Jade District Night
Market, Portland, OR (Saturday, August 30)
Asian Food Cart
Asian Tacos
(Chicken)
Anticipating
exciting new Asian “street food” carts, I walked briskly with my husband, from
my house in Foster-Powell to the nearby “Jade District Night Market” in the
Fubonn parking lot on 82nd Avenue in Southeast Portland. Still, I wasn’t quite
sure if I would be able to find something to eat there. It might be too crowded
or too expensive. But as soon as I saw the words “Best Asian Tacos” I knew I
had to squeeze myself into the line forming in front of the “Asian Food” cart. I
had read about some kind of Asian tacos, probably in my friend Cecelia’s Korean Food blog. These fabled tacos were in LA of course—probably they were “Korean”
rather than “Asian”—and I wished they might travel north to my town so I could
sample some. Apparently the culinary gods had heard my plea.
I knew I just wanted
the tacos, but as I waited in line, I noticed there were other choices. One of
them involved squid. I think I tried squid once, in a weak moment, coaxed into
trying something nobody else was recoiling from. It was chewy and had a nasty
flavor, as I had originally thought it would. My status as a picky eater, with
no hopes of culinary sophistication were once again confirmed. But that was
back in the 1980s. Now, well past midlife, I knew what I liked, and even more
importantly, I knew what I didn’t like.
Finally I found
myself face-to-face with the roundish, affable Asian fellow in the Asian Food
Cart, asking about Asian tacos. I knew there was a choice between chicken or
pork, and I wanted to try both, so I opted for the two tacos for five dollars
deal. But alas. Asian cook guy who could be seen slaving over a smoky grill in
the back, was out of pork. A slight setback. Chicken? Pork? I didn’t much care.
They were grilled and they were inside an Asian Taco. I ordered my two, handed
over my five-dollar bill. My name was affixed to my food order slip, held down by
a rock, in line behind three previous food order slips. I got ready to wait.
But tonight, it
seems, the culinary gods were on my side, and in just a few minutes, my tacos
appeared in a little rectangular box as Asian food truck guy uttered my name.
Now there was a slight
panic. I wanted to find a table where I might park my dinner while it was still
hot. I urgently pushed my way over to my waiting husband, but had no problem finding
a stand-up style table nearby. I gazed at my dinner. The tacos looked just like
any other tacos: grilled meat and shredded vegetables, topped with a sauce,
stuffed into a folded corn tortilla. Ah, but the taste!
Having no
qualifications as either foodie or a restaurant critic, I really have no idea
what flavors or ingredients were in this dish. They tasted Asian, perhaps, even
Korean. The sauce was whitish and creamy. The vegetables were cabbage-like.
There may have been a hint of cilantro (which I normally hate) in the sauce.
Whatever it was, it had easily left my plate and entered my digestive system in
less than five minutes.
Best tacos I’ve had
in years. I will be going back next week. Will I get the Asian Tacos again? Or
will I try something new? Stay tuned.
Well written piece about food. You got me "hooked" which is the artfulness of any good writer. I plan on stoking out that food cart soon.
ReplyDeleteThank you Mr. Douglass!
DeleteYay, Donna's writing again! Made me hungry. What made you want to do a food blog?
ReplyDeleteI too, hate squid.
For one, I'm obsessed with food and love trying new restaurants and food carts. Also, I thought it would be funny for me, a "picky eater," to write restaurant reviews while trying to avoid my many food dislikes, the opposite of what a restaurant reviewer is supposed to be.
Delete