The Olympic Peninsula and Washington Coast Restaurants

Port Townsend reigns as the foodie capital of the Olympic Peninsula, where Pacific Northwest coastal cuisine prevails. For a small town, it features an impressive collection of casual yet upscale dining options, some with sweeping bay views. Influences include Mediterranean, Latin, and Southern American cooking. Many restaurants and pubs offer straight-from-the-farm organic herbs and vegetables as well as locally crafted artisanal breads and cheeses and, of course, shellfish and salmon from local waters.

The entire Olympic Culinary Loop—from Port Townsend, Sequim, Port Angeles, and Forks to the Long Beach Peninsula(www.olympicculinaryloop.com)—is best known for its seafood, fresh from local bays and inlets or wild caught in the Pacific Ocean by local fishermen. Many restaurants along the route feature fish-and-chips, chowders, oyster or salmon burgers, crab cakes, cioppino, clams, and mussels. The peninsula also offers many family-friendly and down-home eateries, from hearty burger and breakfast joints to authentic Thai, Japanese, and Mexican restaurants.

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  • 1. 42nd Street Cafe and Bistro

    $$

    Since the early '90s, this cheerful art-filled spot has been a go-to on the peninsula for celebrating special occasions and simply enjoying stellar comfort food with locally sourced ingredients. Consider kicking off your meal with goat cheese fondue or a half pound of Willapa Bay clams steamed in white wine, before graduating to flash-fried razor clams with seasonal vegetables, or ravioli stuffed with wild mushrooms and topped with tomato sauce. Rich chocolate rum truffle cheesecake is a popular dessert.

    4201 Pacific Hwy., Seaview, Washington, 98644, USA
    360-642–2323

    Known For

    • New Orleans–style beignets at breakfast
    • Exceptional Pacific Northwest wine list
    • House-made ice-cream flavors change monthly

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 2. Alder Wood Bistro

    $$$

    Look to this easygoing, art-filled restaurant for inventive, locally sourced, and mostly organic dishes, including pizzas from the wood-fired oven with creative toppings like pesto, truffled goat cheese, and pickled onions. The menu's sustainably harvested seafood selections highlight whatever is in season and also get the wood-fire treatment. Even the bacon-wrapped meat loaf features local grass-fed beef, along with buttermilk mashed potatoes and greens.

    139 W Alder St., Washington, 98382, USA
    360-683–4321

    Known For

    • Alfresco dining in a garden courtyard
    • Local craft beer and cider
    • Crème brûlée with local lavender

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues. and late Dec.–early Feb. No lunch
  • 3. Blue Moose Cafe

    $

    Convivial, cozy, and a bit off-the-wall, this is one of Port Townsend's best sources of generous, unfussy breakfasts and lunches, like thick pancakes and decadent eggs Benedicts, plus hefty burgers and sandwiches. Long popular with sailors and shipwrights who work in the surrounding Port Townsend Boat Haven, this hole-in-the-wall fills up fast on weekends, but you can help yourself to a mug of drip coffee while you wait.

    311 Haines Pl., Port Townsend, Washington, 98368, USA
    360-385–7339

    Known For

    • Kitschy artwork and dishy staff
    • Peanut butter and banana pancakes
    • Wine-based brunch cocktails

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner
  • 4. Finistère

    $$$

    In an uncluttered, light-filled storefront space in Uptown, this hip neighborhood bistro opened by a husband-wife team with experience at some of New York City's and Seattle's top restaurants turns out some of the most flavorful locavore-driven cuisine on the peninsula. You might start with sunchoke soup with chives and truffle oil, before graduating to rabbit lasagna with sofrito and mustard greens, or seared scallops with romesco, cauliflower, and Meyer lemon.

    1025 Lawrence St., Port Townsend, Washington, 98368, USA
    360-344–8127

    Known For

    • Delicious sweets and goods to go at adjacent Lawrence Street Provisions
    • Romantic, candlelit dining room
    • House-made pastas with inventive sauces

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon., Tues., and Jan. No lunch weekdays
  • 5. Fountain Café

    $$

    Local artwork lines the walls of this cozy, eclectic bistro inside a historic clapboard building a block off the main drag, near the foot of the Taylor Street staircase. The delicious seafood- and pasta-intensive menu reveals Mediterranean and Pacific Northwest influences—think cioppino with local shellfish in a tomato-saffron broth, and roasted walnut and gorgonzola penne with wild boar. There's a notable list of regional and Italian wines, and several imported ports and sherries to accompany any of the rich desserts.

    920 Washington St., Washington, 98368, USA
    360-385–1364

    Known For

    • Friendly, unpretentious service
    • Fresh-baked baguette with herbed butter
    • Warm gingerbread with vanilla custard

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted
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  • 6. Hama Hama Oyster Saloon

    $$

    You'll find Hama Hama oysters, which are harvested from this Hood Canal shellfish operation that's been going strong since 1922, at some of the top restaurants in the Pacific Northwest. Here at the farm store and in the open-air (dress warmly on cool days) saloon, you can enjoy these fresh-shucked bivalves—along with clams and mussels raw or wood-roasted with chipotle-bourbon butter—and other tasty pub fare at lunch. Save room for the warm-chocolate fudge brownie.

    35846 U.S. 101, Lilliwaup, Washington, 98555, USA
    360-877–5811

    Known For

    • Local wines, ciders, and craft beers
    • Clams steamed in halibut–yellow curry bone broth
    • Expansive patio with water views

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Thurs. in winter. No dinner
  • 7. MyCovio's

    $$$

    A tiny gem set in a weathered-shingle cottage within walking distance of the beach, MyCovio's is one of the few dining options on the upper portion of the Long Beach Peninsula, and it's well worth the drive for sublime pastas and other Italian-inspired fare. The cioppino swimming with local seafood is stellar, as is spaghetti with matsutake mushrooms and slow-roasted seasonal vegetables. Next door, the owners run a cute waffle shack that's open for breakfast and lunch.

    1311 Bay Ave., Ocean Park, Washington, 98640, USA
    360-642–3475

    Known For

    • Quirky, intimate dining room
    • Charred romaine hearts with Dungeness crab
    • Panna cotta with rotating seasonal flavors

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch
  • 8. Pane d'Amore

    $

    Pick up a baguette, loaf of fig-anise bread, chocolate-chip cookies, maple-pecan scones, or cinnamon buns at this top-notch bakery, tucked into a small storefront in the heart of the Uptown district. There's a selection of cheeses, jams, granola, kombucha, and other gourmet goods to go as well. Additional locations are on the Port Townsend waterfront, in Sequim, and on Bainbridge Island.

    617 Tyler St., Port Townsend, Washington, 98368, USA
    360-385–1199

    Known For

    • Grilled cheese sandwiches with a variety of inventive fillings
    • Lemon-blueberry scones
    • Seasonal pies

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner
  • 9. Rediviva

    $$$

    The name means renewed or revived, and much of the material—wood, metal, and glass—inside this cosmopolitan downtown restaurant has been repurposed, creating rustic yet refined space in which Edison bulbs and blown-glass floats mix with steel cables and timber beans. The kitchen focuses on seasonal, locally sourced ingredients in flavorful dishes like crispy duck confit with pork belly and white bean cassoulet and wild chanterelles, and rye-crusted steelhead with fondant potatoes and smoked beets. Regional wines complement the excellent food.

    118 E. Wishkah St., Aberdeen, Washington, 98520, USA
    360-637–9259

    Known For

    • Handcrafted cocktails (including the best negroni in town)
    • Pork-belly burgers with smoked gorgonzola and bacon jam
    • Flourless chocolate cake with smoked sea salt

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 10. Rediviva

    $$$$

    It's worth the half-hour drive around the harbor to historic downtown Aberdeen to dine at the region's most sophisticated restaurant, where seasonal, locally sourced ingredients appear in artfully plated creations like black cod with buttered oyster sauce, and braised rabbit with ricotta gnudi. Rediviva means renewed or revived, and much of the material—wood, metal, and glass—in the interior has been upcycled for a refined effect. There's also a great selection of Northwest wines and craft cocktails.

    118 Wishkah St., Aberdeen, Washington, 98520, USA
    360-637–8181

    Known For

    • Rustic but elegant ambience
    • Creative craft cocktails
    • Lavish seasonally changing desserts

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Wed. No lunch
  • 11. Sabai Thai

    $$

    Local seafood—including prawns, scallops, crab, clams, and mussels—features prominently in the brightly flavored and fragrantly seasoned food at this relaxing Thai bistro on the quiet west side of town. Other delicious house specialties are spicy eggplant with red curry, and crispy half duck with bok choy and a smoky soy glaze.

    903 W. 8th St., Port Angeles, Washington, 98363, USA
    360-452–4505

    Known For

    • Warm and thoughtful service
    • Dungeness crab–fried rice
    • Very good wine list

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch
  • 12. Salty Girls Seafood

    $$

    This hip, counter-service seafood bar with a mod-industrial vibe serves Puget Sound oysters and clams on the half shell—either raw or baked with seasonal compound butters—and several beers and ciders on tap to wash them down. Oyster shooters are another favorite, and there's a short menu of other fish-centric dishes, from steamed Dungeness crab with clarified butter to chowder made with local clams, but nothing fried.

    210 W. Washington St., Sequim, Washington, 98382, USA
    360-775–3787

    Known For

    • "grown-up" grilled cheese with bacon and shrimp
    • Exceptional craft cocktails
    • Sea-salt chocolate-chip cookies

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Wed. No dinner Sun.
  • 13. Shelburne Pub

    $$

    The dark-wood-paneled walls, floor-to-ceiling stained-glass windows, and marble café tables inside this venerable spot attest to its history of feeding locals and visitors for more than a century. Although it calls itself a pub, the Shelburne has a casually sophisticated look and vibe, and stellar yet reasonably priced Pacific Northwest fare to go with it—consider the miso-cured sablefish with bok choy and pickled shiitakes, or crispy braised pork with polenta and a blackberry gastrique (a sauce that's sweet and sour). Brunch is a popular affair on weekends. The restaurant is inside a small boutique hotel with comfy rooms.

    4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Washington, 98644, USA
    360-642–2442

    Known For

    • Popular weekend brunch
    • Outstanding craft cocktail list
    • Locally sourced seafood and meats
  • 14. Wandering Goose

    $$$

    From Westport, it's a scenic 20-mile drive down the coast to reach the much-buzzed-about eatery that is inside the historic and offbeat Tokeland Hotel and run by young restaurateurs who had operated the original Wandering Goose in Seattle before relocating here in 2018. Folks come from all over to sample the fluffy scratch-made biscuits and Japanese-style oyakodon omelets (eggs with chicken), but dinner is the star attraction—and duck confit slow-simmered for six hours is the most celebrated dish. In addition to a thoughtfully curated wine and cocktail list, the restaurant has interesting nonalcoholic drinks, from natural sodas to drinking vinegars. A team of cute resident cats and dogs often amble about the dining room visiting with patrons.

    2964 Kindred Ave., Washington, 98590, USA
    360-267–7006

    Known For

    • Endearingly inviting nautical-chic dining room
    • Creative breakfasts (served till 2 pm)
    • Seasonally flavored soft-serve sundaes
  • 15. Waterline Pub

    $$

    With tall windows overlooking Ilwaco's marina, a high timber-beam ceiling, and a friendly crowd of locals and visitors, this upbeat gastropub in At the Helm Hotel is perfect for a bite to eat before or after hiking and beachcombing at nearby Cape Disappointment State Park. Highlights from the seafood-intensive menu are a platter of house-pickled fish, rich Dungeness crab bisque, lingcod fish tacos, and a Reuben with pastrami-spiced albacore steak and beer-braised sauerkraut. 

    203 Howerton Ave., Ilwaco, Washington, 98624, USA
    360-777–3824

    Known For

    • Patio with great views of Baker Bay
    • Shareable "seafood nosh" boards
    • Nice selection of Pacific Northwest wines

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Wed.
  • 16. 8th Avenue Ale House

    $

    Count on comforting, hearty Pacific Northwest pub fare at this long, narrow, and dimly lit eatery, with an ample selection of regional beer on tap. Look for pizza, seafood, and appetizers like deep-fried pickles, beer-battered mushrooms, crab cakes, and a pound of clams. Fish-and-chips, sandwiches, and burgers like the Naughty Nellie, with American and Swiss cheese and crushed red pepper, round out the menu. There's a small beer garden in back and more seating out front. Hoquiam is about a 30-minute drive from Ocean Shores. 

    207 8th St., Hoquiam, Washington, 98550, USA
    360-612–3455

    Known For

    • Friendly and welcoming staff
    • Excellent beer selection
    • Attractive beer garden
  • 17. 8th Street Ale House

    $

    You can count on finding deftly prepared Pacific Northwest pub fare—thin-crust pizzas, beer-braised pot roast, house-made black-bean burgers seafood, cod fish-and-chips, and crab-rockfish cakes—at this long, narrow, and dimly lit neighborhood pub in downtown Hoquiam. There's an ample selection of regional beer on tap, which is best enjoyed in the cozy beer garden in back.

    207 8th St., Hoquiam, Washington, 98550, USA
    360-612–3455

    Known For

    • Cast-iron skillet mac-and-cheese
    • Friendly service
    • Live music some nights
  • 18. Aloha Alabama BBQ and Bakery

    $

    This funky eatery in Westport's marina district offers an unlikely trinity of traditional Southern barbecue, Hawaiian food, and the pub fare that's more typical of the area, and all of it is quite tasty. The island cuisine, including kalua pork and Hawaiian barbecue chicken, is particularly good, but regulars also swear by the fall-off-the-bone beef brisket and the panko-breaded Willapa Bay oysters and fries. You can customize the spice levels by choosing from a huge selection of hot sauces.

    2309 Westhaven Dr., Westport, Washington, 98595, USA
    360-268–7299

    Known For

    • Refreshing cucumber margaritas
    • Addictive smoked-pork egg rolls
    • Garlic-smoked chicken platters

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 19. Billy's Bar & Grill

    $

    The most popular local saloon and brothel during Aberdeen's rough-and-tumble logging and seafaring years, this colorful tavern has a collection of prints recalling those bawdy days and remembering the life of the notorious original owner, Billy Ghol, who was rumored to have killed more than 100 men. The standard comfort fare includes steak and eggs, grilled local oysters, French dip sandwiches, and fish-and-chips. If you're looking for a challenge, try the Billy's Belt Buster, a burger with four patties, cheese, and bacon.

    322 E. Heron St., Aberdeen, Washington, 98520, USA
    360-533–7144

    Known For

    • Good array of beef and chicken burgers
    • Potential sightings of Billy Ghol's ghost
    • Caramel apple tarts with vanilla ice cream

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted
  • 20. Blakeslee's Bar and Grill

    $

    In an area with precious few dining options, this casual tavern just a little south of downtown Forks is a sight for sore eyes and hungry stomachs, offering up big portions of reliably good pub food. After a day of hiking or beachcombing, tuck into the half-pound Mill Creek bacon cheeseburger, a rib-eye steak, or a platter of batter-fried local seafood.

    1222 S. Forks Ave., Forks, Washington, 98331, USA
    360-374–5003

    Known For

    • Nachos (both traditional and Irish-style)
    • Craft beer and potent cocktails
    • Playing pool

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

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