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Critic's Notebook

R.I.P. Three Iconic Seattle Restaurateurs

Peter Cipra, Christina Choi, and Carmine Smeraldo: All left indelible marks on Seattle, all left us too soon.

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Photo courtesy of Nettletown blog

In the space of one dark month, three great Seattle restaurateurs passed away: Peter Cipra (Labuznik), Christina Choi (Nettletown), then—just last Wednesday—Carmine Smeraldo (Il Terrazzo Carmine). Each was a genuine legend.

The first time I ate at Labuznik I was a green restaurant critic—and a nervous one. Restaurant circles in the late ‘80s abounded with tales of Peter Cipra, the taskmaster in the kitchen whose notorious high standards resulted in more than just lusciously sauced renditions of Eastern European veal chops and rack of lamb. Would I hear him from my table, shouting at his kitchen minions? Worse—would I do something wrong? One apocryphal story told of the poor fool who dared complain to Cipra about the restaurant’s policy of only serving three entree choices per table. (The perfectionist chef believed he believed he couldn’t do justice to more than that per order.) By the time Cipra was through “talking it over” with this diner, the story went—well let’s just say that guy probably didn’t become a regular.

I have no idea if the story is true—hewing then as now to my policy of anonymity, I never met Peter Cipra face-to-face—but his food attested to his perfectionism. Before it was fashionable Cipra was butchering his own meats and personally cooking everything that left his kitchen. That first meal I ate there—and every meal thereafter till he closed Labuznik in 1998—was carefully glorious. I savored my first wild morels in Cipra’s dining room.

Carmine Smeraldo also trafficked in luscious food, Italian, but he will be primarily remembered for fostering another Old World value: hostmanship. Carmine was the original schmoozer—the heir apparent to another restaurateur’s restaurateur, Victor Rosellini—with a pitch-perfect instinct for making guests feel important and a skill for training servers in the art of the serve. (A good number of the Italian houses around town are staffed by at least one or two Carmine alums.) Thus his gorgeous Pioneer Square dining room became the haunt of Seattle’s establishment brass, who used Carmine’s (does anyone call it Il Terrazzo?) like a private club, and whose loyalty to their favorite restaurateur ran deep.

To wit: After my Top Ten restaurants issue came out a few years ago—and Carmine’s wasn’t among them—I received a scathing letter from a Carmine’s regular, a Seattle honcho who wondered if I had a brain in my head. (He phrased it more colorfully than that.) He went on to extol the place in such glowing terms, it actually amounted to a sweet tribute. Except for the parts where he called me names.

Christina Choi would no doubt be amused to find herself in the company of such old-school guys, for this young pioneer was nothing if not new-guard. Before she opened her groundbreaking fusion restaurant Nettletown —sort of Swiss food meets Asian food meets the Pacific Northwest forest floor—she was a professional forager, scouring the wilderness for its edible plenty. Nettletown, then, was that plenty on a plate, combined in ways so novel and delectable—lemongrass elk meatballs with pickled fiddleheads and burdock root, a peanut butter and turmeric salmon sandwich—you could literally feel your mind stretching open as you ate.

In designating heretofore overlooked natural ingredients gourmet-worthy, then never sacrificing taste in the process, Choi—as humble and unprepossessing as the natural world she revered—pioneered a whole new paradigm in Northwest Cuisine. One of my personal professional disappointments of 2011 was that she closed the closet-sized Nettletown just as I was about to name it one of the Top 25 restaurants in Seattle.

Of course now we know why she closed the place: She was exhausted by the aneurysm that would end her life four months later.

All three of these pros raised Seattle dining to a new level. All of them changed this city for the better. Here’s hoping the afterlife has a big kitchen, a classy dining room, and a fertile forest floor.

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Tags: Nettletown, Christina Choi, Rest in Peace, Il Terrazzo Carmine, Labuznik

R.I.P.

Nettletown’s Christina Choi Dead at 34

The much-loved chef and forager suffered a brain aneurysm earlier this month.

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Oh no. Reports are circulating today that Christina Choi, who charmed Seattle with her restaurant Nettletown, has died. Only 34 years old, Choi passed away December 28 after undergoing surgery for a brain aneurysm earlier this month.

Choi’s family has been chronicling her heartbreaking ordeal on this website, which is already filling up with messages from the restaurant owner and forager’s many friends and fans. The site’s first post says that Choi was diagnosed with a brain aneurysm December 12, “After months of feeling exhausted, having visual changes, moving slower, and having a weak smile.” She was scheduled for surgery two days later.

Choi garnered a following among Seattle food folk for her business Foraged and Found Edibles, then for Nettletown, which opened in Eastlake in early 2010 and shuttered unexpectedly this summer. According to Eastlake Ave. Blog, Choi grew up in the Eastlake neighborhood.

Our condolences to the Choi family.

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Tags: Nettletown, Christina Choi, Rest in Peace

Food News

Wonton Wednesdays, Extended Hours, and Other Nettletown News

Including a cheap eats afternoon menu.

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Nettletown, offering new hours and new menus February 23.

Changes are afoot over at Nettletown, which opened last year as a lunch/weekend brunch joint, then in July intro-ed Friday and Saturday dinner. Now Nettle is rolling out all-day hours and two more nights of evening eats.

Starting February 23, the Eastlake boite will stay open 11-9:30 Wednesday through Friday and 10-9:30 Saturday. For that couple hours of limbo between lunch and dinner, owner Christina Choi will serve what she calls a “happy afternoon” menu 2:30-5:30. (On Saturday, the menu is available starting at 3.) The offerings will be limited and consist of side-like items for under $10. Meaning “anything that doesn’t require the kitchen to cook” since toques will be prepping for dinner, Choi offered nebulously. Examples she did list include pickles, soups, rices, all of them likely novel and fresh, Choi being a doyenne of forest floor foods.

The chef is also introducing Wonton Wednesdays. On those nights a rotating selection of the dumplings will be on special. Diners can order them in a soup or spicy sauce and should expect fillings such as elk, mushroom, or the more traditional minced pork.

Note Nettletown’s Tuesday and Sunday hours remain the same: 11-2:30 and 10-3, respectively.

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Tags: Eastlake, Cheap Eats, Food News, Nettletown

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #10 New Dish of 2010: Elk Meatball Sandwich at Nettletown

Christina Choi devotes her cozy Eastlake digs to wild edibles.

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Nettletown’s elk meatball sandwich.

2010 was a biggie for restaurant openings in Seattle. Nosh Pit looks back on the year with a survey of new standout foods we couldn’t stop talking about.

In a strip mall storefront that once housed Sitka and Spruce came Nettletown in March. Teensy in space but big in vision, the casual Eastlake boite would serve as chef and owner Christina Choi’s gastrolab of seasonal, foraged Northwest edibles. (In her review of the restaurant, Kathryn Robinson noted, “Nettletown’s menu reads a little like a botanical survey of the forest floor.”)

Star among the banh-mi–like baguettes and noodle bowls is the lemongrass elk meatball sandwich. The seasoning is just so, the game is tender and flattened to nicely fit into Le Fournil bread. Garnishing it is—what else?—a smattering of gathered vittles. As with all of Choi’s chow, the herbs and pickled vegetables bear delightful freshness. Kind of like Nettletown itself.

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Tags: Eastlake, Nettletown, Christina Choi, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food

Favorite Seattle Salads

Good places to get your greens (and fried chicken, too).

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Salade verte from Bastille recreated at home
Photo: Jess Thomson

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Salade verte from Bastille recreated at home
Photo: Jess Thomson

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Baguette Box, home of the drunken chicken salad.

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Goi is good at Tamarind Tree in the ID

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The salade verte at Le Pichet downtown: a hazelnut-enhanced classic

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The big salad changes daily at Nettletown and may take longer than an hour to eat.

Seattle Met recently featured a recipe for Bastille’s salade verte, I highly recommend you try it at home. When the French decided that hazelnuts should be a regular ingredient in salad dressing they were very much onto something.

Here are some more of my other favorite everyday, easy-to-come-by salads around town:

A salad need not be light. The drunken chicken salad at Baguette Box is a total calorie whore, but who really cares when you’re looking at a bed of mixed greens—spruced up with orange slices, almonds, croutons, and caramelized onions, and covered in fried balls of chicken that have been crisped to perfection? Nobody, that’s who cares.

On the lighter side are shredded-veggie Vietnamese salads (gỏi), although my favorite does come topped with beef. It’s the gỏi bò at Tamarind Tree: slices of tender beef in an herby fish sauce lie on a bed of shredded cabbage, carrots, herbs, pickled onion, and roasted peanuts.

Le Pichet is a great place to remember when you’re downtown on the weekend in search of a late lunch—the menu is available from 11:30 to 5:30. When I’m there, I must order the cafe’s version of the classic salade verte with hazelnut vinaigrette. It’s basically a ball of bibb lettuce drizzled in perfect vinaigrette with a smattering of toasted hazelnuts tossed on top for good measure. On Capitol Hill, an identical salad is to be had at Cafe Presse (same owners).

It’s been a few months, but I’m still freaking out about Nettletown. The big salad changes daily, and features whatever foraged goodies have made their way into Christina Choi’s kitchen. The first time I went for lunch, I ordered a sandwich and one of my dining companions went for the salad. I actually had to leave her there after an hour to go back to work, she was still digging her way through that big old bowl of greens, and happily.

The insalata mista at Tutta Bella gets big points from me for having white beans as well as white balsamic vinaigrette. White balsamic is less syrupy than its brown counterpart, and when it has its zippy way with a plate of raw veggies the results are mighty fine. It also has carrots, olives, sweet red onions, roasted peppers, and the option to add Gorgonzola cheese. By all means, add it!

So there you have some of my favorites. But come now, good readers. Surely you have some favorite salads of your own. Please, tell us about them.

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Tags: Vegetarian/Vegan Whatnot, Nettletown, Le Pichet, Salad, Vegetables, Summer Eating, Tamarind Tree, Bastille

New Evening Eats in Eastlake: Nettletown Tackles Dinner

Reserve-only supper tonight, weekend dinners begin in two weeks.

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Nettletown sandwich

Tonight at Eastlake eatery Nettletown (read Kathyrn Robinson’s new review here): the First Week of Summer supper. Guests will gullet summery stuff like cherries and halibut and peas and asparagus. The dinner is $35 and reservations are required: nettletown@gmail.com or 206-588-3606.

Two weeks from today on July 9, Nettletown starts dinner service on Friday and Saturday only. The menu will include most of the lunch items, with a few additional entrees. Sorry, no reservations for those regular weekend dinners.

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Tags: Eastlake, Special Dinners, Nettletown, Christina Choi, Food Foraging

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