Why: With chilly and rainy weather settling in, it’s time for some hearty, sticks-to-your ribs fare. Menu items at Gustav’s have changed little since Horst Mager opened The Rheinlander in Portland in 1963 and followed up with Gustav’s, with restaurant locations in Portland, Clackamas, Tigard, the Portland International Airport and, of course, Vancouver.
Atmosphere: Belted by asphalt, it’s like an Alps lodge tucked away in the middle of Vancouver. Walk into the restaurant, and high ceilings with exposed honey-colored beams beckon. In the fittingly-named Alps Room, where we dinned, beer flags hung from the wooden rafters, a fireplace flickered and trophy deer heads dotted the walls — one with a Bavarian feathered cap. It was lunchtime on a weekday, and a few other diners were scattered around the room, where light Christmas music played in the background.
What I Tried: We started our meal with a fondue sampler, which comes with a trio of melted Swiss cheese in mini-crocks. Typically, the pots hold one each of melted Swiss cheese, tomato jam in melted Swiss and crab and roasted peppers in melted Swiss cheese. Enter my shellfish allergy and a need to nix the crab. The server readily swapped out the crab crock for an extra Swiss cheese, and the plate arrived with bread chunks, roasted pretzels, sliced apple and celery, along with fondue forks for dunking.
The fondue jettisoned me back in time to fondue dinners with bread chunks and cooked meat dipped in communal cheese sauces. Except in this offering, there was no heat source to keep the sauce from chilling. Still, it was fun to spear bread chunks while trying to avoid cheese sauce drips. And the apples made an interesting sour-sweet-savory dunk.