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Review: Losing Sight by Tati Richardson
ARC provided by the author, I also bought my own copy. This post includes affiliate links that may kick us a small percentage at no cost to you if you use them to shop. So if this post is useful, please use them to support my work -- it's so appreciated! When things are…
We Tried Trader Joe’s Gluten Free Yellow Mini Sheet Cake
with Chocolate Frosting! I've been on alert for Trader Joe's Yellow Mini Sheet Cake with chocolate frosting after seeing u/aswewaltz posted it in NY on Reddit 8 days ago. Every trip, I was disappointed. But today...finally... TJ's in the PNW have been blessed with the new gluten free sheet cake. So let's cut into it!…
We Tried Trader Joe’s Teriyaki Mushroom Mini Bao Buns
I was skeptical when I saw that Trader Joe's newest dumpling was teriyaki-flavored. Teriyaki in a bao? I imagined a gloopy super sweet soy-based sauce overwhelming the veg filling. But now that I've tried Trader Joe's Teriyaki Mushroom Mini Bao Buns? I think it's meant to be more of a shorthand toward a sweet,…

Feast Tofino: Long Table Dinner at Pacific Sands Resort

Dining al fresco looks and sounds fantastic, whether you’re sitting out in a vineyard or in an alpine meadow or beside the ocean. The Pacific Sands Resort was a gorgeous spot for Feast Tofino‘s Long Table dinner. We had great weather that week, so on a sunny, but still-chilly-at-the-beach evening, we gathered with 50-60 of our closest strangers under a tent strung with bare bulbs and hanging tea lights with Cox Bay in the background. It was picture perfect.

The Long Table dinner brought together Tofino and visiting chefs in teams, featuring the work of Lisa Ahier, SOBO; Warren Barr, the Wickinninish;  Amanda Cohen, DirtCandy; Billy Feltmate, Sea Shanty; Nicole Gomes, Nicole Gourmet; Robbie Elliot, Shelter; Lora Kirk, Ruby Watchco; Anita Lo, Annisa; Nick Nutting,  Wolf in the Fog; Ian Riddick, Great Room at Long Beach Lodge Resort and and Dylan Tilston, Fish Store and Oyster Bar.


The Pacific Sands was two hotels over from where we were staying, so although Feast had a shuttle for guests who parked in town, we just walked down the beach a spell and made a right. As we checked in, we were greeted with Sea Cider’s Kings and Spies, a sweet prosecco-like sparkling, and alder-smoked oysters. Mix-and-match vintage dishes dotted the long table and it was a casual, seat yourself, no placecards arrangement. After the oysters, we enjoyed what was my favorite bite of the night — crispy humpback prawns with a spicy mango salsa in a crunchy wonton wrapper.

We bumped into another couple who’d been at the Long Beach Lodge Resort/DirtCandy dinner a couple of nights earlier (they’re down below with the platter of beets) and chatted a bit before sitting down to the main event.

Mix-and-match vintage dishware – be still my heart.
Wildside Grill’s prawns with a spicy mango salsa in a fried wonton wrapper.

Each course — six in all — was paired with BC wines, cider or locally brewed beer and served family-style. From a logistics perspective on the chefs’ side, you can see how family-style made sense. Individually plating five courses for this number of people would have taken ages and they were already working out of a somewhat primitive setup inside the gazebo adjacent to the tent. But the math may have gone a little sideways, as for at least one course we got the dregs, scraping off the last three beet chunks on a platter between two people. When you’ve paid $110 per person, that’s a real letdown. Communal dining is great, but being at the mercy of other diners apparently determined to “get their money’s worth” is not.

The bulk of Feast Tofino’s events are actually dinners at the individual restaurants with just a few larger-scale anchor events like the Long Table dinner, so I’m taking our experience at the Long Beach Lodge/DirtCandy dinner as more indicative of the Feast Tofino experience overall. Next year, I’d look to mix it up and plan a visit prioritizing the dinners.

Feast Tofino’s final event for this year is a Pescetarian Pilau on the beach on Sunday, May 29. Tickets are $25 and available by calling Ocean Village at 250-725-3375.

Lightly cured albacore tuna with oyster aioli, crispy veal tongue and pickled knot weed.
Vancouver Island Salt roasted beets with Thai green curry sauce and grilled beet greens

Ling cod with Vancouver Island baby potatoes and clam nectar
Rhubarb custard tart
Categories: Events Travel
Michelle: