Tag Archives: Joule

2012 in Food: No Top Chef, But 26 Favorites for the Seattle Area

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In the hotly contested best burger category, my current favorite is Li'l Woody's. There's good char on the meat, but the best part is the simple bun. Why do restaurants insist on using brioche as they make a more upscale burger? I prefer a simple, soft bun that doesn't overwhelm the beef.

Joining Paseo and Salumi in offering my favorite sandwich in Seattle is Katsu Burger. You can select beef, chicken, or tofu, but I prefer the classic pork. The nori fries are great, too. (More on the sandwich and Katsu Burger here.)

Favorite pho? That currently goes to Pho So 1. The broth is flavorful and fresh, with good depth of beef. (There are a number of good restaurants in that strip mall at 12th and Jackson.)

Ramen in Seattle falls short of Japan standards. But if I have to pick one bowl, it might belong to Showa. I liked the original recipe more than the one pictured here, but this miso ramen has an interesting broth that is milky and cloudy, almost tonkotsu-like in both appearance and taste.

Someone recently asked me what my very favorite Asian noodle bowl would be in Seattle. Strangely enough, I didn't have a specific answer, but I do know that I enjoy wide noodles, and especially love hand-shaved noodles. Pictured are dan dan noodles, hand-shaven, at Seven Stars Pepper.

For favorite Chinese restaurant in the Seattle area, the spice lover in me will actually travel to Bellevue to eat at Bamboo Garden. It's in a strip mall next to an adult toy store, it has an incredibly adventurous "Take a Walk on the Wild Side" menu, and it does a delicious version of my favorite Chinese dish: ma po tofu.

Speaking of the Eastside, I'll further travel to Issaquah to eat my favorite Thai food in the area. Noodle Boat isn't shy about spice levels, which makes their varied menu even more interesting. Pictured is BKK, which is what they call their version of hor mok. (More on my latest meal at Noodle Boat here.)

I'm thankful that a friend introduced me to Huong Binh, which is now my favorite Vietnamese restaurant in Seattle. The regular menu is solid, but I especially like the weekend specials, which includes this chao long, or pork offal congee.

Pick my favorite sushi restaurant in Seattle? That's tough. If I want to simply eat sushi and sashimi, I'd likely choose Kisaku. The chef knows that in addition to uni, I love hotate konbu jime, which is kelp-marinated scallop. (And don't get me wrong...other dishes are great at Kisaku, like the agedashi tofu.)

Then again, I also enjoy Sushi Kappo Tamura. Great sushi, and also a nice variety of ippin (small plate) dishes. This year, I enjoyed featuring Tamura in an article I wrote about kaiseki dining for IBUKI magazine.

Another great option for sushi is Mashiko. This restaurant is committed to sustainable seafood, which means dinner can be an educational experience, opening your mind to new types of seafood. (More on scallop dishes around Seattle here.)

Every year brings a number of new restaurants. For breakfast, my favorite new spot is Crumble & Flake Patisserie, where you can get great pastries to go. Pictured is the amazing smoked paprika and cheddar croissant.

The Whale Wins is another of my favorite new restaurants. Sharing space with the newly relocated Joule, The Whale Wins gets well-deserved raves for its roasted meats and vegetables, like this roasted trout and lemon dish.

Continuing with my list of favorite new restaurants, I give a nod to Blind Pig Bistro. This little restaurant has an intriguing menu, interesting ingredient combinations, and flavors that pop. Pictured is hamachi crudo with avocado, chilies, and apple. (More on Blind Pig Bistro here.)

I'm thrilled that my neighborhood, Queen Anne, has a hot new restaurant. LloydMartin is another of my new favorites, again with fascinating dishes on an ever-changing menu. In addition to the composition on the plate, I liked the varying textures and flavors of this porcini and pickled asparagus with fried egg, pistachio, and foie gras. (More on LloydMartin here.)

Tanglewood Supreme could be at the top of the list of new hidden gem restaurants. I recommend making the trip to Magnolia to try this local seafood bistro with inventive preparations, like these Alaskan Weathervane scallops with macadamia nuts, Thai and Indian eggplant, green curry, and naan puffs. (More on scallop dishes around Seattle here.)

Rounding out my list of favorite new restaurants is Hot Cakes Molten Chocolate Cakery. This cute dessert shop has childhood (and adult) treats, like this s'more molten chocolate cake: a smoked chocolate cake on a pool of dark caramel, topped with a roasted marshmallow and served with graham crackers. It's ooey, gooey, and smokily satisfying.

Moving on to overall favorite restaurants in Seattle, I turn first to Seif Chirchi and Rachel Yang. I've long adored Joule, but I'm at least equally enamored with Revel these days. Dumplings, pancakes, noodle bowls, and more in a casual setting seems so right.

Another pair of my favorite restaurants are Le Pichet and Cafe Presse, where I recently enjoyed this tartine montagnarde aux poires (“winter pears, Comte cheese and grain mustard-caramelized onions baked on country bread, topped with watercress”). At either of these places you'll find chocolat chaud, which is my favorite chocolate treat in Seattle.

It's off to the Eastside for my final pair of overall favorite restaurants. Cafe Juanita serves spectacular northern Italian food, often featuring a few offal dishes. And occasionally there's experimental fun, like this Alaskan red king crab with green apple sorbetto and crab butter powder.

Also in Kirkland is Trellis, another favorite restaurant of mine, offering true farm-to-table fare. My favorite dessert there: lemon sage flan with sage-infused syrup, lemon sage tuile, and candied lemon. (Other favorites that I don't hesitate to recommend to others: Crush, Sitka & Spruce, Spinasse, Art of the Table, and Canlis.)

Beyond Seattle, I've been discovering great food in Victoria the past few years. At Fol Epi, you'll find one of my favorite sandwiches in the world: smoked albacore tuna. (More on this sandwich and my latest trip to Victoria here.)

It's well worth a visit to The Bluff at Friday Harbor House on San Juan Island. I was very impressed with my entire tasting menu (plus the next morning's breakfast), with one highlight this flash-fried kelp & calamari with smoky tomato sauce and hazelnut & citrus dusts. (More on The Bluff and Friday Harbor in general here.)

Andrew Zimmern's visit to Seattle aired earlier this year, and among the "Bizarre Foods" that he (and I) tried was this shiokara (fermented squid guts) at Maneki. (More on Zimmern's stop at Maneki here.)

Many Seattleites are watching the current season of "Top Chef" to spot local food luminaries. (The season's been a bit of a disappointment so far.) The new year will bring a couple of "Kitchen Nightmares" episodes of local interest, including one that saw the transformation of Everett's Prohibition Grille to Prohibition Gastropub. I recently described some of what I witnessed firsthand.

Perhaps the most exciting food event I experienced this year wasn't in Seattle, but in nearby Portland. Feast Portland was a fabulous food frenzy, and if we can't have such an event in Seattle, we're lucky to have one of this quality so close to home. As reported, I was lucky to attend, and hope to return in 2013.

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As the year comes to a close, seems like everyone is compiling their Top 10 restaurant lists for 2012. Meanwhile, throughout the year, people take to Twitter and Facebook to scream that “this” or “that” is the best—making your pick more like the worst.

I feel fortunate for any opportunity to eat out, and prefer to call restaurants my “favorites” rather than proclaim any as the best. Based on a year of eating, here are my favorites for 2012.

Since I especially love Asian food, I’m selecting some of my favorite noodles, sushi joints, and restaurants for particular Asian cuisines. For kicks, I’m also including my favorite sandwiches and burger in Seattle. More generally, check out my choices for favorite new restaurants—and a few favorite overall restaurants as well. Based on a number of “Passport to Pleasure” articles this year, I’ve got a couple of favorite eateries to try when you want to escape from Seattle. Finally, you’ll find a few food “events” that stood out this year.

See the slideshow above for my 26 favorite food experiences in the Seattle area for 2012.

Semifinalists Announced for 2012 James Beard Awards

It’s awards season, and the Seattle food scene is again abuzz about the just-announced James Beard Award nominations. Today we learned who the semifinalists are, with that list getting whittled down to finalists on March 19, and winners announced on May 7.

The full list is well-worth a look. On the national level, Altura earned a nomination as best new restaurant. (I agree!) Canlis cashes in for both Best Restaurant and Best Wine Program categories. Perennial participant Tom Douglas is a semifinalist for Outstanding Restaurateur, Holly Smith for Outstanding Chef, and Blaine Wetzel for Rising Star Chef (meaning under 30). In the new Outstanding Bar Program, Zig Zag Cafe represents Seattle.

Especially interesting is the Best Chef Northwest category, which this year features interesting semifinalists from Seattle and further afield in Washington state:

  • Chris Ainsworth, Saffron Mediterranean Kitchen (Walla Walla)
  • Matt Costello, Inn at Langley (Langley)
  • Matt Dillon, Sitka and Spruce
  • Renee Erickson, Boat Street Cafe
  • Jason Franey, Canlis
  • Ethan Stowell, Staple and Fancy Mercantile
  • Jason Stratton, Spinasse
  • Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi, Joule

I’m always curious about the Portland nominees, and the list there is also solid (including three from elsewhere in Oregon):

  • Aaron Barnett, St. Jack
  • Matthew Bennet, Sybaris (Albany)
  • John Gorham, Toro Bravo
  • Christopher Israel, Grüner
  • Brendan Mahaney, Belly (Eugene)
  • Naomi Pomeroy, Beast
  • Adam Sappington, The Country Cat Dinner House & Bar
  • Cathy Whims, Nostrana
  • Justin Wills, Restaurant Beck (Depoe Bay)

The other regional nominees:

  • Jeff Drew, Snake River Grill (Jackson Hole, WY)
  • James Honaker, Bistro Enzo (Billings, MT)
  • Jeff Keys, Vintage Restaurant (Ketchum, ID)

My early guess is that Seattle and Portland will be almost split in the final five contenders for the Best Chef Northwest category. Stay tuned!

Passport to Pleasure: Flying Kites and Exotic Bites in Wallingford

In his regular Passport to Pleasure feature, food writer and sex educator Jay Friedman shares hedonistic ideas (from nibbles to “naughtiness”) for couples visiting Seattle-area neighborhoods and more distant destinations.

Wallingford has had a reputation as a neighborhood for families. But children are typically a by-product of passion, right?

Whether you have children or not, here are some ideas of how you and your loved one can spend a day heating things up in the Wallyhood.

EAT UP THE EROTIC BAKERY

Your first stop must be the Erotic Bakery. No need for embarrassment. This place has been open 25 years because it’s fun—in a folksy sort of way. Check out the cakes turning in the glass display, but since you’re going for a “quickie,” cash in on the craze and grab your choice of penis and vulva cupcakes. There are also cookies sculpted with body parts. Ah, the magic of marzipan.

As you shop the store, note that you can purchase pans to make provocative cakes in your own kitchen. (The breast-shaped pans look quite ample.) Or how about some blue ball ice cube trays to make good times explode at your next party? And it’s not just food-related wares at the Erotic Bakery. Before you leave, you can also replenish your stock of lubricants, games, and other adult novelties for your sex play.

GO BUY A KITE…

You’ll now go from an adult toy store to a kid toy store—though this is for kids from 5 to 105. It’s time for your inner child to come out and fly a kite, this time with support from a partner.

The Gasworks Park Kite Stop sells both single line and dual line kites. You can’t help but forget the worries of the world from the moment you enter the store, as you’ll be captivated by all the bright colors and interesting shapes and designs. Choosing one or two will likely be as challenging as learning to fly what you buy. (If you do need flying lessons, the friendly folks at the store will gladly give you tips.) Perhaps a simple orange butterfly kite, or maybe a classic box kite in rainbow colors to start? Pick up other toys like bouncing balls and yo-yos as back-up if you fear kite-flying failure.

…AND GO FLY A KITE

Gas Works Park is not just for the Fourth of July. It’s actually a lot more relaxing the other 364 days of the year. The 19+ acre parcel of land, cleared in 1906 to build a plant to manufacture gas from coal, became a public park in 1975. Parts of the plant remain, seemingly built into the park, and the hilly terrain makes for a perfect place to picnic while taking in views of Lake Union, the city, and all the surrounding activity on and around the lake.

Sit back and watch the seaplanes land and take off while enjoying your anatomically correct (or not) cupcakes. Then it’s time to climb the hill, take out those kites, and laugh as you both try to let them sail into the sky. Work together to get one going, communicating and negotiating and deploying all the skills that are useful in other aspects of your relationship. Worst-case scenario: fall flat in your efforts and roll down the hill—together. Nothing should keep you from have fun in this park.

THE JOULE OF THE EVENING

Stay at Gas Works as long as you like, as you’re building your appetite for dinner. Tonight, you’re dining at Joule, appropriately named for the spark and energy of its food. Chefs Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi have received numerous accolades, including an appearance on Iron Chef America and semifinal status for a James Beard Award for Best Chef Northwest. Also, Joule was named one of the top 50 best new restaurants by Travel + Leisure in May 2009.

Yang and Chirchi recently birthed a baby and opened a second restaurant, Revel (in Fremont), so you’re no longer likely to see them in the kitchen together. (Too bad, as watching them work together teaches us a lot about relationships, as I described in my “Perfect Partners” article in Edible Seattle last year.) But regardless of who’s cooking in the kitchen, the food is imaginative and full of fabulous flavor.

Joule’s menu contains a limited number of items under the “Abroad” and “Native” flavor categories, as well as a 7-course “Collected” flavor menu for $35 per person (served family style for the entire table). It’s east meets west as you jump about the menu, and sharing small plates is the way to go. Expect a symphony of bold flavors, starting with any soup (I’ve long loved the spicy beef soup, but recently enjoyed corn vichyssoise with lime cream, cotija, and chili) and moving on to one of the fresh salads, such as bok choy with grilled corn. The Joule chefs are great with the grill, which you’ll notice in their preparations of beef tongue to octopus to fingerling potatoes. It’s always great to get a little glass jar of kimchi or pickles, and if you find whole fish on the menu (the current menu features whole mackerel with sherry glaze and cumin pickled carrots), grab it and pick through the bones with your partner. Joule is a contemporary little restaurant with dark wood and Asian accents, but your focus will be on the food—and then each other after eating one of the most intriguing and delicious meals possible in Seattle.