnic tables/Photo by Ashley Welch

I couldn’t think of a better way to end the conference and I hope this is an event that is duplicated in the future. It just goes to show, one person’s trash is another person’s treasure.

Local 360

“Real Food”/Photo by Ashley Welch

Farm to Table in Seattle comes in a wide variety of forms, many of which appear to be more laid back and casual than the places I dined at in Denver. The first restaurant I visited was unique and not necessarily even farm to table. Located in Belltown, Local 360 is a trendy spot where all the ingredients are sourced within 360 miles of the restaurant (except for lemons, limes, and coffee). The menu had a wide variety and the prices ranged from low to high. So this restaurant could easily be accessed by the majority of people. The cocktail list was also very interesting as well and we found ourselves ordering one made with local Communi-tea Kombucha and gin.

Cocktails/Photo by Ashley Welch

Although the foraged mushroom pot pie sounded intriguing, I decided to order their 3 course seasonal tasting menu while my partner decided to stick with a medium rare 14oz New York steak served with housemade fries.

Squash Blossoms/Photo by Ashley Welch

The first course was squash blossoms stuffed with chevre. They were creamy, earthy, and somewhat bitter; a perfect pairing. Yet they were gone all too soon, since there was only three on my plate. Next came the main course, a cut of steak paired with grilled tomatoes and jalepenos. The steak appeared to be blackened or charred. The presentation was beautiful and it tasted delicious too. Their steak is sourced from Double R Ranch and they are wet aged for maximum flavor. (Pasture raised and grain finished as well.)

Seasonal Steak/Photo by Ashley Welch

Finally, for dessert I was presented a lemon meringue creme topped with a macron, pistachios, and rhubarb chunks. Light, tart, and summer-y it was my favorite dish of the whole meal. Everything else was good and almost felt cliche. I was expecting to be wowed with creativity like I was at Mercantile and Fruition, but instead I found a place that is substandard. Local 360 is simply a casual dining area for the millennials and middle aged of Seattle; it gives us a peak of what all restaurants should be like and could be like if ingredients were sourced locally. A place you add into your monthly rotation, because it won’t break the bank and the food is good. For now though, it will appear trendy and innovative until locally sourced ingredients become the new norm.

Dessert/Photo by Ashley Welch

Watershed Cafe

Sign for the Cafe/Photo by Loc Le

Although our original plan was to eat at the King Fisher Restaurant at the Sleeping Lady Resort, which boasted their own organic garden, we were skeptical about a farm-to-table buffet. (side note: how is a buffet even sustainable…wouldn’t it generate a lot of food waste?) So we opted to eat at WaterShed Café in downtown Leavenworth instead. I was intrigued by their unique proteins and how they seemed to be sourced locally mostly from the Pacific Northwest, which was often not the case for some of the farm-to-table restaurants I had visited in Denver (in one case my fish had come from Iceland).

Dreamsicle Cocktail/Photo by Loc Le

So once our reservation time rolled around, we eagerly walked a few minutes across town and were sat at a table by the window. We decided that the cocktail menu looked interesting enough to try and ordered our respective drinks. He ordered the Dreamsicle (what our server called the equivalent of a melted creamsicle popsicle); made with Bacardi rum, orange juice, local lavender simple cream, and soda. While I ordered the Wildflower 75 with gin, brut, WA local honey, and lemon juice. The honey aroma and taste was the most evident in those first few sips, yet slowly faded away the more I drank. The Wildflower 75 was my first cocktail made with honey and would certainly not be my last, as I intend to add honey into the ingredient rotation the next time I play bartender for my friends.

Wildflower 75 Cocktail/Photo by Ashley Welch

As we debated appetizers and googled what ‘carpaccio’ was, I selfishly wanted to order a bowl of the bison tortilla soup to myself. But I took a gamble and ordered an appetizer for the two of us, that was outside of my culinary comfort zone and was thankfully rewarded. The Oregon Bison Carpaccio was plated with baby arugula, radish, shaved fennel, champagne vinaigrette, and anjou crostini. For those of you who don’t know what carpaccio is, it is thinly sliced raw meat or fish. The bison was so savory, I felt like it could melt in my mouth and the radishes were the most crisp and fresh I had ever had. As I cherished each thin slice of carpaccio, I wondered how bison were raised and made a mental note to research that later on.

Bison Carpaccio/Photo by Loc Le

Our entrees arrived at the perfect time and I excitedly dug into my partner’s plate. Maybe this seems a bit rude to just dig into his food, but the truth was I was honestly more excited for his entree than mine. It is rare to see meatloaf at a more upscale establishment, so you already know it’s going to be delicious…not to mention all the Yelp reviews that openly praise the meatloaf online. The meat comes from Double R Ranch; the same place that Local 360 sources much of their beef. The meatloaf is served with a cabernet herb gravy, crimini mushrooms, and garlic whipped mashed potatoes. I swirled a mushroom around in the gravy and popped it in my mouth. Complete umami bliss, just as expected. Tender and moist, the meatloaf was utter perfection. After deeming my partner’s entree a success, I decided to move on to my own plate.

Meatloaf/Photo by Loc Le

I went with the PNW Wild Ling Cod encrusted with walnut butter and served with a potato croquette topped with Tillamook cheddar, sour cream, and chives. The sauce was a tomato sherry cream and green beans were served on the side. The cod was light and delicate, providing the perfect base for the walnut butter and sauce. After I hit the halfway point in my dish, I came to realize I had ordered the plate with the most dairy in it. My plate was drowning in dairy; from the butter, to the cheese, to the cream based sauce…it was too much. I slowly sank into a food coma and declined dessert for the first time in my life. I suppose I should have been less surprised with the over the top use of dairy, the potatoes for every side, and large portions of protein…I was in a Bavarian town, so it only made sense to be served food in a Bavarian style. I suppose I just didn’t expect it from a farm-to-table restaurant. This situation reminded me of The Third Plate by Dan Barber, because this restaurant was still stuck on the metaphorical first plate due to their large protein sizes and smaller amounts of vegetables. Seems weird to complain about, but I wanted less meat and more local vegetables to be showcased on my plate.

Ling Cod/Photo by Ashley Welch

I suppose each farm-to-table restaurant is different in the sense of how they view sustainability; do they look long term into the distant future or are they only worried about the now? If they as a restaurant care about the future, then it would be best to downsize and downplay proteins and put more of the focus on plant based foods. Surely there can be a way to do that without sacrificing the Bavarian cultural influence that they try to incorporate into the food.

Beautiful wreath decorating the outside door/Photo by Loc Le

Icicle Ridge Winery

In the midst of my food coma (induced by Watershed Cafe), we wandered the streets of Leavenworth in search of an establishment serving terroir influenced libations. The local brewery didn’t intrigue me and the idea of sampling hard alcohol was not appealing either. So we settled on finding the winery we had passed earlier in the day offering chocolate and wine pairings. After walking up and down the streets, it seemed to have disappeared, so we meandered down the stairs to Icicle Ridge Winery instead. The room was cute and not quite country-chic…it was more sophisticated than that, with sceneries of railroads and cedar wood furnishings.

Wine tasting list/Photo by Ashley Welch

We decided to split a tasting of five wines, starting with two whites. The first was a 2014 Riesling, crisp with notes of honeydew and cantaloupe. Not really anything special, but overall a nice wine. The next white wine was made from grapes on their property; which was only four miles away from Leavenworth in the town of Peshastin. The 2015 Blondes Gewurztraminer was named after the owner’s three blonde daughters and featured three cute blonde angels on the bottle. The marketing didn’t really appeal to me and I thought it was a weird wine to sip on considering our current racially charged political climate…but wine is wine, right? The estate wine tasted even more crisp and refreshing than the previous and was heavy with notes of grapefruit and honey. But for once in my life I was excited to move onto the red wines and away from the whites.

Red blend/Photo by Ashley Welch

A dark beauty was a nice way to describe a wine that I found much too reminiscent of a smokey scotch filled man den. The notes of tobacco overpowered any of the raspberry notes I should have tasted in the 2015 Romanze Red Blend. Overall, I was not a fan of the pepper-y notes and now consider myself biast against dark wines. The next red, was much more delightful considering it was full of many bright characteristics. The grapes used in this 2014 Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon came from their own property as well. One sniff left me so satisfied I almost didn’t want to drink it; the wine smelled purely of berries and I couldn’t stop smelling the delicious aroma. When I finally took a sip and let the blood red wine seep over my tongue, I got notes of earthiness and fresh berry. The wine wasn’t very dry either; this was the clear winner in my perspective and a clear demonstration of terroir. Hopefully, I will be able to venture out to that area again and see their vineyards to get a better understanding of how the Cabernet Sauvignon came to be so wonderfully berry filled, aroma and taste wise.

Finally, we ended our tasting with a Sangiovese Port. Heavy in my mouth and oozing with cinnamon and tobacco notes, I was not a fan. Luckily, my partner enjoyed it and finished off the glass. I sleepily thanked our wine steward and headed back to the car ready for the day to come to an end. Terroir opportunities were everywhere in Leavenworth, as long as you know how to look past the tourist traps.