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Morning Matters

Terra Plata Begins Brunch Service

Tamara Murphy’s Melrose Market restaurant breaks out the biscuits, gravy, and Bloody Marys this weekend.

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Starting this weekend, Terra Plata’s open kitchen will be bestowing brunch on Capitol Hill’s hungry and hungover masses. Photo via Facebook.

Terra Plata has joined the brunch ranks. Tamara Murphy’s long-awaited and newly open Melrose Market restaurant reports that it will begin brunch service this weekend, from 10 to 3 on Saturday and Sunday.

Murphy is carrying her “earth to plate” concept into the morning time; the brunch menu includes a green chile pork with a fried farm egg and housemade tortillas, and manchego biscuits with chorizo gravy, also made in house. Also: Greek-style baked eggs with tomato and feta. The oysters Rock-a-Terra (a play on oysters Rockefeller; you got that, right?) consists of a large Pacific oyster topped with creamed winter greens, housemade chorizo and fontina cheese, baked and served with a Bloody Mary shot.

On the libations front, brunchers can quaff blood orange and ginger mimosas, or a Bloody Mary with tomato juice made in house, as well as house-pickled vegetables.

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Tags: Brunch, Terra Plata, Tamara Murphy

Morning Matters

Even More New Brunch Spots

Here are the latest restaurants pulling the morning shift.

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Phinney Market Pub and Eatery joins Seattle’s brunch bunch. Photo courtesy phinneymarketpub.com.

Not that we’re surprised, but a handful of new brunch joints have surfaced in recent weeks.

The Coterie Room is on board, as is Phinney Market Pub and Poquitos (though that last one doesn’t begin serving until 11:30—isn’t that what we call lunch?) This weekend Little Water Cantina joins the bunch. Even Molly Moon’s on Queen Anne is getting in the game: on Saturdays starting at 8am bowls of oats topped with maple bacon ice cream are available—a rather loose definition of breakfast, but we’ll go with it.

These are only a sampling of the latest to cook up new morning menus, you’ll find more on this map of brunch joints. We’ll continue to update it as we hear of more newcomers (and come they will). And if you know of a worthy arrival, throw it in the comments and we’ll add it to the map.

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Tags: Brunch

Morning Matters

Twenty of Seattle’s Newer Breakfast Spots

The options just keep coming.

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Morning glory: a pork belly waffle at Skillet Diner.

Readers, you’ll be happy to know brunch—the preferred repast of many an Emerald citizen—is booming. Still.

You can credit the surge to a relatively new way of thinking among restaurateurs: rare is the restaurant that opens without some sort of morning menu. If it isn’t in place from the get-go toques are quick to implement one, as Revel, Luc, and Golden Beetle demonstrated.

More neighborhood institutions are brunching. To wit, two weeks ago Cafe Lago rolled out Saturday-Sunday wood-fired offerings, taking a cue from the Harvest Vine and Spring Hill, which just buoyed its existing morning program with a more casual “brunch bar” offshoot. So are breweries and burger joints, like the coming-soon Red Mill Totem House.

Which brings us to this list of brunch and breakfast joints. Plotted are newcomers and dinner houses to recently add a breakfast bill. More will surface soon—Little Water Cantina, Lecosho, even the roving Where Ya At Matt have hinted that —but meantime here’s where to start the day.

Did we leave out one or three? Let us know!

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Tags: Breakfast, Brunch

Morning Matters

Cafe Lago Does Weekend Brunch

Pizza for breakfast? Why not?

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Cafe Lago, now serving brunch.

Montlake’s beloved Cafe Lago rolled out brunch service last weekend. And judging by the reception on the restaurant’s Facebook page, it’s pretty good!

All of the plates on the menu (priced at $11 and under, obviously skewing Italian) are fired in the restaurant’s oven. There are several pizzas—goat cheese with Yakima peaches, bacon rosemary, a sausage-arugula-fontina, your standard margherita—and two varieties of calzone. Where are the eggs, you ask? In a frittata of smoked mozzarella, parmigiano, sausage, and veggies; or baked sunny side up in a “fiery” tomato sauce. Or, as is popular these days, you can ask for one on the margherita pie for a dollar more. A couple of pastries—the scones in particular are a hit—round things out.

Brunch runs 9–2 on Saturday and Sunday.

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Tags: Brunch

Morning Matters

Where Can One Get a Tasty Breakfast Sandwich?

Some thoughts.

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A beacon for fans of the breakfast sandwich.

Skillet Diner serves up a craggy mass of biscuits buoyed by American cheese and house-made guanciale—it’s an Italian bacon taken from the jowls and as succulent as it sounds. The newly minted Spring Hill brunch bar has something similar, only with kassler ham.

I Love New York Deli touts one of the longer morning menus out there. The counter cooks up omelets (a Denver, a veggie, a reuben-inspired one) or slices up meats and squishes them into kaiser rolls. Nook —so tiny!—also options multiple ’wiches, each on a scratch buttermilk biscuit. The one with goat cheese and tomato jam sounds particularly promising. (But note: the restroom is deplorable.)

The Cherry Street coffee houses are reliable stops for anybody on the go. And for sweet teeth eschewing eggs, Volunteer Park Cafe has a deliciously naughty panini slathered with melty Nutella and sliced strawberries. Also worth a mention is their brie and apple baguette drizzled with lavender honey.

Spankin-new Li’l Woody’s swaps bread for a hamburger bun with its all-day egg-bacon-cheese stack, while Geraldine’s Counter, the favorite breakfast boite of Columbia City, piles onto sour batard toothsome bacon, scrambled eggs, tomato, arugula, and (always a bonus) aioli. Another bonus: hash browns. They come on the side.

Every loaf Homegrown slices turns to sandwich gold, and its AM varieties are no exception. Same story with Macrina Bakery. Here you really should shell out the couple bucks for the Zoe’s bacon and ask for extra of the spicy tomato sauce.

Recently a friend visiting from Chicago—a friend who would subsist on breakfast sandwiches were it an option—decided she had found the ultimate in eggy-cheesy goodness at Dahlia Bakery, where the English muffins are housemade. People also go pretty nuts for the fried egg and dungeness crab, topped with avocado and kicky mayo, at Seatown Seabar.

Where else?

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Tags: Breakfast, Brunch, Seattle Sandwiches

Father's Day Events

Father’s Day Weekend: Five Ways to Celebrate with Beer and Food

Oysters and a pint, competitive grilling, a beer festival in a state park…here’s how to toast the paternal figure in your world.

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Get a jump on the sibs: Take dad out for free fries on Friday.

Local marketing diviners seem to be banking on the fact that your Dad likes beer. And food. Because almost all of the Father’s Day events we found centered around these two things. (Well, one centers around competitive grilling, but food and beer are involved.) Frankly, though, it’s kind of a hard model to challenge. Besides, who has time to argue when there’s food and beer around?

BALLARD
1. Bastille has four brunch specials on Sunday (10am-3pm). These include a merguez sausage dish and oysters on the half shell served with a pint of Hoegaarden (both $15). The restaurant’s patio beer garden, open through the end of September, is available to you from 1 to 4pm.

CAPITOL HILL
2. One of Nosh Pit’s enduring obsessions is the monthly free French fry deal at Pike Street Fish Fry. But something tells me your dad has never partaken. Fries are free from 5 to 7pm this Friday, June 17. Brews from New Belgium are $2 each. (Bonus: taking your dad out on Friday will give you the jump on your brothers and/or sisters, who are likely planning something for Sunday. Suckers.)

FREMONT
3. PCC has organized a grilling competition—yup, competitive barbecuing—on Sunday, June 19 from 1-2:15pm at the Fremont Fair. There’s also a dog parade. And Redhook beer in special tents.

KENMORE
4. The annual Washington Brewers Festival in Saint Edward State Park begins Friday, June 17 and runs through Sunday the 19th.

Seattle Beer News reports that organizers have expanded the food options this year with a full-blown food court and plenty of picnic tables at which to feast. But of course, the main event here is the beer—there will be more than 200, and a larger selection of ciders this year too.

MADISON VALLEY
5. The Dad’s Day special at Luc is a grilled pork chop rubbed with sage mustard and served with vegetables. This, along with—you guessed it—a draft beer, will run you $20.

*Next year, I say we take this fun-with-dad-cliches approach to its logical extreme. We can pit dads against each other in a taking-out-the-trash competition. We can see which dad is best at feigning excitement over receiving a tie for Christmas, who can be most intimidating while screaming about how he’s always the one to take the dog out, and how come you damn kids still don’t take any responsibility for anything? Etc.

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Tags: Beer, Brunch, Barbecue, Father's Day, Beer Festivals, Father's Day 2011

Food Finds

For Your Weekend Consideration: Biscuit Brunch at Nook

The comfort food classic headlines the eatery’s morning meal.

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Get your biscuit fix at Nook.

Biscuits are quickly becoming a thing, thanks in part to this U District newbie known to draw such a crowd on weekends the grub sells out by noon. Those crowds come for the scratch “mini brunch” menu, which can be had on Saturdays starting at 8am.

In the kitchen of the teeny tiny Nook, owners and operators Alex Green and Aki Woodward turn out the handmade cakes and dress them up in a variety of ways: The bill posted last week included barbecue brisket on a biscuit (so fun to say it’s worth an order), poutine biscuit, and buttermilks with banana and pastry creme, or goat cheese, tomato jam, and egg. Also on the menu is a cheddar-chive variety, Nutella or jam toppings, and a breakfast soup. Note the offerings hover at $6 and under.

Should you venture to Nook and discover the buttered breads are no more (son of a biscuit!), you might consider this upmarket take on a fried chicken biscuit —so delicious it’s ridic.

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Tags: Brunch, Food Trends in Seattle, Biscuits

Breakfast Out of Bed

Another One for Mother’s Day Brunch Consideration: Golden Beetle

Because nothing says “I love you, mom” like a goat confit omelet.

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The interior of Golden Beetle in Ballard.

Should you still be on the hunt for a spot to take mom on Sunday, and if you’ve been wanting to try the place but haven’t yet scored a reservation, don’t forget Golden Beetle just joined the brunch game.

For Mother’s Day, the new Maria Hines restaurant will cook up four types of crepes (caramelized apple sounds pretty good), plus roasted eggplant omelet with lacinato kale, feta, and herbs. But if meat strikes Mom’s fancy, don’t pass up the option to add goat confit to that omelet or the lamb scramble made with harissa and spinach.

Brunch service runs from 10-2. Call for reservations.

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Tags: Brunch, Mother's Day, Maria Hines

Reporter's Notebook

Kids and Fine Dining: More Thoughts

Dale Levitski advises Seattle chefs to “be confident;” Herbfarm owner Carrie Van Dyck says it “depends on the kid.”

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Dale Levitiski, banner of children.

For this month’s Seattle Met I wrote a story about Dale Levitski, chef at Chicago restaurant Sprout, and his policy of banning any child under 12 during weekend brunch (check out the article’s comments for a lively debate on the matter).

Here are two things that I couldn’t squeeze into the article but that I thought might interest you.

First, I asked Levitski what he would say to a Seattle chef who wanted to implement an adults-only brunch but was nervous about backlash. Here was his advice: “Be confident! The customer is not always right. This is your restaurant. You’ll take some bumps and bruises put people will come around.”

Secondly, I wasn’t able to include the conversation I had with Carrie Van Dyck. She owns fine-dining standard barer the Herbfarm with her husband Ron Zimmerman, and had some interesting insights to share.

“Depends on the kid,” was Van Dyck’s main message. Given the multi-hour meals at the restaurant, Van Dyck says that some children just can’t handle it. But, she says, she’s known (lucky) kids who have grown up eating at the Herbfarm and now bring their own families there. That said, Van Dyck admitted that kids between age 1 and 6 are always “questionable.” After age 6, “it depends on how they are raised.”

She wouldn’t tell me any dishy stories about young kids who tore up the Herbfarm while the parents sat idle, but Van Dyck did recall a time when a family brought a one-year-old baby who kept crying the whole evening. The Parents “had to keep getting up,” to sooth the baby, which distracted them from enjoying the meal.

And that, says Van Dyck, is the biggest problem that restaurateurs have with kids acting out of turn: it’s not the crying or the annoying other customers, it’s the fact that the behavior prevents their parents from enjoying the experience.

Oh and interesting factoid about the Herbfarm: the restaurant will actually make kid-friendly food—hamburgers, etc—upon request. Who knew?

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Tags: Restaurant News, Brunch, Chefs, Family and Relationships

Breakfasts Out of Bed

Mother’s Day Brunches

A sampling of the fare out there, made special just for Mom.

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Two ways to a mother’s heart: flowers, a tasty brunch.

Almost all of the restaurants featured in last month’s Easter brunch roundup are holding court this Sunday, so in the interest of avoiding repeats, Nosh points you to six other options for feting the special lady.

Allium on Orcas 10—2
Hop the 10:35 ferry to Orcas Island, where Mom is treated to fresh fruit with vanilla cream and a hint of Grand Marnier and an entree of baked ham with sour cherries, wild mushroom and truffle medley, or halibut with tarragon pesto. $39/adult; reservations recommended.

BOKA Kitchen and Bar 8—2:30
Start with the generous seafood platter then move on to the inventive mains like braised veal cheek hash. Individual items $9-$15/person; call for reservations.

Cafe Flora 9—2
The highlights of this vegetarian repast? Hibiscus scones and orange cinnamon twists, truffled asparagus benedict, spring foraged tartlet, and a huckleberry chevre French toast. $23/adults, $14/children; reservations recommended.

Piatti Ristorante and Bar 10—3
Let Mumsie kick back with a sparkling pomegranate mimosa or a peach nectar bellini while the rest of the family feasts on rock shrimp scramble, eggs pomodoro, or omelet with rosemary ham. Individual items $11.50-12.60/person, $6.50 for kids brunch; reservations recommended.

Volunteer Park Cafe 8—4:30
Locally sourced, farm fresh ingredients perk up this four-course family style meal featuring chilled English pea bisque, olive oil poached halibut, seasonal greens with citrus vinaigrette, herb roasted lamb rack, and strawberry shortcake. $65/adults, $15/child; reservations recommended.

Westport Winery 10—3
Partake in a Fête de Mères while raising money for the Westport Arts Festival. Main courses include a benedictine quiche, baked french toast with pecan streusel, roasted rosemary potatoes, apple sausages, and a raspberry velvet pie. Chase the meal with a walk in the sculpture garden. $35/person; call for reservations.

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Tags: Brunch, Mother's Day

The Best Part of Waking Up

Golden Beetle Will Serve Brunch

But not until the very end of April.

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You can have brunch at Golden Beetle in Ballard starting April 30.

On Thursday morning Maria Hines tweeted the news her Ballard eatery Golden Beetle plans to launch weekend brunch service. That won’t happen until April 30, but it appears the menu is pretty much set.

Divided into four parts, the bill is made up of t’mazza (“little bites”), crepes, plates, and sides. Your typical morning fare is there—a wild mushroom omelet, fruit salad, fried potatoes (sorry, no bacon)—but Hines stays true to the restaurant’s Eastern Mediterranean roots with dishes such as a harissa-lamb scramble, fava bean pita, and an eggy-cheesy wood-fired flat bread. As for those crepes, choose between roasted apple or strawberry (both with creamed toppings, of course), or a braised chicken or lamb-pepper-peanut variety. Spiced donuts, puff-pastry pies, and grilled leek with egg sauce round out the t’mazza fare.

The brunch announcement comes just a couple of weeks after Hines introduced her happy hour menu.

Keeping us on our toes, this Hines!

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Tags: New Seattle Restaurants, Brunch, Ballard

Are You Already Thinking About This Weekend’s Brunch?

No shame in it. Let’s talk options.

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Ensaimadas

Sweet buns at the Harvest Vine

I’ve never tried it myself, but I’ve heard many, many raves about the brunch at Harvest Vine. The menu sounds fantastic—egg and sherry-battered fried toast with figs and orange syrup, scrambled eggs with duck confit, caramelized onions, and cream…..Brunch is from 10am to 2pm on Saturday and Sunday.

Easy Joe’s, the new comfort-food spot (the concept reminds me of that at Bing’s in Madison Park) in the former Tidbit spot, is doing weekend brunch from 9am to 2pm. Dungeness crab hush puppies? Yeah, they make that.

I had a chance today to check out Local 360, the new restaurant in the old Flying Fish space in Belltown. It serves a straightforward selection of sustainably sourced breakfast items like buttermilk biscuits and preserves, a sausage and egg sandwich, steel-cut oatmeal, grits and eggs, etc. Get there early so you can score a booth and park it for the morning. Ahhhhh.

I like the sound of duck-ham eggs Benedict, on the brunch menu at new West Seattle restaurant Avalon. Crab and cod Benedict, a root vegetable hash, and a leek quiche all also grace that menu. Brunch at Avalon is Saturday and Sunday from 10am to 2pm.

The Row House Cafe over in South Lake Union is doing brunch on the weekends. They have a build-your-own breakfast sandwich option that’s pretty cool, and who can argue with baked brie with honey and pine nuts and an Illy cappuccino in the morning?

Not you, my hungry cheese-loving friend. Not you.

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Tags: South Lake Union, Belltown, Brunch, Madison Valley, Madison Park

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