Tag Archives: Tanglewood Supreme

Tanglewood Supreme Serves Up a Supremely Good Happy Hour

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Pacific oyster trio with apple-shallot mignonette ($5)

Soup of the day: Lentil-green bean in potato broth, with crispy-fried Walla Walla onions ($3)

Salmon tartare with fennel seed crackers ($4)

Albacore ceviche with plantain chips ($4)

Root vegetable frites (yams, Russets, and sweet potatoes) with sweet garlic aioli ($3)

Grilled watermelon with baby kale and hazelnuts ($4)

Herbed farro with shaved radicchio ($4)

And one from the dinner menu: sake-poached octopus with Thai eggplant, daikon, scallion, and tamarind-soy glaze ($9)

Tanglewood Supreme made my list of favorites for the 2012 year in food, where I wrote that it could be at the top of the list of new hidden gem restaurants. This “local seafood bistro” has a Northwest focus to the menu, with plenty of Asian and Mediterranean influences that make the food full of delicious surprises.

Lunch was my preferred time to visit Tanglewood Supreme, as prices were reasonable and lingering at the kitchen counter meant a chance to watch the chefs prep for the dinner ahead. Dishes like fisherman’s stew and the salmon pastrami sandwich were favorites until lunch service was suspended several months ago.

But instead of lamenting the loss of lunch, why not take advantage of another way to enjoy Tanglewood Supreme in a cost-effective way? Here, food lovers will find one of the best happy hour deals in town. Served daily (Tuesday through Saturday) from 4-6pm, all items are three to five dollars. This Magnolia restaurant strives for sustainability, and during happy hour you can sample local oysters, salmon tartare, and a daily ceviche. Items like risotto, arancini, and various salads round out the happy hour menu.

I recent tried to get through the 14-item menu, stalling at the halfway point, partly because of a desire to sample something from the dinner menu. (By the way, ordering “omakase” is the way to go at dinner, as you’ll get seven courses for $45, which makes it well worth the drive to Magnolia.) Check the slideshow above for photos of the seven happy hour dishes I tried, plus the extra from the regular menu.

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.

In Search of Sweet (and Sustainable) Scallops in Seattle

Lately I’ve been wondering: What is the best bite from the ocean? What seafood do I find most seductive?

There are plenty of great choices. I love sea urchin and oysters, and when Ethan Stowell puts them together, you get the best combination of seafood I’ve ever eaten. I’m crazy about clams (especially razor clams), and find the texture of these and other bivalves tantalizing. At sushi restaurants, I’ve admittedly enjoyed bluefin tuna, and even eaten at maguro restaurants in Japan, but with awareness of overfishing, I’ve really tried to limit my consumption to near zero. And since visiting the Creative Salmon farm near Tofino, I’ve been giving a lot of thought to the debate between farmed and wild salmon, with Creative teaching me that sometimes there are no easy answers to the challenge of sustainable seafood and finding our way with food in the future.

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I’ve reached a realization that, for me, the pinnacle of perfection in seafood may be the scallop.

A jewel of the sea, this bivalve mollusk comes in a beautiful shell and is bursting with flavor. The scallop is at once savory and sweet. They’re easy to cook; like steak, you want to sear them on the outside in a very hot pan, but leave them basically rare on the inside to preserve their soft texture and sweetness. You can also eat scallops raw as sashimi, or squirt them with citrus to make ceviche.

In addition to being delicious, scallops are good for you. They’re full of omega-3 fatty acids, B12, magnesium and potassium. All contribute to cardiovascular health, another reason to heart scallops.

As an added bonus, scallops get good marks from Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch. The key is to buy “dry” scallops instead of “wet” ones. Dry scallops, like Weathervanes, are caught wild and immediately frozen at sea to keep at a high quality level. They’re said to have an almost vanilla color.

Wet scallops, on the other hand, are treated with preservatives and chemicals, typically phosphates (like sodium tripolyphosphate), which artificially “pump up” the scallops to make them look bigger. More snowy white in color, you pay for the increased water content, only to find them shrink during cooking and become dry and tasteless. (It’s also difficult to caramelize wet scallops.)

Lastly, on the sustainability front, farmed scallops like those from Qualicum Bay in British Columbia look promising. The Qualicums are actually a cross between a Japanese scallop (Patinopecten yessoensis) and the Weathervane (Patinopecten caurinu). Generally available year-round, I’m told that it’s been tough to get these scallops in recent months, but once you find them, they’re about the sweetest you’ll ever have.

If you’re as enamored with scallops as much as I am, here’s what I see some local restaurants doing with these sweet treasures from the sea.

tanglewood-scallop-640-0660Tanglewood Supreme

Tanglewood Supreme in Magnolia may be the best new hidden gem in our local restaurant scene. Striving for sustainability, this “local seafood bistro” serves ocean treats that are fished with good practices. And while there’s a Northwest focus to the menu, there are plenty of Asian and Mediterranean influences to make the food interesting.

Currently on the dinner menu, you’ll find Alaskan Weathervane scallops with macadamia nuts, Thai and Indian eggplant, green curry, and naan puffs. My scallops were perfectly seared, with the plate drizzled with just enough curry that I could dabble with how much I wanted those scallops sauced. Not timid with the heat (but not overwhelmingly spicy), the curry is a complement to the slightly bitter eggplant, and the puffs add a playful element to the presentation.

dukes-slider-640-0232Duke’s Chowder House

Duke Moscrip, owner of the local Duke’s Chowder House chain, is an enthusiastic advocate of high quality, sustainable seafood. Earlier this year, I accompanied him on a trip to Westport to see how Pacific Seafood peels, cooks, and packages shrimp at their processing plant. His latest passion appears to be scallops, featuring Weathervane scallops on a special menu. He calls them OMG (Oh My God) scallops, touting their tenderness and sweetness and saying that they scream for simplicity.

The menu includes a surf-and-turf option of ribs with scallops and shrimp (my scallops were way overcooked, though I’m told the issue is being addressed) and bacon scallop tacos (the scallop pieces were not quite as overcooked, but the flavor somewhat lost in the midst of Thai chili sauce, tequila lime aioli, and cucumber pico de gallo—combined with the blueberry tortilla, this smacked more of Momiji sushi roll syndrome than the simplicity I was seeking). Best bet might be the topless scallop slider, served on bite-sized sourdough bread with pesto, avocado, and cucumber pico de gallo.

coastal-scallop-640-0620Coastal Kitchen

Scallops are one of chef Jason Jones’ favorite ingredients at Coastal Kitchen—a restaurant which has been serving sustainable seafood since 1993. Rather than lamenting the difficulty of sustainability, he feels that we should embrace the challenge. Specific to scallops, he says “they’re a delicacy, and while they may seem prohibitively expensive, we should slow consumption and simply appreciate them.”

The day I went it, the special was pan-seared scallops with sunchoke risotto, porcini mushrooms, and watercress. As at Tanglewood Supreme, the scallops were perfect—nicely caramelized on the outside, soft and tender on the inside. The risotto and mushrooms were rich and earthy, while the watercress offered a refreshing counterbalance to the dish.

fivehooks-scallop-640-8494Fish Hooks Fish Grill

This new, family-friendly restaurant at the top of Queen Anne features enthusiastic staff, perhaps to the point of service being too friendly and not formal enough. Chef-owner Paul Saito says that he strives for sustainability (“I want to avoid things like Chilean sea bass”), but can’t always keep that goal with dishes at the lower price point that Fish Hooks Fish Grill offers.

As an example, he uses Weathervane or “similar” scallops in his premium plates, and dry, large bay scallops for his fried dishes. I tried the Crispy Combo of prawns and scallops, and found the seafood to be overcooked, with the breading completely overwhelming the flavor of both the prawns and scallops. (I preferred the fish and chips, as the large pieces of cod provided a better breading-to-fish ratio, though I’m not a fan of the “rustic” batter—or the fries, for that matter.)

mashiko-hotate-640a-8722Mashiko

At this sustainable sushi restaurant in West Seattle, chef-owner Hajime Sato serves seafood that is as local, seasonal, and fished with caring environmental practice as possible. He’s a fan of Weathervanes and also supports farmed scallops, as they’re filter feeders and easy to grow. (Wild scallops are often dredged, which can destroy the sea floor.) Like me, he wonders why so many Americans throw away other good parts the scallop, like the abductor muscle and the roe. Texture is apparently not something we have a taste for…yet.

Sit at the counter at Mashiko and order omakase, letting Sato serve you what he wishes, and you’ll get good education (non-preachy) and delicious dishes (you can tell him some of your preferences). During a recent visit, I enjoyed a geoduck, scallop, and Japanese pear ceviche that I thoroughly enjoyed. The contrast in texture between the geoduck and scallop was fun, and the slight sweetness of the pear enhanced the eating experience.

kisaku-hotato-640-4575Kisaku

After all the combinations and preparations and “cooking” techniques and sauces and flavorings, my favorite way to eat scallops might be the most simple: as sashimi or sushi. The soft texture is comforting and the natural, oceanic sweetness still thrills me. You can enjoy scallops as part of your sushi meal at Kisaku in Tangletown, but I’d like to let you in on something better.

Upon arrival, ask chef-owner Ryuichi Nakano to prepare hotate konbu jime. (Tell him I sent you, though he may already figure that out!) Nakano wraps the scallop (he uses dry ones from Hokkaido) in kelp and lets it sit for at least 30-45 minutes, amping the scallop up with umami. There’s no need for wasabi or soy sauce in this preparation. It’s absolutely delicious, and at the end of the day, my favorite way to eat scallops.