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Seattle Restaurant Openings

Another Potbelly for Downtown Seattle

It’s opening in the 1100 block of Third Avenue on December 6.

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Photo courtesy Potbelly.

Seattle went years with nary a Potbelly, the holy-hell-popular sandwich chain. Now the Chicago-based biz is marching in fast and furious.

Or at least fast. On December 6 Potbelly plans to open its third area outpost in six months. The newest branch is at 1111 Third Avenue, not far from the first shop here, at Fourth and Pike. (The other one is in downtown Bellevue.)

The company has hinted at ambitious plans for the Seattle area, but a Potbelly rep says further locations still are not nailed down.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Lunch, Sandwiches, Potbelly Sandwich Shop

Lunch Matters

No More Sandwich Bar at Dinette

But look for the ’wiches elsewhere on the menu.

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So. Good. Photo courtesy Dinette facebook.

October 14 is the last day Dinette owner Melissa Nyffeler will assemble monsters like this as part of her summer sandwich bar, the noon hour menu she initiated in June to delicious result. (One of the better things Nosh ate recently was a truffled eggwich from here, in fact.)

But fans, no need to freak. The very tasty concoctions are likely to reappear—in nightly dinner specials as well as during the late-night happy hour available Friday and Saturday 9–11, says server and bartender Deseree Lyon.

“Everybody loves them,” says Lyon. “We’re hoping to keep them alive during the colder months.”

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Tags: Lunch, Sandwiches

Lunch Matters

Is Fremont the New Sandwich District?

One reader thinks so.

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Dot’s Delicatessen, giving Fremont sandwich cred.

Every couple months brings a new crop of sandwich joints but through them all prevails Pioneer Square, the city’s unofficial district for sliced bread.

The neighborhood is home to some of Seattle’s tastier sandwich counters: There’s Salumi, Delicatus, BuiltBurger, the Berliner, and Tat’s, where workers installed a webcam for monitoring the always-gnarly lines.

But as one (possibly) prescient commenter notes on this article charting Pioneer Square’s resurgence, Fremont is no sandwich slouch either: “What about the corner in Fremont where you now have UNEEDA Burger, Dot’s, and Paseo???”

Let’s not forget, several blocks down from those spots sits Homegrown, Baguette Box, Royal Grinders, and Blue Moon Burgers.

Do you guys agree? Is the Center of the Universe destined for sandwich greatness?

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Tags: Lunch, Sandwiches

Lunch Matters

Are Even More Potbellys in the Pipeline?

Definitely maybe.

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Potbelly

Potbellys is possibly plotting more Seattle-area stores.

In the past couple of years Chicago-based chain Potbelly Sandwich Works has embarked on a speedy-ambitious expansion plan, plotting first-ever stakes along both coasts while growing in existing markets.

The first for the Seattle area opened on Fourth and Pine Pike in early June, and on August 30 downtown Bellevue gets one at 10680 NE Fourth Street, according to a company spokesperson. We also learned last month another Pbelly is going in the 1100 block of Third Avenue, not far from that first one.

And it sounds as if more are in store: “We are exploring many of Seattle’s great neighborhoods for possible Potbelly shops,” said the rep when asked about further expansion plans, “but the timing and locations are yet to be finalized.”

Stay tuned.

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Tags: Lunch, Sandwiches, Potbelly Sandwich Shop

Lunch Matters

Serafina Opens a Panini Window

The Eastlake Italian eatery is serving up takeout sandwiches Monday through Saturday.

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“The Ferrari of panini presses” toasts the sandwiches at Serafina.

Photo: Nuova Simonelli

This week marked the opening of a new takeout panini window at Serafina in Eastlake.

“We got the Ferrari of panini presses from Italy,” says general manager Rachel Aiken, referring to the restaurant’s new fancy Nuova Simonelli toasting machine.

The menu will change regularly and likely expand. For now, Serafina offers three ’wiches: a porchetta panini on Macrina ciabatta with pickled onion and salsa verde; a salami sandwich with fontina cheese and artichoke olivada on baguette; and a Caprese on housemade focaccia with basil pesto, heirloom tomatoes, and fresh mozzarella.

Paninis will be available from 11:30am to 2:30pm Monday through Saturday, and Serafina eventually plans to offer picnic lunches for lakeside dining, according to Aiken. The window is intended for takeout (Serafina offers a weekday sitdown lunch as well), but Aiken says customers are also welcome to eat the paninis in the sidewalk seating area, and can order beer, wine, and other beverages along with their lunch.

Also: Is this the dawn of a new bad economy-eating trend? With happy hour now saturating the city’s restaurants—from high-end eateries to dive bars—perhaps the sandwich stand is the new recession-busting move for local restaurants? We can list Dinette as an example, but it takes three to make a trend….

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Tags: Eastlake, Lunch, Sandwiches, Seattle Restaurants

Midday Mealing

Ba Bar to Intro Lunch Service on Monday

Breakfast is on the way, but not for a few weeks.

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Next week, Ba Bar opens for lunch. Photo courtesy twitter.

If you’ve yet to score a seat at the very buzzy Ba Bar, starting next week you can give it a go during the day.

A call to the restaurant reveals the noodle shop will inaugurate lunch service on Monday. That menu is available daily starting at 11am until close—you can order off it even during dinner hours. As for what to order, employees didn’t have a copy on hand so couldn’t offer specifics.

And the breakfast bill that’s been pushed back? “In a couple of weeks.”

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Lunch

The Biz

Dinette Owner’s Response to Neighborhood Challenges: Let Them Eat Lunch

A mid-day sandwich bar brings casual fare (biscuits!) to the East Olive Way eatery.

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Lovely Dinette: Now serving sandwiches at lunch

Photo: Dinette

The challenges of operating a destination restaurant on East Olive Way are not few. To begin with, parking is a beast. Dinette owner Melissa Nyffeler used to direct customers to a pay lot on Summit, but then that became a p-patch. A community garden is a lovely thing—who could argue otherwise?—but its presence means now Nyffeler is left sending customers to a “sketchy” lot full of broken glass that doubles as a napping spot for transients. “It’s embarrassing,” she said.

“When I moved to the location six years ago,” Nyffeler continued, “Lark, 1200 Bistro [now Chao Bistro], and Dinette—those were the only places you could go for food that was a step above pub food.” Since then, dozens of high-end restaurants have opened on the other side of the Hill, where parking is still dodgy but decidedly less so. Circumstances there are such that people no longer have to walk more than a block or two before stumbling into a nice restaurant.

Over on Olive, however, there is a dearth of retail and dining destinations, not to mention a resident base that skews towards twenty-somethings. Street traffic tends to seek out cheap eats—not entrees that run upwards of $20. La Bête opened up around the corner in the former Chez Gaudy space last year. That has helped some, said Nyffeler. But business isn’t what it should be given Dinette’s high marks among the critics and on customer feedback sites like Yelp. “We have so many happy customers, I feel like it should be busier. And I think the location is the problem. We’re a little too fancy for this part of the Hill.”

The solution: adapt. This week (as first reported on SLOG) Nyffeler rolled out a new lunch program she’s calling Summer Sandwich Bar: a revolving menu that includes five or six sandwiches served on breads from Columbia City Bakery plus sides like kohlrabi slaw and an arugula salad with shaved pecorino. Available in the lounge and on the sidewalk patio, the sandwiches cost between $6.50 and $8.50.

So far so good: Nyfeller sold twice as many sandwiches on Wednesday as she did Tuesday, her first day in the lunch biz. An Italian beefwich with cured and roasted steak from Painted Hills is already a popular item, and a truffled egg salad-wich has also garnered fans. If ‘wiches continue to draw a crowd, Nyffeler said she’ll continue serving lunch in future seasons—possibly in the restaurant’s dining room as well—and may add soup and mini sandwiches to the menu.

And it’s not inconceivable that we’ll be seeing lower priced items—including sandwiches—on Dinette’s dinner menu as well. “I’m seeing how it develops,” said Nyffeler. “I don’t mind changing what I do. I would be happy to appeal more to people in my neighborhood.”

Summer Sandwich Bar at Dinette is open 11:30am to 2:30pm Tuesday through Saturday. Attention biscuit lovers: Nyffeler said she’ll be serving up homemade biscuit sandwiches, plus bloody marys, this Saturday, June 25 in the lounge.

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Tags: Restaurant News, Capitol Hill, Lunch, Sandwiches, Seattle Restaurants, Biscuits

Frank Talk

Doggy Style Gourmet Franks Debuts Downtown

Pioneer Square gets “Seattle’s best hot dogs.”

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Doggy Style Gourmet Franks, now available downtown.

Earlier this week Doggy Style Gourmet Franks, self-proclaimed purveyor of “Seattle’s best hot dogs,” set up downtown at City Hall Park on Third Avenue. This is the second cart for the vendor; the first is at the Wyatt Park boat launch on Lake Stevens.

Specialty dogs—there are five—top out at $5 and are modeled after namesake sausages of other cities. There’s the Philly, topped with onion, green pepper, and cheese whiz, while mustard and kraut come on the New Yorker. The Seattle one is, of course, slathered with cream cheese (onions and cabbage, too), and your traditional Chicago frank is available as well. All of the wieners are steamed.

Doggy Style gets going at 10:30 a.m. near King County Courthouse. Have you tried one? Fill us in on the franks!

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Tags: Street Food, Lunch

Lunch

Lentil Soup to Go: Three to Try

Plus: Bread! You know, for dipping.

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Lentil Soup!

Photo: Michael Hilton via Flickr

Is soup a winter thing? To some. But I like it all year round. And as someone who tries not to eat too much meat, I like how filling and flavorful it is despite the fact that it involves no animal flesh. Flesh is not an appetizing word, sorry. Anyway! Lentil soup. It tastes good! Here are three of my favorites in Seattle.

1. Café Paloma: Paloma in Pioneer Square makes a hearty, lemon-laced lentil soup in the Lebanese tradition. You can get a cup with salad—excellently tart vinaigrette, and just the right amount—or a bowl that comes with toasted pita triangles. Dip those babies in there.

2. Cherry Street Coffee House: Cherry Street makes a sulfur-colored Egyptian-style lentil soup that’s pureed. It’s not served everyday, so call ahead to ensure its existence. Being a puree, it has a uniform flavor, but that uniform flavor has a really subtle peppery note to hold your interest so that you don’t think about hamburgers and how juicy-delicious they are. It comes with slices of toast (ask for olive bread) that have been doused in butter. You can pretend that it’s too much butter but you and I both know you’re secretly thrilled that your toast has been so extravagantly slathered, because when you dip it in the soup: holla. That’s a tasty combo. Besides you’re eating lentil soup for lunch, your gastronomic virtue has already been established.

3. Eltana: Yup, the bagel place on Capitol Hill. Its lentil soup, another Lebanese recipe, is brothy with about as many lentils as there are stars in Cambell’s Chicken and Stars soup. Withered islands of dark-green chard float around on top. Again, the citrus is pretty bold and definitely doing a lot of the heavy-lifting from a flavor perspective. The soup comes with an unadorned Eltana bagel and when you rip off a piece and submerge it into your soup you’ll see, as I have seen, just how absorbent Eltana bagels really are. I mean, wow. Those suckers were made for dipping.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Pioneer Square, Lunch, Soup, Bagels

Openings

Potbelly Sandwich Shop Opens Downtown

This is the first store in Washington State.

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And hello back to you, Potbelly. Photo courtesy Facebook

Downtowners, behold your new favorite lunch spot. The Chicago-based chain with more than 200 kitchens is now toasting sandwiches at Fourth and Pike (next to Michael Mina’s RN74, slated to do it up Monday, June 13). That hoopla you hear is Midwestern and East Coast transplants freaking out: Potbelly is cherished in those parts.

When you go, do order a milkshake—they’re hand-dipped and served with a teeny butter cookie—and don’t be surprised if the lines stretch out the door and down the block.

Eastsiders, note the Bellevue outpost at 10680 NE Fourth Street is coming soon.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Lunch, Sandwiches

Condiments

The Weekly Spread: Jalapeno-Mint Chutney at Hopvine Pub

The chef adds yogurt to offset the heat from this fresh Spring chop-up. It’s still pretty spicy.

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The Hopvine’s Michael Congdon makes a chutney for each season.

Photo courtesy: The Food Aisle

The condiment in question The Hopvine Pub’s jalapeno-mint chutney, a bright chop-up that’s added to the baked turkey-and-chutney sandwich: roasted turkey and Swiss cheese piled between slices of whole wheat bread from Essential Baking.

Made by The Hopvine’s Michael Congdon, more famous for the pub’s boldly flavored soups. “I’ve been making chutneys for years,” says Congdon, who adds that East Indian cuisine was one of the first that he explored as a chef.

Traditional East Indian chutneys are vegan, and that’s how Congdon makes this one at home. At the pub, however, “a lot of people complained that it was too hot” so he added yogurt. The chutney still packs heat—your server will likely offer a word of warning—but thanks to the cooling effect of the yogurt it’s like a slap in the face without the sting that follows.

Made with Mint, jalapenos, green onions, ginger, salt, sugar, lemon juice, and plain Greek yogurt. “I avoid nonfat and lowfat yogurt at all costs,” says Congdon.

Available Now! Each season, the Hopvine changes up its chutney, and the jalapeno-mint is served strictly during spring. Come summer, Congdon will switch to a cooked peach chutney; Fall’s the moment for raw cashew chutney—the chef’s favorite. In winter he cooks up a mango spread for the sandwich.

Parting thought You can order the sandwich by the half and pair it with one of Congdon’s soups. The pub is currently serving the garlic soup, a perennial favorite made with garlic (fresh and roasted), herbs, cream, white wine, croutons, and Swiss cheese. Get there now if you want some; Hopvine will be changing things up for summer soon.

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Tags: Capitol Hill, Lunch, Sandwiches, The Weekly Spread, East Indian Cuisine, Chutney, Seattle Condiments

Openings

Nook Opens on the Ave

It’s a breakfast, lunch, and late-night spot big on comfort food.

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Nook in the University District starts serving comfort food April 2.

UPDATED Nook will open on Sunday, April 3 because of “a few last minute things” that have come up.

The Ave is great and all, but ethnic joints aside it’s no culinary calling card. So yay that the newest addition to the U District boulevard looks to be a thoughtful one.

The aptly named Nook (a wee spot, it’ll seat 13–15 patrons and is tucked on the corner of University Way and NE 50th Street) opens its doors April 2. Operators and owners Alex Green and Aki Woodward aim to bring to the table “something a little nicer than what’s on the Ave, but not upscale.” Said goal translates into a menu heavy on comfort foods infused with signature touches (house-made pickles, chiles, citruses).

The prices certainly are Ave-friendly: fresh buttermilk biscuits start at $2, with a $5 bacon-egg-cheddar variety topping out the breakfast list; the sandwich menu doesn’t exceed $7. With that “I love all my children equally” hesitation, Green offered the ‘wiches he’s keen on at the moment: the meatloaf, a mash-up of pork, chicken, beef, and chipotle ketchup, and the braised buffalo chicken leg served with blue-cheese slaw. (A biscuit-topped chicken potpie with root vegetable puree caught this guy’s eye.)

The duo considered opening a biscuit shop or launching a food truck before stumbling upon the cozy space that’d become pastel-trimmed Nook. Green was most recently in the kitchen at South Lake Union’s Re:Public. Before that it was Earth and Ocean and Juno downtown and the erstwhile Madoka on Bainbridge Island. His first cooking gig found him in Atlanta alongside this week’s Top Chef All-Stars victor Richard Blais.

Hours may change, but for now Green says they’re set for 8–4 weekdays and 8–2 weekends. A late-night weekend menu of grilled cheeses will debut April 8.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Breakfast, University District, Lunch, Late Night

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