Cape Arago at Sunset

Cape Arago at Sunset

To anyone who has taken even a cursory gander over previous posts, my obsession with fried oysters is readily apparent. While I did make a noble effort to eat healthfully on the road this year, I could not deny myself oysters when traveling to the coast. And, I had been waiting for years to eat the perfect fried oysters in Coos Bay.

This winter was the fourth year I have conducted site visits in Coos Bay. Each time I visit, I am in town for exactly one dinner and one lunch. After consuming my first meal of fried oysters in the town at the unsurprisingly disappointing Red Lion restaurant, I vowed to find some exceptional fried oysters in the area. Hey, if you only have two meals per trip, they should be worthwhile. (And, lunch is always the Cafe Mediterranean. It may be perplexing that I eat falafel and lentil soup every single time I have lunch in Coos Bay. But, that’s where my people want to go.)

My proclivity for oysters has propelled me to restaurants up and down the Oregon Coast. Typically, oysters are some of the freshest items on the menu. So, they are a safe bet. Plus, virtually anything good tastes even better fried. On the Southern Oregon Coast, it seemed that Charleston, the town on the ocean just west of Coos Bay/North Bend, would have lots to offer, especially given that it is renowned for their seafood. So, I thought my quest to find my perfect oysters in the Coos Bay area would be easy. Not so.

Marine Mammals of Simpson Reef

Marine Mammals of Simpson Reef

My search began with the February 2008 trip to a place recommended by Rachel Ray, The Oyster Cove Grille and Bar. It sounded promising. I arrived too early (they open at five), and killed time by meandering up the Cape Arago Highway in driving rain, stopping to bolt from the car and read educational markers about Simpson Reef. By the time I returned, I was soaked and ready for my plate of dreamy fried oysters.

The inside of the Oyster Cove Grille and Bar is all lovely dark wood and sweet tables with white linens and small bouquets. I felt odd throwing my soaked rain jacket over the seat and taking a table all to myself. Additionally, I was the only one in the restaurant, and I discovered after sitting down how expensive it was.  To be honest, what I remember is the awkwardness. The meal was forgettable. I paid too much for what I hoped would the ultimate dish of fried oysters and was left feeling robbed.

The next day, a local told me I had gone to the wrong restaurant. “There is another place. Just to the left after the bridge.” I vowed I would go there next time.

Unfortunately, the next time I didn’t make it as far south as I had intended. Instead, I ate in Yachats and had sub-par oysters in a restaurant decorated by a repeat pattern of saucy looking hippie mermaids. That was March 2009. A sad time.

And, so March 2010 came around. It was my last visit to Coos Bay for my job. I had to find my oyster place. I knew it was supposed to be. And, I was ready.

As my colleague Matt – to whom I had relayed the trials and tribulations of my search – and I crossed over the bridge into Charleston, I eagerly looked to the left. I had been waiting for this moment for three years. Rays of light would come down from heaven to shine on the house of my perfect oysters. There would be a bugle call signaling that I had finally arrived. Or, at the very least, there would be a weather-worn clapboard building with the signature blue metal roofing of the coast with a sign out front heralding a name based on a provincial maritime pun.

No. There was a pile of burned rubble.

High Tide Cafe's Jaunty Sign

High Tide Cafe's Jaunty Sign

I don’t know that I can adequately articulate the disappointment that swept over me. At first, I refused to process it. “Well, let’s drive around and see if they were talking about someplace else.” No. They were not. “Let’s drive up to Cape Arago and see if things are different when we come back.” They were not. The giant pile of rubble was still there. Still charred. Still disappointing.

Slightly down the road from the ruins of my perfect oyster house, was another restaurant with an appropriately pun-based coastal name, The High Tide. From the outside, it looked either closed or exceptionally sketchy. Turned out to be neither of those things, but it also wasn’t particularly good.

My tiny plate of fried oysters were not only lackluster, but expensive. All in all, they made me even sadder. My colleague’s dish was equally boring and over-priced. I have since been told they make decent fish tacos, which I suppose are just fine. But, I wanted fried oysters, my perfect fried oysters. And, that was too much to ask of Charleston.

I end with a plea: If you know of a place in Charleston (or nearby) that has those perfect fried oysters – the ones that are crispy on the outside, luscious and juicy ocean on the inside – please tell me. I can’t let go of the hope that my oysters are there, even though they may have literally gone up in smoke.

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The Chowder Bowl

The Chowder Bowl

Chowder Bowl, you were the reason I wanted to go to Newport as a child. There was something magical about a grilled cheese sandwich after pushing through the cold wind along the surf . Yes, a grilled cheese sandwich on the coast. For those of us Oregonians who were finicky eaters as children, we always had grilled cheese at the coast. Seafood was still a little scary. But, that grilled cheese paired perfectly with the mineral and salt left in my mouth after too long on the beach.

Armed with a more adventurous palate, I returned to The Chowder Bowl for the first time in nearly 15 years and discovered that it is even more magical than I remembered.

Stormy Tuesday nights in mid-December are not a particularly popular time to hang out in Newport, so I was among very few patrons seated at the wood tables with embedded sea scenes. The tables are the same ones that enchanted me as a child: whales and porpoises in a lighter wood swim through the dark cross-grain under moons.

The menu is more extensive than I recalled, which is probably more a result of my only seeing grilled sandwiches on it previously. I almost went for the fish and chips with a cup of chowder, all hallmark dishes, but decided to go with my gut instinct: fried oysters. (What can I say, I like oysters.)

RIP Nye Beach Chowder Bowl

RIP Nye Beach Chowder Bowl

“Good choice!” My server noted then added, “I love those. They are the freshest thing on the menu. They come from our bay and were just shucked this morning.” She motioned out the window to the Newport Bay, which is just over a hill through the darkness. Pleased, I sat in anticipation of my meal and read the brief notes about the history of The Chowder Bowl on the wall.

Apparently, The Chowder Bowl closed down for a short time after my last visit only to be re-established within a few months. It was hard for me to imagine Newport without The Chowder Bowl, and I gave a rather curious thanks for not having ever traveled here when it was closed.

My oysters came out in short order, along with this ridiculously heavenly garlic bread that is light and fluffy on the inside toasted just so on the outside. But, make no mistake, the oysters are the main show here.

They taste fresh and are free of any sand grains (something that seems to inexplicably plague many fried oyster dishes along the coast). The breading suits them well: not too heavy or greasy and with a pleasing blend of spices. Eating those oysters, I stopped caring about what people think of a lone woman in a restaurant gorging herself on fried food. While I wasn’t exactly eating with haste – I had to savor each one – I also wasn’t stopping or slowing down. The server checked on me, and we had a friendly chat about how supremely awesome the dish was, then I just kept eating. At the end, there were still one or two oysters left over. My inability to cram those orphan oysters down disappointed me. I wished I could teletransport them to Michael so he could also enjoy them.

All in all, The Chowder Bowl will remain one of the main attractions in Newport for me. One day, I might even try the grilled cheese again. But, for now, I will go for the oysters. Those perfect, succulent, dream-haunting oysters.

Fried Oysters with Chips and Garlic Bread

Fried Oysters with Chips and Garlic Bread

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Trail to tide pools at Devil's Churn.

Trail to tide pools at Devil's Churn.

I love Yachats. Spring breaks in elementary school were spent at the Yachats Inn back when it was still a motel, swimming in the heated in-door pool, hiking around Cape Perpetua, and watching the sunset over the rocky coastline. Later, cute, hippie cafes and shops were established, beckoning our family to linger in Yachats for coffee and astrology readings.

When I planned my March coast trip (which started with an unexpected stopover at Spirit Mountain Casino), I was bound and determined to get back to the sweet hamlet of my childhood. Unfortunately, by the time I got to Yachats the sun was already setting, and I realized I had no clue where to eat dinner as an adult. Mainly, I was incredibly bummed that my beautifully appointed hotel housed a full serivce spa but offered no food whatsoever. My dream of sinking into my bed to watch the sun drop into the ocean while someone quietly brought me room service (I imagined it would be a sauteed white fish with rice) was not going to materialize. And, so I began my ritual hunt.

View from room at Overlook Lodge at Sunset

View from room at Overleaf Lodge at Sunset

Yachats is primarily situated lengthwise along 101 with the center of town criss-crossed by sharp angled streets hitting the highway. Almost as soon as  you realize you are in the center of town, you are already hitting the deep curve that takes you across the river and out of town. All this makes for very difficult dinner cruising. Especially if you have low blood sugar and just finished conducting a seven hour compliance visit. However, after a number of death-defying u-turns, I scored a parking place in front of the Drift Inn and crossed my fingers.

The ambiance invites you to share dessert with friends of all generations. The singer-songwriter on stage looks like a family friend, the one who got up early when you were camping to start the stove and get everyone coffee. The patrons glow with wholesomeness.

Mermaids of the Drift Inn: Coven of Empowered Sea Vixens or Nautical Brothel?

Mermaids of the Drift Inn: Coven of Empowered Sea Vixens or Nautical Brothel?

And, there is a voluptuous mermaid and her coven of wise merwomen reprinted everywhere imaginable: on the wall, on tags for the homemade sauces, on the menu. She seems to have just emerged from the tide pools to find her mermaid daughter being lovingly groomed by the Grand Crone Mermaid. This scene is undoubtedly supposed to say something empowering about the feminine power of the ocean or somesuch, but I could’t help thinking the scene came across a little more like a nautical brothel moment featuring a grey-haired, half-fish madam. I chided myself for entertaining such un-wholesome thoughts, and turned to the menu.

While I had been dreaming of gently sauteed or grilled fish, price dictated something fried. I opted for oysters. They come with grilled polenta and vegetables, which sounded reasonably healthy. While I waited for the plate to arrive, I watched the woman in the booth in front of me enthusiastically cheer on the songster. She appeared to know all his songs without appearing to be his friend. I found this curious in such a small town. The songs themselves pondered father-son relations, husband-wife relations, other family members and other family members relations and there were some musings about the forest and nuclear fall-out in there too.

Fried Oysters, Grilled Polenta and Vegetables at the Drift In

Fried Oysters, Grilled Polenta and Vegetables at the Drift Inn

After a song or two, the oysters with polenta and vegetables arrived. Visually, it was not the most impressive. Everything was soggy and seemed to be melting into each other. But the oysters were passable, and I enjoyed the polenta more than I expected. It has a satisfying texture, which made me feel like, yes, I am EATING. However,  the real treat was the lemon custard pie I took back to the hotel room to enjoy to the sound of the ocean. The weight of the slice was impressive, the crust thick and flakey, the lemon custard powerful and dense.

Overall, the service was very pleasant and prompt. The food was decent but nothing to scream about. But, I did like the feeling of being transported back to the warm, safe place I remembered from childhood. A place where everyone seems to care for their brother, sister, mother, father, friend, grandmother mermaid, forest, nuclear waste site. And, that was nice. I just wish I was as innocent as I had been at that time too.

Close-up of Mermaids: See that one on the right looks awfully saucey

Close-up of Mermaids: See that one on the right looks awfully saucy

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