All good things must
eventually come to an end. I don't know who invented that phrase,
but it has long since passed into the cliché bargain bin. If it
were a movie, it would be Beastmaster 3. And I still can't resist
picking it up and using it myself. Also like Beastmaster 3.
Our last meal in
Seattle was I think one of the beast breaking of fast that I've ever
had. I went with a roast beef hash that was the special for the
morning. It was either that, or the Chorizo biscuits and gravy. For
me, this was my Sophie's Choice moment, and that is without a bit of
hyperbole. Not a jot. Big decision.
As a rule of life,
if it sounds good, always go with the special.
We checked out of
our hotel and I was reacquainted with how hill-infested the region
actually is. And as I lugged my 50 pound bag the two miles between us
and our destination at King Street Station,I kicked myself along the
way for not bringing along a backpack. Nope. I had to opt for the duffel bag. Stupid. Fortunately my arms are big and muscular.
Unfortunately the previous statement is a lie.
The train was late.
Go Amtrak! Nothing else to add to that. We just got/had to hang
around the train station for a couple hours longer than we had
planned. Alls well, the décor was worth an extra gander and I got
some good pics before they called us to board the train.
I had been looking
forward to the train ride since booking the trip. A train seemed
like an easy way to get out and enjoy the scenery, as it passed your
window at 60 miles per hour. I was facing backwards, and the weather
was overcast and foggy. Foggy and overcast. I don't need to make
that tire ass Seattle joke do I? Because I will. No joke is too
tired for me.
The very first thing
I noticed as we made our final approach into Portland were the
garbage streams. Not literal rivers of garbage, but streams of
refuse that seemed to be flowing down hill. As if a landfill got all
biblically gone done pulled a flood and then just projectile vomited
its inner secrets unto the world. That was what the road to Portland
looked like. Trashslides and rubbivulets.
Behold the beauty of
the Pacific North West in all of its splendor!
The station we
arrived at lacked the grandeur of the one we had left behind, it was
much more utilitarian and pedestrian. Which in retrospect seems
fitting and an apt metaphor for a comparison between the two cities.
Odd, as Portland has somewhat of a reputation for being a wild and
weird frontier city. You would expect their public buildings to
reflect that more.
To be honest, Oregon
as a whole struck me with a similar vibe. Like they had been a
meeting point between hippie and cowboy and created some sort of
self-hating mutant hybrid. Or maybe a pair of siblings that both
thought that they alone should inherit the estate. Oregon is a weird
place. I liked it.
The weather was
sunny and beautiful. Which is exactly how I remembered Portland.
The one time I visited. Three years ago. For about 1 day, before I
shuffled off to Eugene to hang out with the one person I really
wanted to fly across the country to see. Didn't see her again this
time. I made missteps and things seemed awkward. I don't seem to
have the social wherewithal necessary to unawkward the whole mess.
I am pretty good at
regret though. And revisiting embarrassing memories. I'm tops at
that. Shit, I should get a medal.
So yeah. Portland.
We didn't spend much
time wandering around down town. Only stopping briefly to pose for a photo near a giant eye sculpture. A giant eye sculpture with a steering wheel and captain's chair. Eye Eye Captain.
Because fuck that. Remember the
whole “I'm carrying a bag thing from earlier”? Yeah, touristing
can wait. Once again, we hopped the train and rode the rails. All
the way up to the hotel that I stayed at during my last visit. I
recalled it was clean, near the airport, and a half block away from
the Red Line.
The rest of the
evening was going to be spent unwinding. Unwinding, on a vacation.
It sounds stupid when I read aloud my words to myself. But that was
what we did. We hung out in the room and watched Rifftrax on my
phone, until we ventured out to eat.
The discussion
followed the form of: “What about?” “No”. For a distressing
amount of time. Until we chanced upon El Sombrero. What is El
Sombrero you ask? Well that is a stupid question. But I'm really
good at answering stupid questions, and usually with only a limited
amount of condescension and sarcasm.
El Sombrero is a
Mexican joint that serves “Basic no frills Mexican fare.” What I
consider standard Mexican food. Combo plates that automatically come
with sides of Beans and Rice.
Dude, I live in a
city with a sizable Latin population. There are numerous taquerias.
So I suppose that I can be argued that visiting a foodie Mecca like
Portland to eat at a basic Mexican joint probably as blaspheme
against some minor hipster foodie deity. And fuck that tight pants
bearded asshole. Lets get us some Mexican! And not even fancy
Mexican Fusion made from exotic blends of unexpected ingredients that
elevates the meal from simple sustenance to an art form. An
experience.
Nope. Just tacos
and beans and rice.
And goddamnit was it
phenomenal. If El Sombrero was here, it would be on my “Visit this
place more often” list, as we bookended the day with amazing eats.
Foreshadowing and
spoilers, but this was the best meal I had in Portland.
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