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-   -   Jonesing for Dungeness Crab - Seattle (https://www.fodors.com/community/united-states/jonesing-for-dungeness-crab-seattle-936984/)

sludick May 29th, 2012 03:31 PM

Jonesing for Dungeness Crab - Seattle
 
Can't get 'em here in Florida, at least not at anything remotely affordable. We'll be in Seattle overnight in September - any recommendations for a lunch or dinnertime crab pig-out?

I order seafood occasionally from Pike Market (very expensive to ship to Florida, except the salmon), and have not been there in person since I was growing up. So plan to stop in there. I see that 22tango recommended Etta's at the Market on another thread - would that be the best stop?

We will be at the end of our vacation and probably not wanting to dress up, so looking for good crab and hopefully some good sourdough, but not someplace that jeans won't do.

suze May 29th, 2012 03:40 PM

Dungeness Crab is not "remotely affordable" here either. Even at the grocery store crab meat is like $25+/lb.

Etta's Seafood is a great restaurant but the only crab on their menu last time I was there was (a little dab really) topping a salad. Certainly not a "crab pig out" by any stretch.

Honestly the easiest crab is from the fresh fish vendors right in the Market. Most of them do a "cup of crab" with a plastic fork to go, cocktail sauce if you want it.

suze, reporting from seattle :-)

Gardyloo May 29th, 2012 04:08 PM

Where will you be staying? Maybe someplace with a kitchenette? (E.g. the Residence Inn on Lake Union would be a great location.)

Reason being, while most fish/seafood restaurants in Seattle will sell you Dungeness crab for $$$, to be honest the very best way IMO is just to buy a couple of cooked crabs (have the fishmonger clean them) a couple of nutcrackers, a loaf of good bread and maybe a bottle of local white wine (and anything else you'd like, such as, say, a pound of butter to melt, a few lemons to squeeze, and did I mention butter?) and <i>DO IT YOURSELF.</i> Even if you're not staying someplace with a kitchenette, I'm quite certain virtually any hotel in town will be glad to have room service bring you the setups - order a couple of Caesar salads and some dessert. There won't be any dress code, you can use all those extra towels to clean up the inevitable mess, and tip the hotel people a couple of extra bucks to adios the plates and shells before you start smelling like a halibut farmer.

Any way you cut it, you'll be way ahead financially, you can pick the crabs you want, take your time, and indulge in one of the Northwest's great traditions - cold crab for dinner.

You can buy the crab at the Pike Market, or for a treat go to the Uwajimaya supermarket in the Chinatown/International District for IMO the best fish/shellfish selection in town (and pick up some funky Japanese snack food in the process.)

Now if all that hasn't convinced you, I'd recommend Anthony's Pier 66 on the central waterfront, around $40 pp, or Elliott's Oyster House, around $50 pp. The Crab Pot, a small chain, has an outlet on the central waterfront also, for about $40 pp. (I'd choose Anthony's in a heartbeat.) Etta's is also good; I think a whole crab (just crab) will be around $25 in the bar. [For comparison's sake, a take-it-home crab will usually be under $10.]

sludick May 29th, 2012 04:13 PM

I guess it's all relative. The meat would cost me $99 ($33/lb plus shipping, plus $45 for the minimal 3 lb order. The whole crab would be $75 for 3, plus $45 shipping.

I do see on Etta's menu (if it would be available, who knows) that a steamed dungeness crab with lemon & butter is 25 half/40 whole, or at "crabby hour" is 15 half/25 whole.

Growing up in the SF Bay Area, I know what you mean about those little thimbles of crab cocktail - thanks but no. Would like some garlic crabs, if they could be found..

sludick May 29th, 2012 04:17 PM

Hi Gardyloo - thanks, excellent suggestions. No, we won't have a kitchenette in Seattle, but we will have a condo with kitchen in both Victoria and Vancouver.

For Seattle, your idea sounds delicious. Thorough shower before getting on the plane...

suze Jun 1st, 2012 09:45 AM

It'd trust Etta's to make anything delicious (although not cheap). I usually eat there at lunch-time and didn't realize they served whole crabs.

The crab cups from the fish vendors aren't little "thimbles", they are regular plastic drinking glass sized.

hazel1 Jun 1st, 2012 10:33 AM

But wait, Dungeness crab season doesn't even begin until mid-December, so how can you get fresh crab anywhere in Seattle in September? Am I missing something? Generally getting crab out of season means it was "previously frozen".

sludick Jun 1st, 2012 10:51 AM

Weelll... I believe it's harvested pretty much all year round up in BC, so maybe that's where it is coming from. Sport crabbing in the Puget Sound opens in October, I think, depending on how things are going.

We'll be in Victoria 2 nights in a condo with a kitchen and will pick up some seafood at The Fish Store (Victoria Fisherman's Wharf). They have a floating store and claim that their dungeness crabs have never touched land - the boats pull up and drop them off, live.

I'll certainly find out..

Gardyloo Jun 1st, 2012 01:37 PM

IIRC there's a summer commercial Dungeness fishery in SE Alaska too.

sludick Jun 1st, 2012 05:04 PM

Hey, Gardyloo - was at dinner with friends tonight talking about your advice (above) on how to eat crab in your hotel room. Strong agreement with the butter-butter-did I mention butter recommendation.

Overall, given our itinerary, we'll probably try for crab in Victoria and Vancouver. Possibly may even stop at a cousin's house coming down from Vancouver to Seattle for a cookout, if we could inspire that. In my family there, that means oysters and salmon on the grill, don't think they have figured out the hamburger/hot dog thing yet, thank goodness....


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