The Food Issue 2016

Why Is It So Damn Tough to Open a New Restaurant in Portland?

Rent, Labor Shortages, High Costs Are Keeping Newcomers in the Weeds

Chefs, Booze, and Frozen Pizza

We Got Top Portland Chefs Drunk and Then Made Pizza—with Toppings Purchased at 7-Eleven

This Little Piggy Went to Market

(And Prepared a Recipe from the Portland Farmers Market Cookbook)

Not as Easy as Pie

I Tried (and Kind of Failed) to Make a Pizza from Ken Forkish's New Cookbook

The Gweat Gwyneth Paltrow Wrecipe Test

Is It Really All Easy? IS ANYTHING?

The World's Most Indispensable Food Accessories

If You're Not Using These Remarkable Inventions, You're Eating Incorrectly and Might Choke and Will Probably Die

Portland's Most Delicious Mashups

Our Favorite Local Collaborations of Booze, Candy, Spices, and More!

Year of the Radler

Why This Fruity Beer Cocktail Is on Everyone's Lips

I AM A DREADFUL COOK. Blame it on grad school, sloth, or domestically inclined ex-boyfriends, but I'm staring down my thirties with a pizza-delivery habit so frequent roommates have remarked upon it. While I make no apologies for my pizza, I'm working to get out of my not-cooking rut because (a) I'm on a budget, and (b) it's gonna be a good survival skill to have after the great quake. I've found some good teachers in Mark Bittman (I CAN NOW COOK A WHOLE CHICKEN! Yup, in the oven and everything! AMA!) and Smitten Kitchen's Deb Perelman. But I really wanted to test Gwyneth Paltrow's new cookbook, It's All Easy, because Margot Tenenbaum was FORMATIVE for me as a moody theater kid growing up in a WASPy family, and the title seemed like a challenge. How much do we trust the cookbook's employment of the word "easy"? Given that one of my favorite dinners of all time is grocery-store rotisserie chicken with ketchup and beer, it looked like Goop had her work cut out for her.

  So I set some parameters for the Gweat Gwyneth Wrecipe Test: (1) I made several substitutions. I'm not vegan and I have a cool rare allergy to most kinds of fake milk, so I used regular milk instead of the suggested alternatives (except in the case of the coconut milk café au lait, which was great). I also used products containing gluten, and frozen blueberries instead of frozen acai berries because I am not a king. I didn't make my own aioli. I'm sure it's easy but I don't care. Leave me alone. (2) I chose three recipes—two I might plausibly make of my own volition (breakfast sandwiches and taquitos) and one I most certainly would NOT (acai bowl, WTF).

  And, well, I guess I have bad news for proud members of the GP Is Garbage Club. Her open-faced breakfast sandwich recipe, with bacon, gruyere, arugula, and a fried egg is DELICIOUS and quick and painless. The secret is frying the egg right on top of the cheese, which sounds scary and pan-ruining, but is actually like kindly giving yourself a present. Breakfast sandwiches are my favorite food, and this one is solid.

So were Paltrow's chicken taquitos, which she says she likes to eat for dinner with her kids. I can see why. These are by no means fancy—they're your basic taquitos—but they're tasty and I could definitely see a six-year-old getting really into them. I made mine while watching C-SPAN, using leftovers from rotisserie chicken night. Surprisingly, GP advocates using cheap, pre-shredded cheese. It's All Easy's alleged focus is on low-maintenance weeknight dinners, but I wasn't sure how much Pepper Potts could be trusted on this front. Touché, Pepper Potts.

My wildcard, the gluten-free vegan acai bowl, was promptly downgraded to a not-gluten-free, not-vegan blueberry bowl. This dish required chia seeds, home-toasted shredded coconut, and pulsing a bunch of fruit and almond butter and a single pitted date (WHY?) in a food processer. I was profoundly skeptical, but it had a flavor! And it looked JUST LIKE the picture. I will never make it again, but I know how to toast shredded coconut now! What a milestone in my effort to Not Suck at Cooking. What a good omen for future hot-fudge sundaes.

Megan Burbank

I ate very well during my week testing out It's All Easy, and while I don't understand half of what's in Paltrow's Goop newsletter, I can't stay mad at anyone who brings a delightful new breakfast sandwich into my life, inadvertently steps up my ice-cream sundae game, and delivers serviceable taquitos for the lazy. Everything I made from this cookbook was solid, quick, and impossible to fuck up, even while I was devoting half of my attention to live-streaming the Senate floor. Is it really all easy? IS ANYTHING? I don't think so. But this came pretty close.


It's All Easy: Delicious Weekday Recipes for the Super-Busy Home Cook
by Gwyneth Paltrow with Thea Baumann
(Grand Central)