Oregon Makers Honored at 2024 Good Food Awards

2024 Marks the Event’s Second Year in Portland

Like Moira Rose, I veer to ‘awards’ whenever someone asks what my favorite season is. I’m admittedly not much of a movie buff, and don’t watch TV save for a handful of comfort shows (including Schitt’s Creek, obviously). For me, awards season means food, and specifically the Good Food Foundation Awards, bestowed annually to honor the absolute best in makers of tasty, authentic and responsible food and drink across the United States. Chosen through a rigorous blind tasting and sustainability vetting process, winning products are chosen based on taste while demonstrating an outstanding commitment to sustainable environmental and social practices. This is worth celebrating.

Last night’s awards ceremony took place at Portland Center Stage, and opened with remarks from Oregon Congressman Earl Blumenauer, who welcomed a full house of six hundred guests. Dana Cowin, the longtime Editor-in-Chief of Food & Wine Magazine, was the evening’s MC, and Ari Weinzweig, co-founder of the legendary Zingerman’s Family of Businesses, delivered the keynote address. Good Food Founder and Executive Director Sarah Weiner closed out the evening with a poignant and touching speech acknowledging the journey and efforts of those who craft food and drink both artfully and responsibly:

“My wish for you is that tonight is just the start of the celebration and the rejuvenation that you deserve. Having struggled to care for your team and farmers and customers over many years, you can let those around you rise up and carry some of the burden. That you make time to explore new delights, to cultivate your gardens. That you refill your well so your creations can continue to be powered by the vibrant energy and singular vision only you can bring to them.”

(I’m not crying, you’re crying!).

Not surprisingly, Oregon made a good showing among the winners. For the first time that I can recall, two Oregon makers took home awards for Olive Oil. Both Durant Olive Mill and La Creole Orchards were honored. Durant Olive Mill was founded in 2008 and is home to seventeen acres of olive trees and a state-of-the-art Italian mill at Red Ridge Farms in Dundee, Oregon. Their olive oils are available online and at the Olive Mill itself. Creole Orchards is located in Dallas, Oregon and supports research at Oregon State with the aim of identifying cold-hardy olive varieties and using a state-of-the-art water efficiency system for summer irrigation. They are a little tougher to find as they collaborate directly with chefs and tend to pop up at a handful of farmer’s markets across the state.

Molalla’s Mt. Hope Farms took home an award for their wonderful marionberry jam, a perfect homage to our region. It’s always nice to see good things happen to lovely people and that’s the best way to describe Owners Mike and Laura. And their marionberry jam is just the beginning. I’m absolutely fawning over their amazing strawberry lavender jam, which I purchased thinking it would make a great gift but couldn’t help slathering on my morning toast this morning. Ah, well. Veteran winner Briar Rose Creamery once again rose to the top with their irresistible Butter Baby, a soft, bloomy rind Guernsey cow milk cheese. Butter Baby is a personal-sized version of their also award-winning Butterbloom, which I included in an indulgent Briar Rose Creamery-focused tasting this past summer. (And now I’m wondering how IT would taste slathered in strawberry lavender jam!)

 Oregon also made a fine showing in the chocolate category, with Portland’s Only Child Chocolate Company winning for their delicious Cashew Later bar – a dark chocolate bar filled with a milk chocolate and turmeric filling. If you’ve not tried their bars, I highly recommend it.  Seahorse Chocolate out of Bend received awards for both their Dark Milk 65% and Left of Dial Blend, a lovely, fruity 78% bar they describe as custard pie, sweet cherry and lemon zest, and as being inspired by “musical obscurity found only in the search for hidden gems lost in record crates forgotten in the basement”. That’s pretty specific! I tried it over the weekend, and I’m not sure I picked up on the musical obscurity, but the flavors absolutely blew my mind.

And finally, although I’m focusing on Oregon brands, I do want to give a shoutout to Brooklyn Cured from New York. Brooklyn Cured makes mouth-meltingly delicious charcuterie from pastured-raised meats using no antibiotics and has received kudos from everyone from Bon Appetit to Martha Stewart. Things were temporarily looking perilous when Marketing Manager, Katie Milani arrived in Portland for the weekend’s festivities only to discover that the product she planned to sample and sell hadn’t arrived and could not definitively be tracked. Katie was forced to run around to local purveyors to try and procure enough product for Saturday’s Mercantile and Marketplace events. Happily, the excellent team at Zupan’s on West Burnside sprang into action and was helpful and amazing – Zupan’s exactly. As what I’m certain was no small consolation, Brooklyn Cured walked away with awards for their Tuscan Red Wine Beef Salami and Pork Salami with Black Truffles. I love a happy ending! Assuming Katie didn’t clean them out entirely, you can find their products at Zupan’s.

Congratulations to all of the 2024 Good Food Award recipients and thank you for making the world a better and more delicious place!

 

Local Culinary Mashup: Briar Rose Creamery and 33 Books

Cheese is quick and easy to prepare – with a crisp wine and a few simple accompaniments, it can be the better part (or all) of a perfect summer meal. In honor of the timely excellence of cheese, we’re staging a local culinary mashup featuring 4 cow’s milk cheeses from Briar Rose Creamery and the Cheese Tasting Flight Deck and 33 Pieces of Cheese Tasting Journal from Portland’s 33 Books Co.

 Let’s Talk about Cheese.

I’m aware that the summertime heat lends itself to easy-to-make, easy-to-eat meals; Meals that require little to no actual cooking. Meals that are heavy on the light and light on the heavy. And yes, few things are heavier to eat than cheese – but please bear with me. Cheese is quick and easy to prepare. Paired with a glass of crisp vino and a few simple accouterments – a baguette, some jam or fresh fruit, a handful of nuts, perhaps – it can make a satisfying summer meal. Cheese is fragrant and profound. It’s imbued with the terroir of its origin– an embodiment of the sunlight, soil, and climate that produces it. One would be hard-pressed to find a more perfect example of food that is truly local. The ease of its preparation is just icing on the cake.

 The Mashup.

This sets the stage for a local culinary mashup, where we bring together offerings from two talented local producers, resulting in a whole that’s greater than the sum of its parts. This mashup features a tasting of 4 extraordinary, aged cow’s milk cheeses from Briar Rose Creamery, an artisan cheesemaker located in Dundee, Oregon and the recipient of multiple Good Food and American Cheese Society awards. The cheeses – Butterbloom, Maia, Fata Morgana, and Callisto – are produced by hand in small batches and have names steeped in mythology, with nods to magical caves, floating castles, springtime goddesses and faraway kingdoms.

photo credit: Briar Rose Creamery

Briar Rose procures milk from dairies across the region, including Perrin Family Dairy in Woodburn, who tend Oregon’s only herd of certified organic Ayrshire cows. 

photo credit: Briar Rose Creamery

This rare heritage breed is favored by cheesemakers for its sweet, pure flavor and the unique way the cream is naturally dispersed throughout the milk. According to Briar Rose Proprietor and Cheesemaker Sarah Marcus, Ayrshires are also efficient grazers, and thus gentler on the land, thriving as grass-fed herds. In addition to Ayrshire, Briar Rose sources local Guernsey milk, prized for being rich, sweet, and high in butterfat.

For the second piece of the mashup, we’re performing the tasting using both the Flight Deck for Cheese Tasting and 33 Pieces of Cheese Tasting Journal produced by 33 Books Co, a Portland-based purveyor of tasting journals, kits, and tools. Founder David Selden’s offerings encourage learning and discovery and are designed to enhance the appreciation of many good and delicious things like wine, beer, coffee, whiskey and… well..cheese.

photo credit: 33 Books Co.

 

The flight deck cards allow the organizer of a tasting to capture standard identifying information like the name, milk, texture, and origin of each cheese, while the tasting journal’s unique flavor wheel allows each taster to rate each cheese on the following 16 qualities:

* Crystalline                    * Crumbly          * Salty                                * Sweet

*Sharp/Tangy                *Lemon              *Grassy                             * Herbal

*Caramel                          * Nutty               *Earthy                              * Moldy

*Stinky                              * Robust            * Buttery/Creamy        * Milky/Lactic

 

As with all 33 Books tasting journals, this one incorporates ink laced with the tiniest bit of the thing being tasted. In this case, it’s a few morsels of a semi-firm beer-washed sheep’s milk cheese made in Belleville, Wisconsin.  (I have yet to bring the guide up to my nose to see if I can smell it, but I’m thinking about it.) To note, I also sprung for one of 33 Books’ Flight Boards, which are handmade by Selden himself using orchard-salvage Oregon Black Walnut. They are incredibly stylish and come with a convenient slot to display the flight cards. While the board and card are configured for a flight of three cheeses, I made some minor accommodations to squeeze in four:

I like to jury rig things.

 

Setting the Stage.

photo credit: Culinary Kitten

To maximize the aromas of the cheeses, I’ll serve them at room temperature, and we will taste in order of mildest to strongest, saving the deeper, more pronounced flavors for last. This will help preserve our palates throughout the tasting so that we can better appreciate the individual nuances between each cheese.  To this end, I will keep accompaniments simple to help cleanse the palate between selections. For today’s tasting, I chose a flatbread cracker and slices of sweet-tart Washington pink lady apples. Unlike at a wine and cheese party where I might be a little more informal (and let’s be honest – tipsy), I’ll be methodical in my approach, first visually inspecting the exterior (Is there a rind? Is there mold?) and the interior (What color is it? Are there holes or veins?). Then I’ll cut off a piece to get a sense of its weight and texture (Rubbery? Delicate?), and to appreciate its full aroma.  Upon tasting, I’ll take high level notes, and then work through the 33 Cheese Tasting Wheel to develop a more nuanced profile. I’ll share my observations along with Briar Rose’s cheesemaker notes for comparison.

 

The Tasting.

 

Butterbloom photo credit: Briar Rose Creamery

 Briar Rose describes Butterbloom as a butter bomb, and I agree in the best possible way. I’m not sure I truly appreciated all the different ways butter can present itself before really sitting down to enjoy this lovely, soft cheese. The first thing that occurred to me in looking at it alongside the Maia is how tall and fluffy it is by comparison. I was immediately reminded of a 1970’s magazine ad for boxed cake mix that compares two cakes – an ordinary mix and then one that bakes up lighter and fluffier. Butterbloom is very much the fluffy cake. I was also taken by the gorgeous, long striations in its bloomy, delicate rind, resembling long, slow ripples in a pond. As I cut a piece, it felt like sticky butter on my fingers, and when I brought it to my nose, I was rewarded with aromas of sweet, lemony frosting. It was incredibly creamy, and the initial taste brought a lush buttery top note with a slight sharpness that quickly melted into an earthy chocolate note and then relaxed into comforting buttermilk pancake batter.  It was an utter treat and an excellent first stop on our tasting journey.

 

Maia photo credit: Briar Rose Creamery

Whereas Butterbloom is fun and pleasant, Maia has what comes across as a more serious flavor profile with greater depth. While round and buttery like Butterbloom, it bears an almost cabernet sauvignon top note with a sweet, grassy finish accentuated with fudge and caramel. The texture is soft and luscious. It’s approachable like Butterbloom, but with some unexpected (and welcome) points of interest. Whereas Butterbloom is out skipping through a sunny meadow, singing and picking daisies, Maia is at home in her room writing really good poetry.

 

Fata Morgana photo credit: Briar Rose Creamery

Fata Morgana is Briar Rose’s gorgeous basket-shaped, rindless feta-style cheese. Full disclosure – as a Greek woman with definite opinions about what constitutes good feta, I wasn’t sure what I would think about a local version – made with cow’s milk, no less. But when I took my first bite of Fata Morgana, I was tempted to ask everyone to leave the room so that I could spend a little more focused time with it. I wanted to sort out exactly what it was that I found to be so profoundly delicious. It’s crumbly, but firmer and not as crumbly as the feta I’m accustomed to. It also seems slightly less salty. The package contains very little brine as compared to the small swimming pool that most feta comes in. Stripped of feta’s typical drama and intensity, Fata Morgana is left with an incredible flavor that starts with a slightly tart, lemony top note and gives way to an unmistakable browned butter finish. It was all that I could do not to abandon the tasting entirely and finish the piece (and possibly a second one) by myself. I look forward to exploring Fata Morgana further, mixing it into softly scrambled eggs or handmade pasta, and pairing it with different herbs. I have a hunch it has an affinity for fresh tarragon. 

 

Callisto photo credit: Briar Rose Creamery

The final selection, Callisto, is named for the beautiful nymph from Greek and Roman mythology; skilled hunter, companion of goddesses and associated with the moon. Callisto is a semi-firm alpine-style cheese with a distinctive hoppy top note, an earthy body, and a sultry nutty brown butter finish. According to Briar Rose, it is meltable, like Gruyere or Fontina. I’m sure it would be phenomenal in fondue or wrapped in pastry as part of a creamy mushroom filling, but I don’t think I’d serve it to anyone I wanted to remain platonic with. Beautiful nymph, indeed!

 

In Summation.

The 33 Pieces of Cheese Tasting Journal has a spot for tasters to assign an overall rating to each cheese, but I couldn’t possibly do it. First, I’m cheese drunk (is that a thing?), satisfied and happy and in love with everything I tasted.  I could see enjoying any of them again, in different preparations, contexts, and seasons. I enjoyed using the flavor wheel as a tool to help develop my palate and to recollect my observations and impressions. And I recommend you find your way to both local culinary mashees – Briar Rose Creamery and 33 Books Co – for a delicious experience and your own excellent culinary adventure.

 

Where to Find.

Visit Briar Rose at their farm store in Dundee, Oregon or find them at farmer’s markets across the greater Portland Metro area, markets and shops across the United States and at amazing restaurants across the Pacific Northwest.

Farm Store Address:

Briar Rose Creamery
19231 NE Fairview Dr.
Dundee, Oregon 97115

Farm Store Hours:

  • Friday & Saturday: Open 12-5pm year-round.
  • Monday-Thursday hours are by appointment only, year-round

Email info@briarrosecreamery.com to set up an appointment.

(Briar Rose Creamery is unable to offer tours due to food safety concerns.)

And remember to find incredibly cool locally made tasting journals, kits and maps like the ones we used here at 33 Book Co