News & Blog

Running Tab: Crave and Bowl of Sol return, plus Zona Blanca, Taste Spokane, O’Doherty’s and Sushi.com

via Spokesman Review

By Don Chareunsy
donc@spokesman.com
(509) 459-5446

In honor of the soon-to-open Kennewick-based Boiada Brazilian Grill debuting downtown in the former Maracas Mexican Restaurant – Boiada is a churrascaria, an all-you-can-eat selection of meats, and I am so excited – today’s Running Tab offers a smorgasbord, or AYCE buffet, of culinary news and some recent stops in town:

2022 Crave

My first experience with Crave Northwest in 2019 set the bar really high because The Spokesman-Review was a sponsor, and we celebrated the success of female chefs with programming that allowed me to interview trailblazers including Anito Lo and Mareya Ibrahim. The three days of 2019 Crave are one of my all-time favorite culinary experiences in Spokane.

Then COVID-19 struck, and Crave was canceled in 2020. It returned last September and sold out, but it was only one event in one evening. I’m happy to report that Crave is returning to three nights in 2022, and tickets for the food-and-wine dine-arounds and more July 14-16 at CenterPlace Regional Event Center in Spokane Valley are on sale now at cravenw.com.

The three theme nights for 2022 Crave are, on July 14, Burger Smackdown, with local and celebrity chefs showing off their burger-making skills in a judged contest; on July 15, Foods From Around the World, culinary options with a global flair; and on July 16, Fire & Smoke – if it can be smoked or cooked over a fire, it will be served, Crave says.

I took part in a Zoom meeting about Crave a few weeks ago, and the plans and lineup of chefs are stellar. I’m very excited about 2022 Crave, and you should be, too. Last summer’s Crave was solid, in light of COVID-19, and July’s event will be next level – tripled!

Bowl of Sol

On Sunday, March 13, from noon to 4 p.m., Travis Dickinson’s Cochinito Taqueria is partnering again with Fred Schumaker of Schumaker’s Pottery and the Spokane Potters Guild in the fundraiser Bowl of Sol to benefit Second Harvest food bank. Schumaker has crafted 100 custom and unique stoneware soup bowls for Cochinito’s excellent posole.

For $25, choose one bowl to take home along with the pork posole rojo or vegetarian posole verde with all the toppings. All sales from the bowls and Mexican soup go directly to Second Harvest. Cochinito’s bar will be open for to-go cocktails, beer and wine, as well as extra posole for additional orders.

Preorders to help pace out the day and maintain social distancing while guests pick up their food are available now by calling Cochinito at (509) 474-9618. More than $4,000 was raised in last year’s Bowl of Sol, which sold out, with Schumaker making additional bowls for the fundraiser.

I had dinner with Dickinson and his wife, Karina, at David Adlard’s Candle in the Woods on Saturday night and was blown away by his knowledge of food and wine, but I shouldn’t have been surprised since he was the former executive chef at Clover before opening Cochinito.

Zona Blanca

I Was Baked When I Made This (mezcal, creme de cacao, mole bitters, orange and cherries) and Mayan Pineapple Kush (Zaya rum, house-made tepache, egg white and lemon) were the two featured cocktails by Josh Neumeier.

Oyster Remix on the Half Shell (fennel-apple mignonette, sea grass, herb oil and pickled mustard seed) and Roasted Oysters (smoked andouille and shrimp, corn bread, sage oil, pickled red onion and Fresno aioli) by guest chef C.J. Callahan of Hogwash Whiskey Den were the two featured oysters. https://ddfa4787d9231a089f5af00d1eb0c2eb.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

Also on the menu for my dinner, two new favorites: carne en su jugo (skirt steak, frijoles pintos, onions, cilantro, limes, radishes and tortillas) and a Cazuela Voladora cocktail (grapefruit, orange, lime, tequila, Squirt and a Fannie’s Ice Pops).

This was my fourth weekly Wednesday Chefs Shuck With Us Stand Up to Cancer fundraiser at Chad White’s Zona Blanca Ceviche Bar on Feb. 16. I’m bummed that I missed Chefs Shuck With Us with Dickinson and Scoop Spokane and Hidden Bagel’s Jennifer Davis in two separate Wednesdays, but there are fundraisers set through March. Post-Zona Blanca, it was Aaron Hein and Alyssa Agee’s new Emma Rue’s for cocktails and bites.

Taste Spokane

By all accounts, the Wishing Star Foundation’s cocktail-attire fundraiser “Taste Spokane: Evening Under the Stars” at Northern Quest Resort and Casino on Feb. 12 was a rousing success. It was 3½ hours of wonderful small bites and libations (so much cider) for a worthy cause, and guests and food and beverage vendors alike were in good spirits.

Taste Spokane was also an opportunity to catch up with Julie Holland of Northern Quest, Davis, Gary Silver and Scott Siff of Tavolata and Ethan Stowell Restaurants, Korri McElfresh and Jeana Pecha of Vieux Carre NOLA Kitchen (the audience winner for favorite restaurant), Trent Maier of Trailbreaker Cider and Sandpoint’s Laughing Dog Brewing.

O’Doherty’s Irish Grille

Since moving back to Spokane in April 2019, I’ve taken it upon myself to revisit restaurants that I frequented during my college days at Gonzaga decades ago. China Dragon across from NorthTown mall and Kim’s Korean Restaurant on Division near Gonzaga have already been checked off the list, as have Luna, many times, and the Onion.

On Feb. 2, it was dinner at O’Doherty’s Irish Grille, where I ordered a Reuben, fries and a cider. Yum! I posted a photo, courtesy of classmate Erin (Ryan) Enger, from 1995, quite possibly the last time I was at O’Doherty’s, on my Facebook and Instagram accounts. It was great to see chef Jessica Ponti Pruett, and I won’t wait another 27 years to return.

Next up: the Viking.

Sushi.com

And in the category of Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover, dinner on Uncle Don and Niece Anya, 14, Night on Feb. 11 before opening night of “Jersey Boys” at First Interstate Center for the Arts was Sushi.com. Upon Anya and I leaving dinner, a man in a group of four in the parking lot said, disparagingly, to his friends, “Oh, let’s eat at Sushi.com. Ha!” Such snobbery.

My Spokane family and I first dined at Sushi.com many Christmases ago because it was open on Christmas Eve. It was nearly empty, but the food and service were great. Fast forward many years later, and Sushi.com is bustling and one of our favorites. The food and service remain solid, and it is the sushi choice of a handful of chefs here in town. To each his own – and more for me.

Crave! NW, the foodie event of the summer returns for three days of food, beverages and fun

via Spokesman Review By Julien A. Luebbers Spokane’s food scene is on the come up, and Crave! NW is where it shows. The foodie-oriented event, which takes place Thursday through Saturday in Spokane Valley, is not only an opportunity for local chefs to display their work in a positive, experimental and festive environment, it’s also a space for them to meet and cook alongside widely recognized chefs from around the country and even beyond. Crave! NW was co-founded by local chef Adam Hegsted over a decade ago. He and other local chefs sought to “progress the food movement in Spokane,” Hegsted said. “I thought that we needed some sort of catalyst to … keep the community engaged, keep the chefs collaborating and talking with each other, and to show off people that are doing some cool stuff.” Crave! serves that role, an opportunity for local chefs, breweries, winemakers and more to connect with one another over a public-facing culinary celebration. It’s also a great opportunity to discover more local chefs and eateries to support and enjoy. “I look forward to it every year,” said Travis Dickinson, chef and co-owner of Cochinito. “It’s a good chance for local chefs to put their best foot forward, show their creativity.” Dickinson will be preparing a poached Spanish octopus tostado with aji amarillo, citrus marinade and “some other fun stuff.” This year’s Crave! NW lineup includes more than 45 chefs, 20 local producers, 12 breweries and cider houses, 12 wineries, music and entertainment. Entry is all-inclusive and restricted to those 21 and older. The chefs include a number of out-of-towners, including a group of star, or celebrity chefs. This year’s roster includes chefs Alvin Cailan, Brian Duffy, Mark Singson and Mattias Merges, who will be cooking, judging and socializing throughout the weekend. Duffy will be making his fifth appearance at the event. “I really had know idea what to expect,” Duffy said, recalling his first appearance at the event. “As soon as I landed, I just completely fell in love with the area.” Between the local scenery and the culinary community that greeted him, Crave! has become an annual event for Duffy. “It’s such a great group of people to be able to get out there, hang out, have fun and eat some great food,” Duffy said. “I’m super honored to be able to even be invited out to these events.” Chef Duffy will be cooking mulitas with mojo roasted pork, a sort of street quesadilla dipped in broth, grilled and then filled with meat and cheese. “Sometimes when you do these sorts of events, you basically come in and they use you, in a way, for your food,” Hegsted said. “We do things a little bit differently, we pay the chefs to be there.” “It’s not competitive,” he said, “it’s more bringing each other up.” The event’s primary goal is to “create this community through food.” Crave! NW is operated by the JAKT foundation, a local nonprofit organization supporting the culinary community. “Our idea,” said Hegsted, “is when this (event) gets to profitability, to give that back to the hospitality community.” While the chefs take center stage, Crave! NW is of course a public, ticketed event. Hegsted expects about 2,000 attendees throughout the weekend, about 650 per day. It’s a return to full attendance following last year’s smaller, one-day event and the 2020 cancellation due to the pandemic. “It’s great to see the community come out and support us,” Hegsted said. In addition to leading the event’s organization, Hegsted is cooking a salmon chorizo, with patas bravas, rouille, sherry vinegar reduction, micro cilantro and smoked paprika. Each of the event’s nights has a theme for that evening’s chefs to contribute to, so no night will be quite like the others. Thursday night, the beginning of the celebration, is the Burger Smack Down. Local and celebrity chefs will enter into a judged contest testing their best burgers. Attendees will also have a say, resulting a People’s Choice award when the night is over. The evening will be accompanied by Relentless Wrestlers, an entertainment wrestling group, and live music from Kosta la Vista and Okay Honey at the after-party. Friday night will bring a culinary pivot, away from American staples and toward global cuisines. A team of chefs will take on the theme of “Foods from Around the World” for the enjoyment of attendees, in a carnival-inspired environment with more live entertainment, Beer, wine, desserts and more will be available each night. Erin Parkes is performing at the after-party. Saturday brings a preparation theme: Fire and Smoke. Chefs will be given the opportunity to show off their aptitude for flames and smoky flavors; food will be cooked over live fire, charcoal or smoke. Performances from the Coeur d’Alene Tribe will accompany. A performance by Logee will bring the weekend to a close.

Read More »
Scroll to Top