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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

Morning Matters

Cafe Cesura in Bellevue: One for the Breakfast Sandwich Lovers

The Ashton building eatery opens early next month.

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Humina humina: the all American breakfast sandwich at Cafe Cesura. It isn’t on the fall menu but fingers crossed we’ll be seeing it soon. Photo courtesy Cafe Cesura facebook.

When talking about the food at Café Cesura, the forthcoming breakfast and lunch joint he’s opening with chef Leon Douglas, Shawn Nickerson is partial to the hanger steak sandwich. Dressed in castelvetrano tapenade and served on baguette, it does sound tasty. But let’s take a moment to discuss the morning menu.

In addition to a variety of muffins, Stumptown coffee, granola, and pork rillette flavored with fresh-squeezed OJ (interesting), the menu is made up of four breakfast sandwiches. For anyone who prefers to start the day with a ‘wich, this is exciting. These aren’t your typical egg-bacon-cheese stacks (but there is one of those). Rather, you’ll find selections like smoked salmon on baguette served with a pickled onion and caper aioli; fig and brie with arugula on ciabatta; and salami and fennel slathered in dijon butter atop Macrina bread.

Graham Baba designed the downtown Bellevue cafe (what isn’t the firm designing these days?), so expect an industrial-mod vibe with 23-foot high ceilings. Nickerson and Douglas plan to open Cesura (their first venture), located at 1015 108th Ave NE, on November 7.

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Tags: Breakfast, Sandwiches

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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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

Openings

New Spots For Sandwich Consumption Around Seattle

Li’l Woodys, Grubwich, Grace Kitchen, Chelsea Deli, and Dot’s Delicatessen. Who’s hungry?

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Do it to it: Seattleites are poised to show a whole host on new sandwiches who’s boss.

Photo: Daddydetails.com

Long-awaited Li’l Woody’s opens today on Capitol Hill, where it is now offering Painted Hills-beef burgers, milkshakes with Molly Moon’s ice cream, fries, and onion rings. Here’s what it looks like inside.

This weekend or maybe Monday marked the opening of Broadway’s Grubwich, the new sandwich joint in the former home of Pita Pit. The Stranger says sandwiches cost $7 and include a steak ’wich with chimichurri sauce and another with eggplant. Also: hand-cut fries.

Also serving up sandwiches is the Shop Agora’s new location on 15th Avenue E. Owner Nikos Spiliopoulos was particularly excited about the duck sandwich, but call ahead to see if it’s on the menu. The retail shop is taking the baby steps approach to its fresh food menu.

Grace Kitchen, the brand-new U-Village eatery developed under the guiding hand of Poppy’s Jerry Traunfeld (see Eater Seattle for details), has a chicken sandwich inspired by the increasingly ubiquitous bahn mi, reports Eater.

Columbia City’s new sandwich emporium Chelsea Deli got a mostly glowing review recently from the Stranger’s Paul Constant, who appears to be branching out of his books beat to become something of a sandwich specialist. “Most of Chelsea’s work is truly memorable,” reports Constant, who took advantage of the review space to rail against corporate entities Potbelly and Subway.

Over yonder in the so-called center of the universe, Dot’s Delicatessen has started showcasing its meats in sandwiches, including a reuben with housemade pastrami and a BLT with bacon smoked on the premises.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Capitol Hill, Fremont, Sandwiches, University Village

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

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.

Keep tabs on more food and restaurant news. Friend Nosh Pit on Facebook.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Lunch, Sandwiches

Eastside Eats

Homegrown Extends Catering Biz to Bellevue

The sustainable sandwich shop is now bringing sustenance to the Eastside office set.

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Homegrown: Now bringing sandwiches to Bellevue

Photo: Facebook

Homegrown announced today that it is extending its catering program, formerly limited to Seattle proper, to Bellevue.

The sustainably minded sandwich shop delivers the goods in pine boxes instead of plastic trays and uses reusable totebags and Pyrex salad bowls to create what chef Rob Milliron calls a “zero waste experience.”

The menu differs somewhat from Homegrown’s main menu. Milliron told me that he designed the sandwiches and salads specifically so that they would keep despite the delay between when they are made and when they are consumed.

Delivery is free for Seattle on orders over $100, for Bellevue there’s a $10 fee. There is no minimum for breakfast orders, though Milliron requests that people order for six or more people at a time. Call with your catering wish list by 10am the day prior to delivery.

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Tags: Bellevue, Sandwiches, Lunchtime Delivery, Take Out and Catering

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

What to Eat

Where to Go When You Want a Sandwich

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

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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?

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Tags: Lunch, Sandwiches

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