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Cook
Recipes, techniques, tools, and other stuff to help you make your own real good food
Eat
Vintage (I'm no longer writing these) restaurant reviews from Portland, Oregon, USA
"Mr. Dixon's reviews sounded so tasty they made me want to buy a plane ticket and spend the next few months there."
David Corcoran, New York Times
Think
Sustainable agriculture, farmers markets, advocacy organizations, & assorted rantings
Untouched Tuscany
Affordable Italian vacation rentals, from humble farmhouse to luxury villa
Who is This Guy?
And what makes him think he knows so damn much?
email Jim Dixon
Fine Print
Everything appearing on Real Good Food is copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Jim Dixon
Reproduction in any form without written permission is expressly prohibited under US and international copyright law (and bad karma, too)
Real Good Food Privacy Policy
Real Good Food doesn't collect data about site visitors. If you send me an email, I'll add you to my email distribution list, but I will never give your address to anyone else.
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Latest News
- Olive Oil Price Reductions
- I've expanded my how-can-a-poor-man-stand-such -times-and-live price reductions. Prices for the 2007 harvest Italian & Californian oils have been cut by about 25%.
- Portland Farmers Market Schedule
- I'm only at the market one Saturday each month. Here are the dates for 2009: 3/21, 4/18, 5/16, 6/13, 7/18, 8/22, 9/19, 10/17, 11/21, & 12/19.
- My stand is usually located adjacent to the prepared food aisle, right next to the musicians' tent in the center of the market.
- Activspace Sales
- I'm open for sales almost every Tuesday from 4:30 to 6:30 pm at my "warehouse" in the Activspace building. It's at 833 SE Main and occupies the corner of SE 9th and Main. I’m at numbers 110-111 on the ground floor in the inner courtyard part of the building. It’s easiest to come in from 9th Street. You can pull in and park in front of my space briefly.
You can bring your own bottles (rinse and dry wine bottles) for bulk sales of Madre Terra, Leonforte, Olio Novo, Bettini, and Atheo DOP; cash or checks only please.
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Archives
Olive Oil Fraud
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The New Yorker had a fascinating article about adulterated olive oil, comparing the potential profits from mixing seed oils with olive oil to the drug trade. There's a lot of inferior olive oil on the market, so if you want to make sure you're getting the good stuff, find out what extra virgin really means.
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Going to the Dogs
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I've been making dog food for our pugs for years, and with the recent pet food recall, maybe you should, too.
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Culinate
I'm writing for a new food web site called Culinate. Head on over to read my stories about deciphering olive oil labels, the true meaning of extra virgin, and my own olive oil epiphany. There are also a few recipes of mine, and lots of other good stuff.
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Remembrance of Food Past
A reader sent me this story about eating local, seasonal foods near the mouth of the Columbia in the 1930s.
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mmmm, salty
It seems like everybody's got an opinion about my roles as food writer and vendor. I've pulled them all together in one easy-to-find spot.
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Older Reviews
I'm trying to get dates on the older reviews here, but if you don't see one, assume that the review is, well, a bit stale. Things can change quickly in the restaurant biz, and my reviews are just a snapshot of a few weeks eating time. Always call to make sure the place is still open, and don't just take my word for what's good. There's no accounting for taste.
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Extra Virgin Olive Oil from Italy
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"...Jim Dixon, self-described olive oil geek..."
I import the kind of olive oil you usually have to go to Italy to find, and I do it mostly to supply my own habit. These are what are sometimes called "estate" olive oils, the limited production of a single farm or grower.
I've also imported the Slow Food Award-winning sea salt from Necton called flor de sal.
Here's what I've got:
Olio Novo, from the Colline Pisano of western Tuscany
Leonforte, from the arid interior of Sicily
Bettini, from the Umbrian hill town of Montefalco
Madre Terra, from the southwest coast of Sicily
Order olive oil and salt online
How I got into the olive oil business.
Do you really need at least two kinds of olive oil in your pantry?
Just what does extra virgin mean anyway? How do you taste different olive oils? Find out in Dica Olio, a sporadically published bulletin about olive oil.
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