Just like the Super-Friends, the area’s best local restaurants gather in an annual meeting to decide what you’ll be eating, when you eat out in the upcoming year.
The Food Services of America Trade Show takes up an entire hall of the Expo Center (each year’s show has a theme-this year’s was Wizard of Oz). The Trade Show is aisle upon aisle, row upon row of fantastic food samples (and by samples, I mean a full plate serving or slightly smaller)!
the Trade Show is only open to Restaurant Professionals and as the area’s best and brightest of the culinary world gather, they walk the aisles, sampling produce, meats, cheeses, drinks, condiments, and of course, dessert. All of this tasting in order to decide which fantastic new items you’ll be seeing on area restaurant menus in the next year!
I’m not a restaurant professional (though I keep hoping if I hang out in enough local restaurants, they’ll accept me as one of their own)! Despite my lack of restaurant pedigree, the fine folks at Food Services of America agreed to let me roam the halls of the Expo Center, sampling the samples in an effort to find a few of the most unique local items you may be seeing on local menus!
The decision was tough, I found non-dairy ice-cream that tasted like the real thing, and chicken straws (just like chicken nuggets, only straw-shaped), and a local company that not only buys local berries, but turns them into fabulous home-made pies, but I finally narrowed the selection down to just a couple fun and hopefully recognizable items to highlight. That way, when you see them in your area restaurant, you may say to your dining partner “this is a brand-new item, and I knew about it before almost anyone else”-people love to say that sort of thing to dining partners!
My first pick was found at the Zenner’s Sausage Booth, where they were unveiling a brand-new sausage variety; a Tillamook Cheddar Jalepeno Sausage, which they’d wrapped in a flour tortilla and grilled. If you see this on a menu, definitely give it a try! It is fantastic and gooey and sausage-y and has just a little kick to it!
Second, I found the only Pacific Northwest pickle producer at the trade show! Pleasant Valley Farms is located in North-Western Washington, and the gentleman manning the booth at the trade show was the pickle-maker himself (they called him “Mr. Pickle”…I’m not making that up)! I got to learn about a brand-new pickle that Pleasant Valley Farms will be rolling out in the upcoming year, a horseradish bread and butter pickle. I also got to try a garlic dill pickle at the Pleasant Valley Farms booth. I will go on record as saying that the garlic dill pickle was the best pickle I’ve ever eaten! If you want to try Pleasant Valley Farms, you will need to visit a local restaurant to do so. The company only sells to restaurants, not to supermarkets or direct to us non-restaurant folk!
Unless you are a restaurant industry professional, you won’t be getting an invite to next year’s fabulous array of samples, so if you want to try any of the items from the Food Services of America Trade Show, a great way to do so is to visit DoItNW.com. The website lists locally owned restaurants all over the area that may be carrying some new items discovered at the Trade Show this year.






