May 2021

For a peninsula city, the choice of waterfront dining remains slim.  Luke’s Lobster and EVO X are the two prime spots where you are at the water’s edge.  The former is easily accessible. But plan for a long walk down Portland Pier from Commercial Street  to the end because whatever parking that’s available on the pier is choice, with few options to find a spot.  The same might be true for EVO X, on the grounds of the former Sprague compound, the Fore Points Marina, 443 Fore St.  Last year you could park in an adjoining lot, but that’s now filled with construction vehicles as the site is slowly being developed with an office building  (Sun Life), a retail center (where Portland restaurant EVO will re-locate to); hotel and residential condos and rentals are still far off in this 10 acre development marvel in the city’s Eastern Waterfront.

The view for city waterfront dining doesn’t get much better than Luke’s Lobster on Portland Pier, Circa summer 2020

There’s a few restaurants off Commercial Street that offer views of the harbor but they’re not the same as eating at the water’s edge.  Co-developer Case Prentice says that EVO X will be open today.  But when I went there yesterday it looked far from  ready for its seasonal debut.  Time will tell. Still it’s worth waiting for since chef Matt Ginn of EVO fame oversees the food prep at this formidable food-truck kitchen.

Read more…

This is the first time in years that I didn’t go to the Saturday farmer’s market in Deering Oaks. Not  much  is there in terms of local produce other than the long-awaited arrival of rhubarb and asparagus.  Though I’ve ferreted out early arrivals at some of the farm stores like Spring Brook and Jordan Farm. But under present conditions the market is not much fun.

Portland’s farmer’s markets are still under pandemic rule.  Farmers’ incomes are hurting because attendance isn’t what it used to be. In Portland the vendors are still spread out–not six feet apart but more like 20 feet–into two sections of the park, with vendors allowed to operate on only one side of the walkways, with  one-way shopper traffic still the rule.  And though the Portland Farmers Market lists over 40 vendors, I’ve not seen more than around 20 of them spread out through the park. Some like Green Spark Farm don’t even attend the market anymore, when at one time they were a mainstay at Wednesday and Saturday market days.

One way traffic at Portland’s Saturday farmers’ market Circa summer 2020

Read more…