25 Best Restaurants in Portland, Oregon

Background Illustration for Restaurants

These days, rising-star chefs and the foodies who adore them are flocking to Portland. In this playground of sustainability and creativity, many of the city's hottest restaurants change menus weekly—sometimes even daily—depending upon the ingredients they have delivered to their door that morning from local farms. The combination of fertile soils, temperate weather, and nearby waters contributes to a year-round bountiful harvest (be it lettuces or hazelnuts, mushrooms or salmon) that is within any chef's reach.

And these chefs are not shy about putting new twists on old favorites. Restaurants like Le Pigeon, Beast, Ox, Ned Ludd, Natural Selection, and Aviary have all taken culinary risks by presenting imaginatively executed, often globally inspired fare while utilizing sustainable ingredients. There’s a strong willingness in and around Portland for chefs to explore their creative boundaries.

Menus frequently extend across nations and continents. First-time visitors to Portland always seem to be impressed by the culinary scene’s international diversity, especially when it comes to Asian and Mediterranean fare, but you’ll also find outstanding examples of Peruvian, Russian, regional Mexican, and dozens of other ethnic restaurants. Of course, seafood is prevalent, with chefs regularly taking advantage of the availability of fresh salmon, albacore, halibut, crab, oysters, and mussels from the rivers and the Pacific Ocean.

Most of the city's longtime favorites are concentrated in Nob Hill, the Pearl District, and downtown. But many of the city’s most exciting food scenes are on the East Side, along Alberta Street, Mississippi Avenue, Williams Avenue, Fremont Street, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, Burnside Street, 28th Avenue, Belmont Street, Hawthorne Boulevard, and Division Street, and tucked away in many neighborhoods in between. Serious food enthusiasts will definitely want to make some trips to some of these vibrant, if out-of-the-way neighborhoods.

Bar and restaurant culture greatly overlap in Portland, and many eateries around the city stand out as much because of their carefully curated beverage programs as for their food. Expect to find wine, craft beer, and cocktail lists that rely heavily on Northwest products, and also note that many of the top cocktail lounges, brewpubs, and wine bars we included in our Nightlife and Performing Arts chapter also serve excellent tapas and bar snacks.

Broder

$ Fodor's choice

This adorable neighborhood café—one of the most outstanding brunch spots in town—serves fresh and delicious Scandinavian food with fun-to-pronounce names like friterade applen (apple fritter) and aebleskivers (Danish pancakes). All the food—the hashes, lefse potato crepes, the baked egg scrambles, the Swedish breakfast boards—is delicious, with the Swedish meatballs in sherry cream sauce and salmon fish cakes with caraway vinaigrette being especially tasty among the midday choices. There are additional locations in North Portland, Southwest Portland, and Hood River in the Columbia Gorge.

2508 S.E. Clinton St., OR, 97255, USA
503-736–3333
Known For
  • Light-filled dining room with rustic-modern furniture
  • Often long waits for a table, especially for breakfast
  • Impressive selection of aquavit
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Bullard

$$$$ Fodor's choice

This festive, see-and-be-seen next-generation steak house in the lobby of the Woodlark Hotel brings Southwest-meets-Oregon flair (“Tex-Oregana,” according to The Oregonian's food critic) to signature dishes such as beef carpaccio nachos and San Antonio chicken that lives up to the hype. Try the crispy duck confit with hominy grits, a fried egg, and mustard gravy during the popular weekend brunch, an excellent time to sample the creative cocktails.

Hey Love

$$ Fodor's choice

The food-and-drink component of the stylish Jupiter Next hotel has quickly become one of the East Side's favorite destinations for hobnobbing over drinks and creative bar fare, much of it—salmon poke, the seven-layer taco bowl—framed around Asian and Latin American elements. The space is adorned with hanging and potted greenery and Oriental rugs, which provide a decidedly funky aesthetic.

920 E. Burnside St., OR, 97214, USA
503-206–6223
Known For
  • Fried chicken sandwiches
  • Late-night dining and people-watching
  • A cast-iron macadamia nut–white chocolate cookie with coconut caramel and sea-salt ice cream
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Recommended Fodor's Video

King Tide Fish & Shell

$$$ Fodor's choice
One of only a handful of serious seafood restaurants in Portland, this casually upscale restaurant in the Kimpton RiverPlace Hotel overlooks the Willamette River and Tom McCall Waterfront Park, offering seating in a proper dining room as well as on a sweeping veranda (for the best views). Offering plenty of enticing starters (pickled deviled eggs with Dungeness crab, mussels with smoked-pork dashi, hamachi tostadas) as well as raw bar platters and a typically weighty whole fish catch of the day, the menu is well suited to sharing several dishes among friends.
1510 S.W. Harbor Way, OR, 97201, USA
503-295–6166
Known For
  • Extensive late-night and happy hour menus
  • Local king salmon with your choice of several sauces
  • A peaceful riverfront setting away from the bustle of Downtown

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Lauretta Jean's

$ Fodor's choice

This pie-focused operation began as a stall at Portland's Saturday Farmers Market at PSU and is now a charming, homey, brick-and-mortar café along Division Street in Southeast. Though it's the delicious pies—with feathery-light crusts and delicious fillings like tart cherry, salted pecan, and chocolate-banana cream—that have made Lauretta Jean's a foodie icon in Portland, this cheerful eatery also serves exceptional brunch fare, including the LJ Classic, a fluffy biscuit topped with an over-easy egg, Jack cheese, bacon, and strawberry jam. In the evening, it's a popular spot for desserts and coffee, or even cocktails.

Little T Baker

$ | Division/Clinton Fodor's choice

Set in an airy, high-ceilinged space on the ground floor of the architecturally noteworthy Clinton Condominiums building, this sleek operation serves delectable breakfast and lunch sandwiches and sweets that are nearly impossible to pass up, like the lemon-curd-and-currant scones and sea-salt chocolate brownies.

2600 S.E. Division St., Portland, OR, 97209, USA
503-238–3458
Known For
  • Tantalizing pastries and sweets
  • House-cured lox on spelt and other breakfast sandwiches
  • Savory breads, including a delectable olive slab
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Olympia Provisions

$$$ Fodor's choice

The flagship restaurant of one of the country's leading sources of artisanal charcuterie, such as smoked chorizo, pepper-coated capicola, and pork-pistachio pâté, Olympia Provisions serves gorgeous platters of meats and cheeses along with more eclectic seasonal Mediterranean-influenced fare like eggplant à la plancha with pine nuts and lemon vinaigrette, and pan-roasted black cod with stewed chickpeas. The setting is a smartly designed warehouse space and features a glowing "Meat" sign which quite simply says it all. There's also a pub and a Spanish-inspired tavern, Bar Casa Vale, which are both also in Southeast.

Proud Mary

$ Fodor's choice

Launched in 2009 in Melbourne, Australia, this third-wave coffeehouse that sources its beans sustainably from around the world opened a U.S. location on Alberta Street in 2017. In this light-filled postindustrial space, you can savor perfectly prepared espresso drinks alongside tasty breakfast and lunch fare, such as Korean fried chicken sandwiches and grilled croissant brioches with cured ham, blackened corn, and poached egg.

Screen Door

$$ Fodor's choice

The line that forms outside this Southern-cooking restaurant during weekend brunch and dinner is as epic as the food itself, but you can more easily score a table if you come for weekday brunch, and it's easier to find seating at the newer Pearl District location. A large, packed dining room with canned pickles and peppers along the walls, this Portland hot spot does justice to authentic Southern cooking, especially when it comes to the crispy buttermilk-battered fried chicken with creamy mashed potatoes and collard greens cooked in bacon fat. Or choose the Screen Door plate with your choice of four sides (consider the mac and cheese, creamy grits, and most any of the salads on the rotating seasonal menu).

2337 E. Burnside St., OR, 97214, USA
503-542–0880
Known For
  • Fried chicken (with waffles at breakfast or brunch)
  • Seasonal side dishes, from praline bacon to spiced zucchini fritters
  • Banoffee pie with shortbread-pecan crust

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Toki

$$ | Downtown Fodor's choice

Established by the team behind the vaunted weekend dinner house, Han Oak, this cozy, casually minimalist spot in the trendy West End doles out inventive modern Korean bites, from savory bay shrimp pancakes with a soy-vinegar dipping sauce to Manila clams with miso butter and ginger sake. A highly popular brunch is served Friday–Sunday and is especially known for its twisted donuts in tantalizing flavors like milk tea and toasted coconut.

580 S.W. 12th Ave., Portland, OR, 97205, USA
503-312–3037
Known For
  • Korean fried chicken wings with a variety of sauce options
  • Kimchi and pork belly buns at brunch
  • Butter mochi cake for dessert
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Wed. No lunch Thurs.

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23Hoyt

$$ | Nob Hill

While this upscale tavern serves fine dinner plates, it's happy hour and brunch that draws scene-y Nob Hill revelers to 23Hoyt. With a cool, clean ambience and the owner's private collection of contemporary art on the walls, this corner establishment makes an excellent place to partake in early-evening or weekend noshing.

529 N.W. 23rd Ave., Portland, OR, 97210, USA
503-445–7400
Known For
  • Cocktails made with house-infused spirits
  • Recurring drag brunch
  • A wide selection of small plates
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch

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Flattop & Salamander

$ | Southeast

This chatter-filled breakfast and lunch spot on the edge of the Central East Side is a delightful spot for kicking off your day, with or without a splash of Campari in your glass (there's a fine selection of coffees and teas, too). The breakfast-brunch fare is superb, with chicken-and-waffles topped with hot-chili honey and Honduran baleadas (homemade flour tortillas rolled around refried beans, scrambled eggs, queso, avocado, and crema) leading the charge.

1401 S.E. Morrison St., Portland, OR, 97214, USA
503-477–9651
Known For
  • Brunch cocktails
  • Corned beef or vegan hash
  • Bacon mac and cheese
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Gado Gado

$$$

Bold colors play a central role in the look and culinary approach of this trendy restaurant, from the tropical-print wallpaper to the ornately ornamented tableware, and above all else in the consistently delicious Indonesian fare. Roti with coconut-cream corn, braised-beef rendang with kumquats, and Coca-Cola clams steamed with chilis and lemongrass reflect the kitchen's creative and sometimes surprising interpretation of a cuisine that gets very little play in Portland.

1801 N.E. Cesar E. Chavez Blvd., OR, 97212, USA
503-206–8778
Known For
  • Family-style ($85 per person) "rice table" featuring a wide selection of chef favorites
  • Whole wok-fried jumbo Dungeness crabs
  • Weekend brunch with mimosas
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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JinJu Patisserie

$

Dessert isn't the only offering at this modish East-meets-West patisserie, but these opulent treats—matcha-yuzu mousse tarts, fig–and–red wine chocolates, passionfruit macarons—are unquestionably JinJu's raison d'etre. For a more substantial breakfast or lunch experience, tuck into a five-grain Korean bulgogi bowl or a curried-chicken panini.

4063 N. Williams Ave., OR, 97227, USA
503-828–7728
Known For
  • Exquisitely crafted pastries and cakes
  • Artisanal chocolates
  • Savory and sweet breakfast croissants
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Wed. No dinner

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La Moule

$$$

Along quaintly hip Clinton Street, in a fanciful red-roof building, cozy La Moule serves a perfectly prepared rendition of the dish for which it's named, with a classic marinière sauce and crispy baguettes. But there are also steak frites, whole-roasted branzino with fennel ragout, and other French-Belgian specialties.

2500 S.E. Clinton St., OR, 97202, USA
971-339–2822
Known For
  • Crispy pommes frites with aioli
  • An outstanding Belgian beer list
  • Impressive selection of dessert wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch weekdays

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Masala Lab PDX

$$ | Northeast

With a colorful purple-and-green color scheme, soaring ceilings with exposed air ducts, and lots of hanging plants, this modern mashup of Indian cuisine and comfort brunch fare isn't quite like anything even offbeat Portland has ever seen before. Dishes are both pretty and tasty, from the kitchari (savory rice dal with cabbage, herb salad, and bright-purple pickled eggs) to a rendition of shrimp and grits that showcases shrimp in a tikka mole sauce over coconut milk polenta. The owners also operate the popular DesiPDX food cart on North Mississippi Avenue.

5237 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd., Portland, OR, 97211, USA
971-340–8635
Known For
  • Masala Mary cocktails
  • Friendly service
  • Unusual flavor combinations
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed. No dinner

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Navarre

$$$

It's easy to miss this intimate storefront space whose kitchen produces stellar Spanish, French, Italian, and Croatian food, but don't miss it. The menu changes daily and specials are written in red ink on the front window and always include some sensational seasonal dishes, from a simple summery radish-and-sweet-pea salad to lamb carpaccio with horseradish-celery root. Olive oils, dressings, sauces, and other gourmet goods for sale are displayed on the back wall.  If there's a wait for a table, head next door to the Navarre's sophisticated sister bar, Angel Face, which features raw oysters, charcuterie, and cocktails.

10 N.E. 28th Ave., OR, 97232, USA
503-232–3555
Known For
  • Huge list of wines by the glass
  • Sources many ingredients from a local CSA
  • All dishes available in tapas-size or large family-style portions
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Off the Griddle

$

With bar-top and wooden table and booth seating, fresh-baked pies on display, and a super-relaxed counter service, Off the Griddle feels like a pretty typical—if extra cute—diner, but this Foster Road standby is entirely vegetarian (and mostly vegan). Indeed, the menu reflects the greasy-spoon sensibility, with jackfruit brisket hash, biscuits and gravy with braised kale, walnut-meatloaf Benedicts, and veggie burgers with tempeh bacon among the standouts.

6526 S.E. Foster Rd., OR, 97206, USA
503-764–9160
Known For
  • Full liquor bar plus vegan milkshakes
  • Delicious vegan fruit pies
  • Outdoor picnic table seating on the sidewalk
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Pambiche

$$ | East Burnside/28th Ave.

Painted in bright purples, pinks, and greens, this festive spot offers traditional Cuban fare: slow-roasted meats, tropical root vegetables, hearty stews, rice, and beans. The meat plates—featuring slow-roasted pork, oxtail, shredded beef, rubbed chicken, or giant prawns—with various rich and saucy accompaniments, are all tasty and best enjoyed with a side of fried plantains.

2811 N.E. Glisan St., Portland, OR, 97232, USA
503-233–0511
Known For
  • Sangria with fresh fruit
  • Empanadas with several types of fillings
  • Guava cheesecake
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Pine State Biscuits

$

Loosen your belt a notch or two before venturing inside this down-home Southern restaurant that's especially beloved for its over-the-top breakfast biscuit fare. Pat yourself on the back, or belly, if you can polish off the Reggie Deluxe (a fluffy homemade biscuit topped with fried chicken, bacon, cheese, an egg, and sage gravy), a masterful mélange of calorie-laden ingredients, or the gut-busting smoked-brisket-club biscuit sandwich, shrimp and grits, and andouille corn dog featuring locally made Otto's sausage. You'll find several additional locations around town.

2204 N.E. Alberta St., OR, 97211, USA
503-477–6605
Known For
  • Made-from-scratch seasonal fruit pies and pop tarts
  • Lots of hearty Southern-inspired sides
  • Sells out, so get there early
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Portland City Grill

$$$$ | Downtown

On the 30th floor of the U.S. Bank Tower, the Portland City Grill has bragging rights for best dinner view in town, which makes up for the rather unremarkable steakhouse fare. Gaze over the city skyline and the distant Cascade and Coast mountains from a window table. The adjoining bar and lounge has comfortable armchairs along its windowed walls, which are nearly always occupied.

111 S.W. 5th Ave., Portland, OR, 97204, USA
503-450–0030
Known For
  • Portland's highest-up happy hour
  • Extensive regional wine list
  • "Bridge view" buffet brunch on Sunday
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch Saturday

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Radar

$$ | North Mississippi Ave.

A long, narrow storefront space on the lively North Mississippi strip, this convivial restaurant with exposed-brick walls, a long bar, and high timber ceilings is appreciated as a drinking hole and source of reasonably priced, well-crafted modern American fare. Sip an inventive cocktail and order a few of the shareable small plates, such as smoked-bluefish pâté or summer squash sweet corn risotto.

3951 N. Mississippi Ave., Portland, OR, 97227, USA
503-841–6948
Known For
  • Weekend brunch
  • Impressive craft cocktail list
  • Moules or steak frites
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.–Thurs.

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Tin Shed Garden Cafe

$$

This busy, informal restaurant on Alberta Street is known for its hearty breakfasts—namely, its biscuits and gravy, shredded-potato cakes, egg and tofu scrambles—but the lunch menu offers plenty of creative choices as well, like a creamy artichoke sandwich and a mac and cheese of the day. With a large stone fireplace and chimney, the covered, comfortable outdoor area doubles as a beer garden on warm spring and summer days, and the adjacent garden rounds off the property with a peaceful sitting area.

1438 N.E. Alberta St., OR, 97211, USA
503-288–6966
Known For
  • Dog-friendly patio (and special menu)
  • Cozy atmosphere
  • Breakfast burritos
Restaurant Details
No dinner
Reservations not accepted

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Tusk

$$$
With its clean lines and whitewashed walls, Tusk provides a setting to show off its colorful, beautifully presented modern Middle Eastern fare like flatbread with salmon roe, squash, mustard oil, and yogurt, or grilled sweet potato with hazelnut tahini and dukka. Many of the dishes here are meatless, but you'll also find some pork, lamb, beef, and seafood grills, including a delicious pork schnitzel with carrot-mustard and ancho cress.
2448 E. Burnside St., OR, 97214, USA
503-894–8082
Known For
  • Extensive selection of vegetarian small plates
  • Family-style chef's choice feasts ($65–$75 per person)
  • Savory grilled flatbreads with homemade toppings
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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Wong's King Seafood

$$ | Montavilla/82nd Ave.

Portland's top neighborhood for Asian fare is S.E. 82nd Avenue (and the blocks near it), and this Cantonese seafood restaurant with an expansive dining room that looks a bit like a hotel banquet hall is one of the area's most authentic venues. The lengthy menu of delicious fare includes a number of fresh seafood specialties like braised abalone in oyster sauce and tamarind-stir-fried Dungeness crab.

8733 S.E. Division St., Portland, OR, 97266, USA
503-788–8883
Known For
  • Daily dim sum
  • Cantonese seafood
  • A good variety of pork, beef, veggie, and other non-seafood items

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