According to the City of Portland, "In all categories, the Eastside is more racially diverse than the Westside. Hispanics are most concentrated in North Portland at nearly 15% of the population. NE Portland has the highest concentration of African Americans at 30%. The concentration of Asians in Portland are mostly within NE, SE, and outer East Portland, with a percent population of 11%, 10%, and 9% respectively. Whites are the most common race group citywide." [1]
In 2016, Alana Semuels of The Atlantic wrote, "As black people moved into Albina, whites moved out; by the end of the 1950s, there were 23,000 fewer white residents and 7,000 more black residents than there had been at the beginning of the decade." She also said "by 1999, blacks owned 36 percent fewer homes than they had a decade earlier, while whites owned 43 percent more." [2] In 2021, the Southeast Examiner's Don MacGillivray said "Portland is known for its lack of racial diversity and its lack of African Americans", with a Black population at six percent and Latinos at 10 percent of the city's population. [3]
African Americans are concentrated in north and northeast Portland. [4]
As of 2010, approximately 1,400 Burmese people lived in the Portland metropolitan area. [5] Notable Burmese restaurants have included Rangoon Bistro and Top Burmese.
According to The Oregonian , "One in 10 residents in Portland were Chinese by 1890, making Portland’s Chinese community the second largest in the United States at that time." Ladd's Addition was among the city's first neighborhoods in which Chinese people were allowed to own homes. [6]
Notable Filipino restaurants have included Botanical Bakeshop and Magna Kusina.
Notable Indian restaurants have included:
Ethnic Japanese in the present-day Portland area are known to date back as far as 1834, though permanent Japanese residents did not appear until the 1880s. The Japanese community grew over the next several decades, and eventually, two Japantowns had been established in the city of Portland. Both of these ethnic enclaves disappeared during World War II's Internment of Japanese Americans. Following World War II, a number of the interned Japanese Americans returned to the Portland area. As of 2010, approximately 30,000 Japanese-Americans resided in Portland, Oregon with a total of 38,000 residing in the greater Multnomah County area. [7]
According to 2019 census data, approximately 400 Portland residents listed Palestinian as their ancestry. [5]
Notable Thai restaurants have included:
Portland had the fifteenth largest Vietnamese population in the United States, as of 2022. [8] Vietnamese coffee gained popularity in Portland in the 2020s. [9] Notable Vietnamese restaurants have included:
Approximately 75,500 Jews live in Greater Portland. [10]
Portland has the ninth largest urban Native American population in the United States. [11]
Portland has a substantial Romani population. [12] Approximately 3,000 Romani people live in the metropolitan area. [13]
The city of Portland, Oregon, United States, has experienced a boom in the number of food carts due to relatively low regulation compared to other North American cities.
Lúc Lắc Vietnamese Kitchen, or simply Lúc Lắc, is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon's Leon Chung Company Building, in the United States.
The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon on February 28, 2020.
There were approximately 60,000 people of Hispanic or Latino origin in Portland, Oregon, as of 2020; about 10% of the city’s population.
Ping was an Asian restaurant in Portland, Oregon. Chef Andy Ricker and restaurateur Kurt Huffman opened the original restaurant in Old Town Chinatown in 2009. In 2010, Ping was a semifinalist in the Best New Restaurant category at the James Beard Foundation Awards. It was also named a best new restaurant by GQ and earned a Rising Star award from The Oregonian.
Genie's Cafe, or Genies Cafe, is a restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Rose VL Deli is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon. It is related to sibling establishments Ha VL and Annam VL (2023).
Nong's Khao Man Gai is a Thai restaurant located in Portland, Oregon which primarily serves Khao man gai, a chicken and rice dish originating in Southeast Asia.
Ha VL is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon. The restaurant serves soups, including pho.
Pho Oregon, or Phở Oregon, is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon, specializing in pho.
Fish Sauce is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Thơm Portland, or simply Thơm, is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Hanoi Kitchen is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Desi PDX, or DesiPDX, is an Indian restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Pho Van is a Vietnamese restaurant chain based in Portland, Oregon. The original restaurant opened in southeast Portland in 1992. Owner Lam Van opened a second, called Silk by Pho Van, in northwest Portland's Pearl District in 2002. Third and fourth locations opened in Beaverton and on southeast Portland's Hawthorne Boulevard in 2003 and 2006, respectively. The business expanded to China in 2012. Silk rebranded as Pho Van Fresh in 2015.
Phở Kim is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Annam VL is a Vietnamese restaurant in Portland, Oregon. Established in 2023, the business is operated by the family behind local eateries Ha VL and Rose VL Deli.
Phở Gabo is a small chain of Vietnamese restaurants in the Portland metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of Oregon. The business is owned by Eddie Dong and has operated in Hillsboro since 2015 and Happy Valley since 2022. Previously, a third location operated in northeast Portland's Roseway neighborhood from 2018 to 2024. It closed due to a series of odor complaints by an anonymous neighbor, resulting in multiple visits from inspectors as well as fines.
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