Seattle Met Logo
Advertisement

Nosh Pit

Posts tagged with: Pioneer Square

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
Lunch Matters

The Line Cam at Tat’s Delicatessen

Check out the wait before you make your way over.

Email
Tats

Attention queuers: Tat’s is watching you.

Photo: Tat’s via Facebook

We learned about this from a coworker who learned about it from Jen Kelly at the New Pioneer Square blog, and now we’re passing it on to you.

Tat’s Delicatessen, which often draws a crowd during peak lunch hours, has a camera on its website pointed at the line in front of the counter, so you can check out the wait before deciding whether or not to go get a sandwich.

But don’t get your hopes up, home-computer creepers. You’re unlikely to catch anyone misbehaving inside Tat’s, where there are usually about two sandwich-scarfing cops for every plainclothes customer.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Pioneer Square, Seattle Restaurants

Openings

East Coast Pizza in Pioneer Square: Calozzi’s Moves Menu Beyond Cheesesteaks

Philly native Al Calozzi promises real-deal pizza at his soon-to-be-expanded Occidental Ave shop.

Email
5

Calozzi’s, on Occidental between Yesler and Cherry, will expand into an area behind the restaurant formerly occupied by Utilikilts.

When Al Calozzi first hatched a plan to sell cheesesteaks to bar revelers on the Belltown sidewalks, people told him he couldn’t compete with the hot dog vendors.

This isn’t the East Coast, they said.

“Just try one,” he would reply. And they would, and then they’d get it. “I’ve been making this sandwich since I was 10 years old,” says Calozzi, dropping the “g” in “making” like any good Philadelphia native would. “It’s a very unique thing when it’s made right.”

Calozzi, who moved to Seattle five years ago, found a permanent home for his business last September in an Occidental Avenue storefront between Yesler and Cherry in Pioneer Square. It’s just around the corner from Tat’s Delicatessen, another cheesesteak hub. Calozzi recognizes his competition good naturedly, but points out that Tat’s is more of a deli than a cheesesteak shop—a distinction that might seem arbitrary to anyone unfamiliar with Philly cuisine. But it’s true that while Tat’s features a long list of sandwiches, the brief menu at Calozzi’s (steaks, plus meatball and chicken cutlet subs) fits on a small chalkboard. Calozzi does sell Blue Line cheesecakes, the retirement project of a neighborhood cop that he befriended, but overall the operation has been pretty barebones.

That’s about to change. When Utilikilts gave up the space it was occupying behind his restaurant, Calozzi jumped at the opportunity to start serving pizza. The newly expanded shop will accommodate up to 150 people, he says, and the pizza will be like none other in Seattle. “I’ve tasted them all out here,” he says. “It’s not pizza, it’s not.”

To open our eyes to the way of the true pie, Calozzi will soon be crafting hand-tossed pies in the East Coast tradition—he’s even importing water from the homeland to make his crusts. A deal has been struck with nearby Salumi to supply pepperoni and sausage, and every Friday Calozzi will feature a special pizza—Sicilian-style, for example. The pies will come in individual and larger sizes, and Calozzi plans to offer beer and wine, though he says red birch beer—popular in Pennsylvania—is the perfect beverage pairing for pizza.

On Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights Calozzi’s will be open until 4am to feed the bar crowd. The pizza oven is on its way, and the whole thing should be up and running within two months, estimates its owner.

But while he’s taking pains to make sure his pies are East-Coast perfect, it’s the cheesesteak that will remain the heart of Calozzi’s business.

“The sandwich, that’s my baby,” he says.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Pizza, Pioneer Square, East Coast Eats

Lunch

Lentil Soup to Go: Three to Try

Plus: Bread! You know, for dipping.

Email
Lentilsoup

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.

Add a Comment »

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

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

On the Move

Bigger, Better Tat’s Deli Opens June 4 Soon

Nothing but good things come with this move: more seats, more hours, booze, free delivery.

Email
1

[UPDATE] The Friday opennig has been delayed until at least Thursday.

Pioneer Square may not be big on food carts, but it sure does dig sandwiches.

On Friday, one of its staple sammie counters, Tat’s Deli, opens new headquarters at 159 Yesler Way, a stone’s throw from its old spot at 115 Occidental Ave S.

The deli’s peeps keep playing up the fact that the space will accommodate 50 patrons. Cool news for the legions of lunchers always left to eat outside, but let’s not downplay the awesomeness of new dinner and Saturday hours, the beer and wine menu, or the free delivery for orders of 10 or more.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Pioneer Square, Lunch, Sandwiches

Openings

Delicatus Opens in Pioneer Square

A long list of scrumptious-sounding sandwiches, a long line, a lot to look forward to.

Email
Delicatus

This is Delicatus, the new Pioneer Square sandwichery on 1st Ave S in the storefront where Longhorn BBQ used to serve up its salted meaty wares.

As soon as you enter Delicatus, you are confronted with two long chalkboards, each has a list of sandwiches whose names reference bits of Seattle history and lore: The Gypsy Rose Lee (prosciutto, mozzarella, basil, and balsamic), the Fire of 1889 (braised pork, jalapeno-lime aioli), the Ballard Lox (har). Many of them sound very delicious, and so it’s no easy task, this deciding what to order at Delicatus.

The meats are Zoe’s, the breads are Essential Baking and Brenner Brothers, the vibe is gourmet but casual—like Fremont’s Homegrown, but with fewer recycling containers and a refreshing hustle behind the sandwich bar that feels as East Coast as a corned beef on rye.

As you wait for your ‘wich, take a moment to stare up at a massive and mesmerizing butcher’s drawing of a cow, its body divided—as if the various divisions were geographical entities—into their corresponding cuts: shank, tenderloin, brisket. These posters may have become something of a hipster affectation, but they are still cool. Did you know that brisket came from there?

Prices range from $7.75 to $9 and each sandwich comes with your pick of potato salad, coleslaw, or chips—though the chips were 86ed at around 12:30 today. Fortunately, the boys of Delicatus seem to have a light hand with the mayonnaise—the coleslaw had a winning sweetness and a reassuring crunch.

Word is out on Delicatus. Expect to wait in line, and again for your lunch. And if you go in the next few days, remember to give Delicatus a little slack with the mix-ups and the 86s. Something tells me that in a few weeks, this ship of sandwiches will be sailing smoothly.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Pioneer Square, Lunch, Sandwiches

Lunch Issues

Talk Soup

You can never have enough soup sources, can you? Here is a roundup of downtown spots that ladle up the good stuff.

Email
Dire_frenchlentilsoup_v

I work downtown and I eat soup. You too? Let’s talk.

Let’s talk about onion soup first, and how the oh-so-civilized Le Pichet makes the real deal just the way they do in Lyon: that means a stewlike consistency with a beefy broth and a no-fear approach to buttery onion content, two massive croutons, and a blanket of thick, gooey gruyere that forms strings from the bowl all the way up to the spoon at your mouth. Suck those up nonchalantly and hope your dining companion pretends not to notice. Place Pigalle also makes a mean onion soup gratinee.

Let’s move on to lentil soup. You’ll encounter one of two types at the Crumpet Shop: French lentil and tomato ginger lentil, they never serve both on the same day. Order a bowl of either with sour cream and cilantro along with a crumpet doused in butter and topped with honey.

Cafe Paloma in Pioneer Square makes a fine lentil soup in the lemony Lebanese style, and they serve it with an ample pile of fresh pita triangles for dipping. By all means, dip. But prepare to exercise patience, the service here is not speedy.

In Belltown, tiny Cafe Lieto (1909 First Ave)—now also a late night biscuits-and-gravy spot on weekends—serves up expectations-defying homemade chicken and dumplings for weekday lunch. Be warned: it sells out fast.

The various Cherry Street Cafes have two or three healthy soups daily, usually some combination of tomato, clam chowder, Egyptian lentil, black bean, or coconut curry with tofu. These come with a side of buttered toast—the olive bread is the best one. Elliot Bay Café tends to have beef stew and vegetarian chili, but we won’t talk about that since it is moving. [UPDATE: I was mistaken. The EBC will continue to operate in Pioneer Square.]

As far as I can tell (please let me know if I’m wrong) the best pho in the area is to be had at Julie’s Garden in Pioneer Square. This recommendation does not necessarily extend to everything on the menu, but the soup is delicious.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Downtown, Pioneer Square, Pike Place Market, Lunch, Soup

Advertisement