Seattle Met Logo
Advertisement

Nosh Pit

Posts tagged with: Lunch

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
Comfort food

Grilled Cheese and Tomato Soup in Seattle

A sad, soggy forecast looms. Fight back with the ultimate comfort food pairing.

Email
Grilled-cheese3

Much tastier than Paxil.

Photo courtesy Whatwereeating.com

In some parts of the world, rain is a sign of spring. Here, however, rain is just a sign that you’re in Seattle, and it’s not June.

To compensate, we excel at being indoor people. Thus the reason everyone in your office saw most of this year’s Oscar finalists and has read (the first 30 pages of) Jonathan Franzen’s Freedom. Thus grilled cheese and tomato soup still sounding like a good idea as the ides of March approach. Endless winter? Fine. So long as melted cheese and tart tomato are involved.

Here are five places for getting your GCTS on.

1. The new thing in grilled cheese is a grilled cheese menu, with variations that feature novel breads and spreads. Grim’s, the Capitol Hill bar and lounge from the lady who brought you Po Dog and Autobattery, offers three variations on the grilled cheese. There’s one with tomato, basil, prosciutto, and gruyere. There’s another with chipoltle spread, pico de gallo, and cheddar. Finally there is the sandwich with truffled leeks, herbs, and havarti. Tomato soup is sold separately.

2. The winningly rustic Row House Cafe in South Lake Union, a place that will remind you of breakfast joints you ate in while visiting friends in small college towns, is also offering riffs on the classic grilled cheese. Five variations named for monuments and museums (the Colosseum, the Louvre, the Smithsonian, etc.) come on Essential Baking breads such as potato and walnut raisin.

These grandly named sandwiches come with grandly named dipping sauces. The “rustic tomato relish” that accompanies the Smithsonian, for instance, is basically salsa. The tomato soup has a lovely chunky consistency, but true tomato people will find it a tad sweet.

3. I’m not in love with everything on the BOKA lunch menu, but the grilled cheese and tomato soup always works. The sandwich is Pleasant Ridge Reserve cheddar from Wisconsin melted between slices of sourdough, the soup is well-seasoned. That’s kind of all you need on a rainy Tuesday.

4. For those of us who’ve taken our love for comfort food to a whole new level this winter, cutting back a bit may be in order. The happy hour at Oliver’s Twist in Phinney Ridge offers a comfort-food compromise: a teeny little cappuccino cup of tomato soup frothed into a foam, and a mini grilled cheese to go along with it. Isn’t this what we’re supposed to be learning from the French, eating a little bit of really rich food? That and not drinking the entire bottle of red wine with dinner, I think.

5. The Latona Pub serves seriously delicious food, and I don’t even have to qualify that with “for a pub.” One of the best dishes on the menu is the grilled cheese and tomato basil soup. The sandwich is made from sharp white cheddar cheese and Columbia City Bakery’s walnut bread. And as for the tomato bisque that accompanies it, well, I don’t know what witchcraft the Three Pubs people employ to make their many soups, but they are consistently world-rocking, a reminder that comfort food should be as exciting, from a flavor perspective, as it is comforting, from a it’s-been-raining-for-six-freaking-months perspective.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Downtown, Lunch, Soup, Comfort Food, Seattle Food Guides

Food News/Burgermania

BuiltBurger Opens for Dinner

New month, new hours.

Email
2

Dinner is served at BuiltBurger in Pioneer Square.

Probably because Seattleites can’t stop stuffing their faces with beefy ’wiches, Builtburger introduces expanded hours today, March 1. The Pioneer Square boite, which opened in November as a weekday lunch joint, is doing dinner on Thursday til 9 and serving Sundays from 10-4.

Other P Square luncheries, take note—your neighborhood could use more decent evening eats.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Hamburgers, Pioneer Square, Lunch

Openings

Dot’s Delicatessen to Open in Fremont

Miles James of Seattle Sausage Company goes brick and mortar.

Email
3

Miles James of Seattle Sausage Company is opening Dot’s Delicatessen in Fremont. Photo courtesy Seattle Sausage Company

Fremont and 43rd is about to get even meatier. Dot’s Delicatessen is set to open sometime this spring next to new carnivore darling Uneeda Burger at 4262 Fremont Avenue.

Miles James is the guy behind the venture. If the name doesn’t ring a bell, this bit might: In the past year he’s drawn crowds in SoDo, who flock for the franks he shills from his cart, Seattle Sausage Company.

James describes Dot’s not so much as a traditional butcher shop but a place where patrons will come for lunch—the menu will include hot dogs, Belgian frites, muffuletta—then leave with cuts of meat or the handmade sausages, terrines, and pates he’ll stock. “It’ll be good, high-end stuff, but not overfussed.”

Also lining the deli will be variety of specialty items—baguettes, he offered—to complement those provisions. James will likely carry dry-cured grub, but not to start (health code yadayads).

Years in the restaurant industry sparked James’s interest in charcuterie. His resume includes stints at Gramercy Tavern in New York City, and here in Seattle, Campagne and two erstwhile greats: Union, which he helped open, and Cremant, where he was sous chef. He’s currently clocking in at Lecosho, an apposite employer, considering the meaty menu.

As for Seattle Sausage Company, James hopes to lease it or use it for catering purposes. James noted he launched the street venture last year as means of catching the eye (and buds) of investors. It seems any who heeded made a wise decision.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Fremont, Lunch, Food News

Voila! Bistrot and Its Burger-Centric Lunch

Outside of a burger shack, this might be the beefiest repast out there.

Email
0609-burgers-voila_bistro-2

You know you want it: Voilà! Bistrot’s kobe beef hamburger, now available at lunch. Photo: Iris Dumuk

Diners will find a sampling of classic bistro fare on Voila! ’s new-ish midday menu, but headlining the bill is that Seattle obsession, the burger.

There are several Painted Hills patties to be had: one simply garnished with Emmenthal cheese, another topped with Bleu bits and locally sourced bacon, another with mushrooms prepped in truffle oil. All of which sounds delish, but we’re weak-kneed for the Kobe Classic, dripping with caramelized onions and brie.

Employees say owner Laurent Gabrel will likely expand the offerings, but really, there’s no need—allowing us to break up our 9-to-5 with that half pound of kobe crack already secures you a spot on our list of lunchtime favorites, Gabrel.

Voila! serves lunch Tuesday through Saturday 11:30-2:30.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Lunch, Madison Valley, Burgers

What to Eat

Where to Go When You Want a Sandwich

Thirty-plus places to get baguettes, melts, reubens, banh mi…

Email
Ebc

Delicious sandwiches prevail at Elliott Bay Cafe on Capitol Hill and in Pioneer Square.

Since we last chatted Seattle’s best sandwiches, several of our go-to shacks shuttered—thanks for the memories, Roy’s BBQ and Rizzo’s—and we’ve welcomed some newcomers—hola, Other Coast Café on Capitol Hill, Seatown To Go. So we here at Nosh thought it due time for an updated roundup of between-sliced-bread winners.

Herein, and mapped for your ease, some favorite sandwich spots. Note not all maintain sandwich-exclusive menus. Nor is this list totally and completely and utterly exhaustive—it’s just where we’re heading when the hankering for a bready handheld takes grip.

See you at lunch?

Add a Comment »

Tags: Lunch, Sandwiches

Your Friday in Eating: Lunch at Thai Curry Simple, Dinner at Pau Hana

Have a cultural food kind of day.

Email
Img_4714

A cheap plate of goodness at Thai Curry Simple. Courtesy the restaurant.

The takeout window of Thai Curry Simple, the cheapy I.D. counter with gobsmacking roti, is now open on Capitol Hill, says Slog.

Thai Curry takes over the former Barista Boyz shack at 12 Avenue and East Madison Street (a stone’s throw from Tavern Law). For now hours are Monday-Friday 11am-2pm and weekends 6pm-9pm, reports the blog.

Fill up on $6 curries and $7 gai ping chicken, then make for another Cap Hill newbie, Pau Hana. Tonight the Tenth Avenue restaurant celebrates its grand opening with $5 pupus: kalua pig sliders, sweet-chili chicken wings, pork nachos, coconut shrimp.

Happy Friday.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Capitol Hill, Thai, Lunch, Takeout

Street Eatin'

Pai’s Parks on Broadway. For Real This Time.

After having to put off last week’s Cap Hill launch, the new food truck starts serving the Pike/Pine set.

Email
Pai

Photo courtesy Pai’s.

A reminder for all your food truckers that Pai’s is parking on Broadway today for the first time. You’ll find Pai Pongsupaht and his Thai-Hawaiian kitchen in front of the Shell station at Pike and Broadway from 11am-2pm.

What should I order? you ask. Pongsupaht talked us through his menu and has some suggestions.

If today you can’t get a piece of Pai’s, here’s where the truck parks on Thursday.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Capitol Hill, Street Food, Lunch

Food Finds

Just Eat It: Shrimp Salad Sandwich
at On the Fly

Delicious, and only $6.50.

Email
1

Like the other items at On the Fly, the shrimp salad sandwich is wallet-friendly.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Like the other items at On the Fly, the shrimp salad sandwich is wallet-friendly.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The takeout counter is right around the corner from Flying Fish.

There are maybe 150 shrimpies cramming into that baguette there. They’re of the bay variety, and they’re lathered with just enough dill-flecked dressing to give the guys a splash of sprightliness. The lengthy bow of bread is a reminder that the sandwich, even with its $6.50 price tag, is meant to satisfy the most eager of eaters.

The other offerings at On the Fly —several more sandwiches, salads, make-at-home meals—are also priced to move and maintain the stamp of Chris Keff, whose Flying Fish is right around the corner. She debuted this grab-and-go offshoot maybe two months back.

Smart ones will get to On the Fly before the lunch hour floodgates open. Otherwise you and a friend may mosey there, both with your sights set on the shrimp sandwich, and upon arrival discover only one remains. And that’s just a bummer.

Add a Comment »

Tags: South Lake Union, Food Finds, Lunch, Takeout

What's for Lunch?

Let’s Do Lunch: a Roundup of the Stellar Spots

Places to grab-and-go, talk shop, and otherwise make noon hour noshing unforgettable.

Email
0409-dine-occasions_cstreet

Cherry Street Coffee House maintains five locations downtown.

The soon-to-debut On the Fly is the latest to hop aboard a long list of restos taking the noon hour and turning it into an occasion of awesomeness.

When we here at Nosh have cause to crawl out of the Pit, there are a bunch of said places that ping our lunch radar. Eat at them—they’re all mapped out here for you—and discover that lunch can be more than a repast of respite from the daily grind.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Lunch, Sandwiches

Openings

On the Fly: On for Late Next Week

The take-out counter will serve salads, sandwiches, and make-at-home meals to the booming South Lake Union crowd.

Email
2

On the Fly is the take-out offshoot of Flying Fish, pictured here. Photo courtesy Flying Fish.

Hot diggity the lunch options around here just keep getting better and better.

Late next week keep an eye peeled for On the Fly, the grab-and-go Flying Fish offshoot. The lunch and dinner counter is stocking a variety of salads and sandwiches, price tags for both hovering below $7, says owner Christine Keff. Those dropping by later in the evening will find a more beefed-up menu also stocked with items you can prepare at home. (One example: crab cakes.) For the sweet teeth, there are cookies and pies—Keff sounded particularly stoked about the latter—as well as wines for $18 and under.

On the Fly will share the same kitchen as the recently relocated Fish, but that’s it—the two are of a separate set-up and address. When Keff first scouted her new South Lake Union digs, she was prodded to take over the entire space at 300 Westlake Avenue. A wide-eyed Keff first resisted, knowing it was too big for one restaurant, but then she was a offered “a deal I couldn’t pass up.” Et voilà, the idea for On the Fly took flight.

Right now hours are Mon-Sat 10-7, and there’s no need to call in orders ahead, you can just swing by. An online ordering system will be implemented soon, Keff said.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, South Lake Union, Lunch, Delivery and Take Home, Takeout

Flatbread Pizza at Novelty Hill and Januik

An appetizing weekend lunch option in wine country.

Email
Tasting_room_2

Beautiful Novelty Hill-Januik, where weekend flatbread pizzas are $12 per pie.

So if you haven’t been out to Woodinville yet this summer for some weekend wine tasting, you gotta do it. And when you go, you gotta eat. I like lunch at Barking Frog, and the deck at the Forecaster’s Pub at Redhook Brewery is fun even if the food is sort of…just okay.

But here’s another good option: the gorgeous Novelty Hill and Januik building (the two wineries are separate businesses but share a winemaker and a new ultramodern facility) serves crackly wood-oven pizza on Saturdays and Sundays from noon to 4:30pm. They’re $12, and you can order any of the tasting-room wines—including the pizza-friendly 2007 Stillwater Creek sangiovese—by the glass or bottle.

The current menu includes four flatbread pies: mixed cheese (fontina, Danish mozzarella, aged cheddar); heirloom tomato with roasted chicken and a cabernet-San Marzano sauce; Genoa salami with wild mushrooms and fresh herbs; and over-roasted tomato and pesto. Delicious.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Wineries, Pizza, Wine Tastings, Lunch, Woodinville

What's for Lunch?

Monsoon Seattle Intros Lunch Delivery

And knocks a few dollar signs off the cost.

Email
2-1

Bye bye boring lunch: One of Monsoon’s lunchtime offerings. Photo courtesy Geoffrey Smith.

Another midday meal deal from Monsoon: The restaurant is bringing its lunchtime delivery service to both sides of Lake Washington, and to bait Seattleites the boxed meals are discounted 25% through the rest of the month and 15% through September.

In March Monsoon debuted the noonhour meals on wheels, but only for Eastside addresses. Considering sister restaurant Baguette Box totes its gourmet banh mi around town, it only makes sense the 19th Avenue locale would follow suit. Like Baguette, Monsoon Seattle’s delivery route reaches Capitol and First Hills, downtown, and Fremont.

The lunch menu boasts 16 offerings—noodle dishes, rice bowls, rolls, soups, and salads—with all items costing $7-$14 and each order coming with banana cake. Have a look-see at the boxed meals and order form.

Yep, that sound you hear is my tummy grumbling.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Deals, Lunch, Monsoon

Advertisement