5 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.

3 Doors Down Cafe and Lounge

$$ | Southeast

Three doors down a side street from the bustling Hawthorne Boulevard, this small restaurant is known for its high-quality Italian food and extensive happy hour list. The intimate, unpretentious trattoria has built a reliable clientele with consistently well-crafted plates like lemon-zest-and-ricotta-stuffed eggplant with marinara, panko-crusted Oregon fried oysters and aioli, and a risotto of sautéed kale, sweet corn, and aged Gouda. There's a good list of reasonably priced wines, too.

1429 S.E. 37th Ave., Portland, OR, 97214, USA
503-236–6886
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon. No lunch

Something incorrect in this review?

Caffé Mingo

$$$ | Nob Hill
The weekly regulars may have aged along with this 1990s-era Italian joint, but the cooks aren’t resting on their laurels. Pass by before happy hour, and you may see lasagna dough hanging in the dining room—such touches elevate the scratch-made comfort fare that continues to draw crowds. If the wait for a table is long, pass the time at Bar Mingo next door.
807 N.W. 21st Ave., Portland, OR, 97209, USA
503-226–4646
Known For
  • Connections to regional farms
  • A classic menu that changes weekly
  • Handmade pasta
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon., no lunch

Something incorrect in this review?

DOC

$$$ | Woodlawn/Concordia

With red-checked curtains and candlelit tables draped in white linens, cozy DOC is an authentic nod to casual Italian neighborhood trattorias, but the gorgeously presented cuisine here borrows heavily from the Pacific Northwest. Although you're free to order everything à la carte, most guests opt for the tasting menu, which comprises six courses for $75 (it's an additional $60 for wine pairings) and might feature halibut with a romesco sauce, Pacific oysters on the half shell with a hibiscus vinaigrette, and olive oil cake with strawberry, pine nuts, and tarragon.

5519 N.E. 30th Ave., Portland, OR, 97211, USA
503-946–8592
Known For
  • Family-style suppers offered on Sundays
  • Extraordinary selection of natural and difficult-to-procure wines
  • Local seafood prepared with Italian-inspired recipes
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Firehouse Restaurant

$$ | Woodlawn/Concordia

Occupying a stately, redbrick, former firehouse, this inviting neighborhood spot in Woodlawn is warmed by a wood-fire oven, rustic redbrick-and-wood decor, and sunlight streaming through a glass garage door that's open in nice weather. Although justly well-known for the delicious thin-crust pizzas (try the one with chanterelles, garlic, mozzarella, and thyme), the restaurant receives deserved kudos for its appetizers, salads, and grills, from lightly battered and perfectly fried cauliflower with crème fraîche to meatballs with tomato, rosemary, and kale.

711 N.E. Dekum St., Portland, OR, 97211, USA
503-954–1702
Known For
  • Affordable three-course prix fixe that includes appetizer, salad, and pizza
  • Well-curated list of after-dinner drinks
  • Wood-fired pizzas
Restaurant Details
No lunch

Something incorrect in this review?

Luce

$$ | Southeast

Run by the same creative team behind top-notch nearby eateries Angel Face and Navarre, this sunny corner storefront is both a casual neighborhood trattoria and a small Italian gourmet grocery stocking olive oils, vinegars, pastas, and sauces. The menu is well suited to sharing and focuses on rustic, hearty classics like minestrone, pappardelle pasta with rabbit, spaghetti with garlic, hot peppers, and clams, and hanger steak with garlic and rosemary. The quality of both the ingredients and the talent in the kitchen makes for a consistently terrific experience here. Save room for the flourless chocolate cake.