I've just returned from the Spring 2010 Odd Pairs event, which was a delight. Ben, Erik, Jacob, and crew put together one of the more relaxed, smoothly-run pairing events I've seen, remarkable for its lack of tense chefs, and for prudent portioning, spacing, and invites that allowed every guest to savor a nice amount of food and drink in a reasonable amount of personal space without queues. Most of all, it was friendly in a genuine sense, encouraging strangers to meet and talk and create new "odd pairs," which will propel future events and conversations about the benefits of local and/or sustainable foods.
I was invited to the event not as a foodie, but as a singer, since the planning team had caught one of my choirs on
NPR's Worldview last month, and thought Siberian a capella would be odd entertainment, which I hope we provided. This aspect of the evening provided some neat resonance, since we mingled with the crowd in different phases of the evening, and got to share our own favorite Chicago food experiences - our choir has had a longstanding post-rehearsal dinner club since 1997, perennial favorites being Moon Palace, Lao Sze Chuan and Hopleaf (in addition to the Medici and Jimmy's).
The idea here is to get two local chefs or ingredient providers together and innovate crazy flavor combinations in a friendly environment; the crowd enjoys them, and then helps a celebrity judge pick a winner. There were five food teams, plus cocktails from North Shore Distillery. Here were the entries for the night, in menu order:
Sambar Spiced Vada with coconut Chutney and Green Tea, served with Green Tea Beer
from Glazed Donuts Chicago and Ineeka Tea
I loved the green tea beer, which tasted mostly like a good toasty malt with some brewed tea leaf notes, the green mintiness not coming through aggressively, more like a mellow Chinatown table tea note. The coconut chutney was delicate and surprisingly creamy. The sambar donut was quite dense and dry, and this overall combination pushed it a bit for me, while I still appreciated the playfulness.
Springtime Carrot Soup with Trio of Salted Marshmallow "Croutons"
from FIG Catering and Beyond The Shaker
This could be on the menu at Schwa or Alinea. The carrot soup was beautifully vegetal and fresh with sparing use of cream or spice, which allowed the salty, crunchy-topped marshmallows (in three varieties: shallot, ginger wasabi lemongrass, and bacon fumee de sel) to explode on the palate. This pairing struck me as quite logical (even with its requisite oddness), with the comforting precedent of hot chocolate-marshmallow and sweet potato casserole-marshmallow pairs. I thought this was the best-designed dish for a crowd of 100, soup kept perfectly hot and marshmallows supple, with samples of the custom salts available for tasting and smelling.
Caramelized Onion Shortbread Topped with Fontina, Bacon, Chili, and Pecan DAS Caramels, Spicy Red Cabbage Slaw, and Black Lava Salt
from Swim Cafe and Das Foods
Bacon and salted caramel have always made perfect sense to me (from my bacon-and-Mrs. Butterworth days), and I imagined the extra flavors, particularly the cabbage, would throw too many wrenches into the works, but this was my second favorite dish of the night. I could taste every element, and the execution of the melty caramel center under the crispy ingredients on the top of the bites was again quite amazing in the mass-serving setting. I could have done with less shortbread to make this more of a one-bite appetizer presentation, but could also picture digging into a bigger portion with a fork. Das also had some dynamite lollipops, from bacon and ginger-lemon to orange-pomegranate and salted caramel, very intensely flavored.
Skewered Quitan with Ginger Bliss BBQ Sauce
from Great Taste Cafe and Ginger Bliss
Ginger Bliss is a favorite indulgence from Hyde Park Produce, and I was excited to meet the owners. I consider their juices (particularly the ginger-pineapple) a cure-all during cold season. I haven't considered ginger as a barbecue sauce ingredient outside of char siu glaze, and this could convince me, although I was not as moved by the "quitan," a quinoa-based seitan (developed for this event), which I still found to be a bit grainy and grassy.
Honkers Granita with Triple Distilled Citra Hop Mist and Kumamoto Oysters
from Goose Island and L20
You don't have to ask me twice to dive into fresh oysters. The problem with them is that any accompaniment is destined for second stage, and the beer shaved ice (unconcentrated and quite saltless) was more of a distraction than an enhancement. It was still a beautifully-composed bite (in bad phone-camera focus):

When the singing and tasting were through, the crowd was asked to show appreciation by applause, and the clamor matched the leaning by hip hop artist and green event-planner / caterer judge Cleetus Friedman: FIG / Beyond the Shaker for the win. Molly had committed herself to victory in a PM, and she was right on. That was some damn fine soup.

North Shore kept everyone lubricated with one soothing delight (gin, oj, honey, whole egg) and one shock to the system (absinthe with passion fruit puree, brandy, and bitters, the anise and fruit a jarringly entertaining combo), and like Ronnie at last LTH picnic, served with grace under fire, turning out very consistent and generous pours. I will look for their spirits again.
I hope to attend or read reports about future Odd Pairs events; this was my kind of fun with great people, and I am inspired by the pairing of chefs and caterers with artisans like Ginger Bliss, Das, and Beyond the Shaker. I can't wait to see which new friendships from this event carry into experimental entries at the next one. Bravo to all involved.