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Summer 2008 Issue
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Past Issues
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Edible Portland Online
Spiced Ketchup

Making ketchup from scratch allows you to control the flavor, avoid preservatives and ingredients like corn syrup, and extend tomato season. The process is surprisingly simple and the results superb.




Vancouver Fire Department Station 81
Vancouver Fire Department Station 81 article image




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ADAM: I look forward to breakfast here, especially on the weekends. This morning we had sausage, eggs, homemade biscuits, and — he squints, thinking, and then smiles — tater tots. I love tater tots; they have to be baked just right. Kind of crunchy. You’ve got to cook them at a lower heat for longer. I don’t like them soggy.

JEREMY: Rick made the biscuits with a secret ingredient. We had no milk, so he used sour cream instead. They turned out great.

ADAM: Jack cans things and makes jams. He puts in a garden every year — he’s the country boy among us… What do you can, Jack?

JACK: Tomatoes, green beans, spicy beans with lots of garlic, peaches, plums, pears. Most of it is from my garden — the apples are out of my yard, but the peaches and the plums we buy.

ADAM: Last week Jack brought in fresh seafood. He goes clamming. We had Surf & Turf — homemade clam chowder and steaks.

JEREMY: The one thing we don’t do is tell our wives what we’re having for dinner. We eat really well here.

ADAM: In 16 years of being a professional firefighter, I’ve had maybe three meals that weren’t good. For the things that I cook, I’m harder on myself. My specialty is probably firehouse fajitas. There’s no real recipe. I’ve cooked enough and the guys have all cooked enough that we just make it happen.

As Adam slices two extra-long baguettes with a bread knife and slathers the freshly cut pieces with butter, John slips the lasagna into the oven, then turns his attention to making a salad. Cooking at the station is an integral part of these men’s way of life, but given the nature of their work, getting to the actual meal can sometimes prove a little difficult.

ADAM: Today we were headed toward the line [at the grocery store], cart full. Call comes in — we need to take it. We have a good relationship with our local Safeway, so the produce guys roll our cart into the cooler. When we come back, they wheel it out, and we go up and pay. It happens regularly.

JEREMY: Years ago, we burned the kitchen. A guy was frying fish. They got a call and took off. When they came back, the fire alarm was going off. Now the appliances are wired so that when the bells go off, they kill all of the electrical outlets. The ovens and stovetops all shut off.



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