All posts by Clif Graves

WINTHROP FARMERS’ MARKET PROFILE: WHOLESOME HOLMSTEAD

Wholesome Holmstead flowers

In Winthrop, we have a small but very nice Farmers’ Market that is held on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the parking lot of the Winthrop Town Office. Vegetables, eggs, dairy, meat, and baked goods are sold there, and unless my husband, Clif, and I are very busy, it’s a rare Saturday when we don’t stop at the Farmers’ Market to buy something. Often, we go on our bikes as part of our daily ten-mile ride. For us, the location is perfect as we can swing by on our way home, which is about a mile from the Farmers’ Market. Clif and I have good-size bike bags, where we can pack plenty of stuff, ranging from raspberries to garlic sausage. Then home we pedal.

One of my goals this summer is to write a short profile of all the vendors at the Winthrop Farmers’ Market—unless of course they don’t want to be featured on the blog. (I expect most of the vendors will be happy to have the publicity.)

I decided to start with Wholesome Holmstead, where I get the wonderful garlic sausage that goes so well with my homemade sweet and sour sauce. Tomorrow, I plan to make the sausage and sauce dish, and instead of adding spinach, I’ll use a sweet red pepper I have on hand and some of Farmer Kev’s sugar snap peas. But I digress.

Karen Trenholm

On Saturday at the Farmers’ Market, I spoke with Karen Trenholm, one of the owners of Wholesome Holmstead, which is on 432 Stanley Road in Winthrop. In 1947, her family bought the farm, and Karen grew up there.

“This weekend, there will be four generations helping on the farm,” Karen told me.

She then went on to explain how Wholesome Holmstead is a diversified small farm, with meat, dairy, seasonal vegetables, flowers, and herbs. “And we’re making it work,” Karen added. “We’re thankful for those supporting local farms. It can be done. There is diverse farming in the state.”

“When things we eat can be grown in Maine, we should buy locally,” I added, and naturally Karen agreed with me. We also noted that this did not mean we wanted to give up using olive oil, lemons, and various spices, only that a real effort should be made to get produce and products from Maine farmers.

The chalk board
The chalkboard

I would have to say that Karen and her family are indeed getting good local support. At about 10 a.m. last Saturday, after only an hour of being open, Karen had sold out of many things, and the chalkboard she uses to advertise her food had been wiped clean of several items. Luckily for us, she still had some garlic sausage left.

Wholesome Holmstead attends various Farmers’ Markets in central Maine, including ones at the Arboretum and the Mill Park, both in Augusta, as well as markets in Belgrade, Gardiner, and Wayne. They also have a farm stand at their Stanley Road Farm, and the stand is open daily.

As a parting bonus, Karen gave me a good tip about how to use the garlic scapes that have recently become all the rage—garlic scape pesto. In a blender or food processor, add the scapes and some olive oil. To this I would also add some walnuts and some kind of grated hard cheese. Another idea for dinner this week because, yes, there are bags of scapes in my refrigerator, and while I have added them to stir-fries, I’ve barely made a dent in them.

Along with the great food, it’s tips like this that make going to the Farmers’ Market so enjoyable.

 

 

 

 

 

SALAD DAYS UPDATE: SALADE NIÇOISE, SORT OF

In a recent post, I wrote about how, through our CSA share, we are receiving a bounty of greens. So many, in fact, that at first it put me in a bit of a panic. How would I use them all before they went bad? While we do have a compost bin, I hate throwing food away. Not only is it wasteful, but it is also expensive. To the rescue came Mark Bittman, with his 101 ideas for salads, and since our friends Judy and Paul were coming for dinner on Saturday, what better way to use some of those greens than to make one of Bittman’s salads?

I made salade niçoise, or at least something resembling it. I didn’t have green beans, but I did have sugar snap peas, andsalad nicoise that’s what I used, blanching them first, just a little, so that they were soft but still had a crunch. I cooked some red potatoes and hard-boiled some eggs. I also used capers, olives, and sliced radishes. On a large glass platter, I made a huge bed of mixed greens—lettuce, Swiss chard, and spinach, and I sprinkled the diced potatoes, pea pods, chopped eggs, capers, olives, and sliced radishes over the greens. The salad was dressed with a simple vinaigrette.

I am happy to report that the salad was a hit on Saturday. We decided it was familiar, in that it was a salad, and unfamiliar, because of the selection of ingredients. Definitely a make-again salad—so good  that it is likely to be a summertime staple at our house, both for when we have guests and for our own dinner.  In fact, tonight’s meal will be salade niçoise, where I will use leftover potatoes from Saturday, cook some more eggs, and include the rest of the ingredients listed above. I will also add some canned salmon, since this will be the main event for our dinner.

On Saturday, along with this salad, we had grilled bread and sliced cantaloupe for appetizers; the salade niçoise; a pasta and spinach salad; hamburgers; and for dessert, ice cream with fresh raspberries, purchased that morning at the farmers’ market.

The weather on Saturday could be described in one word—delicious. It was very warm, but not too hot or too humid. We sat on the patio and ate as birds fluttered around the feeders. From deep within the woods came the ethereal song of the wood thrush. The dog barked at passing cars. A summer’s night, all the more beautiful because such warm evenings only come to Maine for two months each year. The mosquitoes drove us in for dessert, but we had a couple of fine hours on that patio.

As we do on a regular basis, my husband, Clif, and I reflected on how lucky we are to have that patio and to have such a nice backyard to share with our friends.

FRIDAY AT PETE’S WITH RICHARD & SHANE

Pete's roast beefOn Friday, I biked into town to have lunch at Pete’s Roast Beef with Richard and Shane, two of the librarians at Bailey Public Library. Richard is the library’s director, and Shane is the adult services librarian. Since they came to Bailey Library about a year ago, Richard and Shane (and the rest of the staff, of course) have brought energy and snap to our lovely stone library. There are the many events that the library hosts, but there is something else that’s harder to pin down. For those who love books, Bailey Library has become an exciting place to go to discuss books that have been read and to get suggestions for books to be read. And all who work at this library are so warm and welcoming that I always look forward to stopping by to drop off books and to pick up the books I frequently request through the state’s interlibrary loan service.

At Pete’s, Richard, Shane, and I all got the succulent roast beef sandwiches as well as a large order of fries, and when the order came, we tucked into the food, as the saying goes, and we also tucked into some book talk. Both Richard and Shane are avid bibliophiles, and while they are young enough to be my sons, their intelligence and their keen take on the books they’ve read make them seem more like peers.

Much of our talk revolved around the book Atonement by Ian McEwan. Richard and Shane had read it six or seven years ago, and I just finished reading it a few days ago, which meant it was very fresh in my mind. We all agreed it was beautifully written with vivid characters and a plot that is taut with betrayal, sexual tension, guilt, and war. In a nice twist, Briony, who is a young teen when the book opens, is the one who does the betraying and is the one who must spend the rest of her life in atonement.

“I absolutely hated Briony,” Shane declared. “I couldn’t stand her.”

“Really?” I replied. “I felt exactly the opposite. While I thought that what she did was wrong, I had great sympathy for the emotional upheavals she was going through. I can remember going through similar upheavals myself at her age. Of course I never betrayed anyone that way,” I hastened to add.

“It’s amazing how McEwan could write so convincingly from a thirteen-year-old girl’s point of view,” Richard said.

Yes, it is, and it is the sign of an author who has a deep, empathetic grasp of human nature, which he in turn brings to his characters. This empathy, combined with his great writing style, is what makes McEwan such a fine writer.

Still, I had a criticism to add. “I thought the ending was anticlimatic. I thought there should have been a confrontation between Briony and her sister, Cecelia.” (Cecelia was deeply affected by Briony’s betrayal.)

“I agree,” said Shane.

Richard, however, had a dissenting point of view. “Maybe that’s part of McEwan’s brilliance. He didn’t do what was expected.”

Maybe it is, even though I found the end unsatisfying.

The talk then turned to Other Voices, Other Rooms by Truman Capote. Richard thinks it’s a terrific book, but as Shane and I haven’t read it, we were unable to discuss it.

“For next month at Pete’s,” Richard said.

Sounds good to me, and after lunch I went directly to Bailey Library to see if they had a copy of Other Voices, Other Rooms. They didn’t, but I have requested it through interlibrary loan.

I’m looking forward to August and Truman Capote at Pete’s.

JULY GARDENS

My front yard gardens are at their best in July. Right now they are abloom with evening primroses, day lilies, and astilbe. (Note: With its predominance of dry shade, my front yard surely qualifies as one of the worst yards in Winthrop in which to garden. Still, I persevere, settling for the few plants I know that will tolerate these conditions.)

My backyard is somewhat better. It gets about six hours of sun, and I can grow things back there that I can’t grow in the front—namely big bunches of irises, which I adore. I can also grow cucumbers and a variety of tomato called Juliet.

Here are some photos of what the gardens look like right now:

The gardens out front
The gardens out front
Tomatoes and cucumbers
Tomatoes and cucumbers
Snapdragons
Snapdragons
Evening primrose
Evening primrose

Ah, July!

SALAD DAYS: OR, WHAT TO DO WITH ALL THOSE GREENS

A bin of vegetablesYesterday, it was as hot as it gets in central Maine. The temperature was over 90 degrees in the shade, which meant that it must have been nearly 100 in the sun. The relative humidity? Pretty much the same. I sweat as I watered the gardens and hung the laundry; I sweat as I ate lunch on the patio. The orange cat lolled beneath my chair, and the dog made a place for himself in the cool shade of the ferns by the house. The black cat joined her brother under my chair, and we all seemed to be in a suspended state, with the heat and the humidity stretching time so that the one afternoon seemed like days rather than hours.

Despite the heat, despite the humidity, I love summer, even the sweat and the stretched time, and the older I get, the more this is the case. Time was when winter’s cold did not faze me. I would stay outside until my face was red with cold, and it did not bother me a bit. Those days are gone, and in deep winter, I now have to steel myself to go for a walk.

Yesterday was also the day that Farmer Kev dropped off our CSA share. The wooden box overflowed with greens, greens, and more greens, and as I surveyed them, I felt a moment of panic. What would I do with all those greens—the spinach, the lettuce, the Swiss chard, and the beet greens with the baby beets? Fortunately, that very morning, I had come across Mark Bittman’s “101 Simple Salads for the Season.” I had even printed it, and I read it while I had lunch.

So I told myself, “Don’t panic. If Mark Bittman can come up with 101 simple salad suggestions, then you can find a way to use those greens. Let Bittman be your guide.”

Once the panic went away, the ideas started coming. There were the usual side salads Clif and I have each night with dinner. That’s the low-hanging fruit, so to speak, and while it does make a dent in the greens, a side salad each night doesn’t even begin to use them all.

Well, our friends Paul and Judy are coming over for dinner on Saturday. Why not make a version of Bittman’s salade niçoise? His calls for green beans, which I don’t have. Instead I’ll use blanched sugar snap peas, which were also included in my CSA delivery. After all, as Bittman noted in his salade niçoise entry: “None of these [ingredients] is crucial; you get the idea.” I do, indeed, and along with sugar snaps I’ll include cooked potatoes, at room temperature; tomatoes; olives, capers, and hard cooked eggs. And they will all be on a thick bed of—you guessed it—greens. I plan to dress it with a simple vinaigrette.

Also for that dinner on Saturday, a pasta and spinach salad with a bit of basil, olive oil, and feta. I made it for our Fourth of July picnic, and it was so tasty, I don’t mind having it again so soon. That salad uses two cups of chopped spinach, which will make a real dent in my spinach bag. I found the recipe in the Portland Press Herald, and this salad is fast on its way to becoming a family favorite. (Note: I substituted little pasta for the orzo in the recipe.)

Then I thought, what about today’s lunch? Why not roast those baby beets and have them in a wrap along with a bit of goat cheese, chopped olives, lots of greens, and a little dressing? That’s just what I’ll do, and I can’t wait for lunch.

wrap with greens

So take that, greens! You do not intimidate me anymore.

Addendum—July 7, 2011: I just got an email farm share update from Farmer Kev, and he promised that next week there will be new potatoes. Woo-hoo! I won’t be panicking about how to use those little beauties. Boiled until soft—you don’t even have to peel them—add a bit of butter, and that’s it! I certainly am looking forward to next Wednesday.

FOURTH OF JULY: A GATHERING OF FRIENDS

The patioYesterday, on the Fourth of July, we had a “gathering of friends” to celebrate Independence Day. Although the day was hot and muggy and thunder rumbled in the distance, the weather cooperated so that we could have our meal outside on the patio, one of the places I love best. Between the hurry brought about by the threat of rain and my duties as a hostess, I did not take any pictures of the actual event. Therefore, the pictures included in this post are after the fact—the two salads, my gardens, the patio.

Our daughter Shannon and her husband, Mike, were supposed to join us, but unfortunately, Shannon came down with a dratted summer cold and stayed home to doze and to recuperate. They were missed, as was our eldest daughter, Dee, who lives in Brooklyn. As I’m fond of saying to Dee, “If only you lived in Boston…”

As is always the case at our gatherings, there was food galore, with many contributions from our friends. We started with appetizers, which included a Mexican dip, goat cheese and crackers, a melon platter, hummus, pita bread, and carrots. Then it was on to the main meal—grilled hamburgers, hot dogs, and chickpea burgers. (A note about the chickpea burgers: they are actually better fried in a bit of oil in a pan rather then grilled. The chickpea patties tend to be a little dry, and the oil in the pan enhances them.) We also had potato salad, pasta and spinach salad, and a big green salad with a wide variety of greens. A red, white, and blue Jello salad, which has become a staple on Fourth of July. For dessert, strawberry shortcake with chocolate biscuits. A real feast.Pasta and Potato salad

Although the food was certainly the centerpiece of the day, the real highlight for me, at least, was the company—Alice and Joel Johnson, Diane Friese, Jill Lectka, and Sybil Baker—and the resulting conversation. We talked about all the things that fire us up—movies, books, politics, art, and a bit of personal stuff, of course. Around the patio table we talked until the mosquitoes drove us in, and sitting around the dinning room table, we talked some more.

In the course of the conversation, there was a discussion about how each year on Public Radio, the Declaration of Independence is read. I mentioned how I love the language of this piece, and how much I enjoy hearing it read. There seemed to be general agreement about this, and there was even a suggestion that next year, we should included a reading of the Declaration of Independence at our gathering. Who knows? Maybe we will.

This morning, Diane sent me an email thanking me for inviting her to the barbecue. I replied, “Actually, I was thinking of sending everyone a thank-you note for joining Clif and me on the Fourth. What a great bunch! I’m so grateful to have you all as friends.”

A very good Fourth, indeed. Now, if only “the kids” could have been there, too.

 

 

 

 

THE JUNE LET THEM EAT BREAD REPORT

Bread CartoonThe project: To bake and give away at least one loaf of bread each week.

The reason: A personal protest against the selfishness of our society.

The bonus: It’s good spiritual practice.

I just passed the six-month mark of my Let Them Eat Bread project. And, yes, it does feel as though six whole months have passed since I started giving at least one loaf of bread away each week. Somehow, in the winter, it seemed easier to make and give bread. But with the advent of spring and summer, my thoughts have turned to the outdoors, and making bread involves more planning and extra work. In a way, that’s not a bad thing. By its very nature, spiritual practice requires some effort. As the Zen master Katagiri Roshi once observed: “Life is no guarantee. You must make effort.”

I am certainly making an effort with my Let Them Eat Bread project, and this effort is teaching me that it is not always easy to be generous. While there might be a natural inclination toward generosity in most of us, we like to be generous at our own convenience and on our own schedule. In other words, when we damn well feel like it. This approach leads to a scatter-shot approach to generosity, where sometimes it goes where there is need but at other times the need is unmet. This is why the progressive activist Jane Addams would write “One of the first lessons we learned at Hull-House was that private beneficence is totally inadequate to deal with the vast numbers of the city’s [Chicago’s] disinherited.”

I agree with Addams and would broaden that statement to include the whole country. Yet I do feel that personal generosity is important—I expect Addams did, too—that we should be generous as both individuals and as a society, especially in a world with many people and finite resources.

Well, there are many sides to generosity. Loaf by loaf, in my own small way, I am learning about them.

This month I gave bread to Esther Bernhardt, Cindy Hinkley, Mike Sienko, JoEllen Cottrell, and Kate Johnson (finally!).

Total bread given away in June: 5 loaves

Total for the year: 34 1/2 loaves

CSA CHALLENGE: SAUSAGE AND SPINACH IN A SWEET & SOUR SAUCE

One of the challenges of belonging to a CSA program is to use the bounty that Farmer Kev brings us each week. In Maine, the end of June is still early summer, and the harvest therefore consists of greens, greens, and more greens. Radishes and sugar snap peas are also thrown in, and they certainly add dash to the plethora of greens. When it comes to the peas, my husband, Clif, and I do not have to wonder how to use those beauties. We are crazy about them, and in grocery stores sugar snaps—never mind organic ones like Farmer Kev’s—are quite expensive. Into stir-fries, pasta, and wraps the sugar snaps go, delicious to the very last crunch. Radishes keep well in a bowl of cold water in the refrigerator, and my husband, Clif, and I love to add them to salads.

But what about all those greens? Bags and bags of spinach and lettuce? Swiss chard and beet greens.  As I mentioned in an earlier post, Clif and I are not all that keen on plain cooked greens. We like them in salads, and we don’t mind them as part of a dish. Every night, therefore, we have been eating big green salads, but they do not use a sufficient amount to deal with the many bags of spinach and lettuce we have in our refrigerator.

I have therefore developed a two-pronged approach. The first is to cook with some of the greens—a bag of spinach will shrink to nothing once it is sautéd in a bit of oil. Last week I made spinach with pasta, and I was only moderately pleased with the results. This week, I had another idea. At the Winthrop Farmer’s market, I had bought some garlic sausage from Wholesome Holmstead. I thought, why not make a garlic sausage and spinach dish? And, why not make a sweet and sour sauce, which both Clif and I love, to mix in with the sausage and spinach? How would that taste? I’m inclined to think that sweet and sour sauce, if it’s homemade, improves the taste of almost anything. All right. Maybe not quiche, but sweet and sour sauce sure is good in stir-fries and on chicken and even with white beans and rice. Still, I’ve been cooking long enough to realize that what the imagination conceives might not match reality. (In fact, this is true of a lot of things.)

I am pleased to report that in this case, imagination and reality were in perfect accord. The sausage and spinach with sweet and sour sauce tasted exactly the way I hoped it would. The spinach and the spicy sausage were a perfect pairing with the sweet and sour sauce. We ate it over rice, of course, and not going back for seconds took tremendous willpower. Good thing a big green salad was waiting for me. And, yes, there was spinach in it.

Clif’s response to the sausage and spinach dish? “Pretty good,” he said. And since Clif comes from a long line of Yankees, this is his version of high praise.

My second approach with the surplus is to give some of it away. This week, I brought Swiss chard and beet greens to my friend Lee Gilman, who lives up the road from me. She was happy to receive the greens, and I even threw in a bunch of radishes, since Farmer Kev had given me two bunches this week.

As I drove to deliver the greens and radishes to Lee, black clouds scudded across the sky. The water on the Narrows Ponds, upper and lower, was dark and choppy, and thunder rumbled close by. Keeping an eye on the sky, I spoke with Lee for a bit, and her Sheltie, Lucky, watched us in the bright way that Shelties have. Lee had come in from her own garden, and she was holding a hoe. As we said our goodbyes, Lee moved the hoe back and forth, and with a happy growl, Lucky chased it. Home I went, getting inside just as the rain poured down, making it too wet for Clif to mow the lawn. Ah, well. At least he could get the spinach ready for cooking.

Sausage and Spinach in a Sweet and Sour Sauce

This is more of a guideline than a recipe. Unfortunately, I cannot share the sweet and sour sauce recipe, as it comes directly from a cookbook, and I make it pretty much the way it is written. However, there are many recipes online and in cookbooks. I will tell you the ingredients of the one I use: sugar, cider vinegar, pineapple juice, ketchup, and garlic powder, something I rarely use but is somehow perfect in this recipe. Then, I boil the mixture and thicken it with water and corn starch. Now, at least, you have something to go by.

Sweet and sour sauce
Sweet and sour sauce

For last night’s dish, I used 7 ounces of garlic sausage. Any sausage would be good, but that garlic sausage was outstanding, perfectly spiced and with just the right amount of fat. As with any dish, the better the ingredients, the better the results. Not putting any oil in the frying pan, I stir-fried the sausage, which came in a solid pack rather than in links. By the time I was done, I had nice little chunks.

Stir-frying the sausage
Stir-frying the sausage

When the sausage was cooked, I added a bunch of spinach. No, I did not measure. I just threw it in until it seemed like enough. (It was.)

Adding the spinach
Adding the spinach

Ditto for chunks of pineapple, from a 20 ounce can. Last came the sweet and sour sauce, and I used the entire batch. A pound of meat and more spinach would take a double batch.

Pineapples added
Pineapples added

While I was cooking the sausage and spinach, I had a pot of jasmine Thai rice simmering on the back burner. Brown rice is better for you, I know, but I can’t help it. I am just crazy about jasmine Thai rice, and that is what we eat in our house.

When the pineapples were heated through, the mixture was spooned over rice.

Sweet and sour sausage with spinach over rice
Sweet and sour sausage with spinach over rice

Time for dinner.

 

JUNE 29TH: BITS AND BOBS FROM THE INTERNET

Here are some “bits and bobs,” as someone from the UK might put it, that I’ve found on the Internet. First, I’ll start with the master—Mark Bittman—and his 101 Fast Recipes for Grilling. Think grilling is only for meat and fish? Think again. In this list, Bittman has twenty-five delectable suggestions for grilled vegetables. Of course, there are also ideas for meat and fish, including one for bacon-wrapped hot dogs. When Bittman writes, “You know you want one,” he is certainly speaking to my husband, Clif, whose passion for hot dogs is legendary.

From the Los Angeles Times: A vegan and a vegetarian couple go on a 5,000-mile road trip to visit family and friends. Their goal was to stick to their foodie principles and eat healthy, vegetarian food from Los Angeles to Florida and then back again. And by gum, unless they’re holding out on us, it sounds as though they accomplished their goal. A bonus: They didn’t gain any weight, no small feat on such a long road trip.

From the Miami New Times: For pure folly, this one can’t be beat. A thief leaves a fishy trail, and I mean this literally. Hint to would-be fish thieves: bring a cooler.

From the Portland Press Herald: Meatless Mondays at Sebago Brewing Co. According to Johns Hopkins’s Ralph Loglisci, “People are open to change on Monday.” Ah, Monday, Monday.

From the Washington Post: I have always considered “foam” to be a trendy, somewhat freakish fad. But maybe it isn’t. As Andreas Viestad points out to foam fanatics, “[w]hat you are doing is not so new.” Examples? Whipped cream, milk shakes, meringues. All right. I’m convinced.

TO HI BOMBAY FOR KATE’S BIRTHDAY

Naan
Fresh naan

Last Friday, my daughter Shannon and I celebrated our friend Kate’s birthday. Our tradition is to meet for lunch in Portland, and the birthday “girl” gets to choose the restaurant. Because Portland is such a foodie town, our options are many, and over the years we have eaten at some good restaurants. (There was also a mediocre one—The Merry Table—but this is bound to happen even in a foodie town such as Portland.) However, this time for Kate’s birthday, we hit the foodie jackpot with Hi Bombay, an Indian restaurant (of course!).

We have Shannon to thank for this because it was at her suggestion that we went to Hi Bombay. Shannon and her husband, Mike, had eaten there a week or so earlier, and they both gave it two thumbs up. As Kate would remark, “Shannon, I would not hesitate to go to any restaurant that you recommended.” To this a proud mother could only nod in agreement.

A small, unassuming restaurant with a brick front, Hi Bombay is on the edge of the Old Port. Last Friday was a cool, rainy day, and what a delight it was to open the door of the restaurant and step into a room that was filled with warm colors—red, especially—and warm spicy smells. Kate was at a booth, waiting for us.

“It’s cozy in here, isn’t it?” she said.

Yes, cozy. And welcoming, too. As an added bonus, there was a flat-screen TV with a Bollywood film playing.

Naturally, we had tea. And some naan, the traditional Indian flat bread, which was so fresh and good that it took great self control to have only one piece. (Over the winter, this good eater has put on quite a few pounds, and the time has come to lose some weight. But more about that in a future post.) Kate ordered the fish curry, which, according to the description on the menu, is “seasonal fish cooked in a sauce of onions, tomatoes, ginger, garlic & blend of spices.” Kate said it was outstanding. Shannon and I ordered the tikka chicken masala, chunks of chicken in a tomato sauce softened with a bit of cream and mixed with spices. I am not familiar enough with Indian food to identify by taste what the spices were. There are no Indian restaurants in the Augusta area, and as far as I know, there never have been. At any rate, the tikka masala was so delectable that I could have easily used some of the naan to sop up the last of the sauce. Or maybe just lick the bowl clean. I didn’t do either of those things, but I was tempted.

Tikka chicken Masala
Tikka chicken masala

Shannon asked for medium spicing, and she said her masala had quite a little zing. I am a wimp when it comes to hot spicing, and therefore requested the mild. A good decision. My tikka masala left a pleasant, spicy tingle on my lips, but not an uncomfortable one. Just the way I like it. A bowl of rice came with the masala and the curry, and the rice was beautifully cooked—light and fluffy with each grained defined.

What a meal! We all decided that we must come to this restaurant again, with the “boys” in tow.

Anytime the schedule is free, I’d be ready head to Portland for a meal at Hi Bombay. All it would take is a call or an email from family or friends.  All weekend long, I thought about that tikka masala, remembering the smooth but spicy sauce and the slight tingle it left in my mouth.

It might have been Kate’s birthday, but when food is that good (and so reasonably priced), it is a celebration for everyone involved.