Happy Hour In Seattle: Cheese Plate Edition
Five Seattle spots for getting stinky (in the best possible way) at HH.
Cheese is a food that makes you want it so bad, it has been compared—by scientists, no less—to morphine and heroin. In fact there was a heroin-based drug going around Texas a few years back that mixed the deadly narcotic with over-the-counter cold medicine. That drug’s street name? Cheese.
But unlike hard drugs, cheese is easy to consume in moderation. Especially during happy hour, when smaller sized samplings of the world’s best dairy products are doled out at a discount. Here are some of Seattle’s notable HH cheese platters. Consume with caution.
Tucked into a few narrow rooms of a Madrona bungalow, with white-washed walls and a chalkboard menu and the cutest owners—a very young couple who wouldn’t know pretension if it smacked them across the face with the last issue of Wine Spectator— Bottlehouse is a total charmer. During a daily happy hour from 5 to 7pm, cheeses are $3.50 per ounce or $10 for three. On offer: fleur d’aunis, a lovely semi-soft with a distinctive nutty flavor; a Gouda-style goat cheese; and the decadent Pierre Robert triple-creme.
I like to pop into Fonte from time to time after work and order up the $6 cheese plate during the daily HH from 5 to 6:30pm. It’s chef’s choice but often includes one of my favorite cheeses, tomme de savoie, plus a healthy hunk of funky blue. It comes with a few slices of bread and, for garnish, golden raisins, cranberries, Marcona almonds, and two mild peppers.
Toulouse Petit has seven cheeses on the HH menu from France, Switzerland, and, in the case of saveur du maquis, Corsica. Saveur du maquis is a sheep’s milk cheese with a rind coated in herbs like rosemary and juniper along with maquis, an aromatic plant indigenous to the storied island where it is manufactured. Amazing. These cheeses are three for $7.50 or five for $12 during happy hour.
I have a theory that the powers that be at Maximilien assign servers to the happy hour shift upstairs as punishment for serving the potage in the wrong bowl or something. In any case they are often in a bad mood, acting every bit the surly French waiters of legend. Such abuse is endured in order to get a nibble of the assiette de fromages, a selection of French cheese arranged on a platter like numbers on a clock face. This generous treat is just $7 during happy hour—5 to 7pm on weekdays and Saturdays from 8 to 10pm.
When I lived in Spain I was tasked, by the university I “attended,” to read Don Quijote in Spanish. That took me nearly all of my six-month stay there (long book, foreign language, cocktails to drink) but when I did hand in my final paper—which I’m sure was a fascinating read indeed—some friends took me to La Mancha to celebrate. I came back to Madrid with a tiny ceramic windmill and a big barny hunk of Manchego. The sweet memory of that cheese I relive at Lecosho, where Manchego is drizzled with honey, accessorized by Marconas, and sold for $7 during HH. Spring for a demi-baguette of Columbia City bread for $3 more.
Tags: Happy Hour, Lower Queen Anne, Downtown, Madrona, Cheese, Seattle Happy Hours



Does anyone use local cheese in their venue? I think we have excellent local artisan cheese and promotes sustainability and we know the source is in our own back yard. Compare the locals like Golden Glen Creamery, Gothberg, Mt. Townsend and the likes and I believe these are great Happy Hour appetizers as well as desert course. We purchase local veggies that are delighfully fresh and the best beef/chicken and lamb is fresh local ranches. Why then are we not utilizing all we have here in the worlds best playground – PNW
Good question, Kim! That occurred to me when I was writing this and I couldn’t think of a happy hour cheese plate that used local cheeses, though of course many restaurants do offer local cheeses at at full price.
I’ll have to investigate further.
Four Seasons has a cheese buffet with 18 different selections available during HH that features a portion of local cheese including Mt. Townsend and Beechers. They actually had the owner of Mt. Townsend in a month ago on Friday for a paired dinner. Then on Saturday, the owner worked the lounge answering guest questions and making recommendations on cheese and wine pairings!