91²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ

Alumna Profile

Wholly Crêpe!

Jehnee Rains ’93

By Bill Donahue

When Jehnee Rains ’93 opened Portland’s finest creperie, Suzette, on Southeast Belmont Street in 2012, she brought with her a certain visual aesthetic—wry and wonderstruck and informed, it seems, by bemused chats outside 91²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ’s beloved studio art building. In the front window of Suzette, there’s an ancient typewriter and an adding machine. Inside, there is a jumble of red leather theatre chairs and church pews, making, somehow, for a pleasant and homey refuge. 

Jehnee was an art major at 91²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ, a painter who did works in oil on glass. But after graduation, as she made plans to pursue an MFA, she got a job in a bakery. “I never looked back,” she says. “When I was painting, I always struggled with what I wanted to paint. But with baking, I always knew what I wanted to eat and explore.” Suzette’s menu is at once curious and cosmopolitan. The Goat Fig Pig crepe, for instance, combines goat cheese, marsala-soaked figs, and prosciutto. The Smoked Salmon Afrique is filled with a roasted garlic-chickpea spread and harissa. And every crepe at Suzette is infused with a little enchantment. “There is something very compelling to baking,” says Jehnee. “You take some raw ingredients—sugar and eggs, say—and then you heat them and something magical happens. You suddenly have a birthday cake, a crepe, a pie: You’ve made something new.”