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.

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

Something incorrect in this review?

Dan & Louis Oyster Bar Restaurant

$$

This Old Town landmark, located near the river and Voodoo Doughnuts, has oysters baked Rockefeller-style, stewed, and on the half shell, but the venerable 1907 restaurant offers plenty of other tasty local seafood, including steamed clams, Dungeness crab stew, and beer-battered cold-smoked salmon. The collection of steins, plates, and marine art fills beams, nooks, crannies, and nearly every inch of wall space.

208 S.W. Ankeny St., OR, 97204, USA
503-227–5906
Known For
  • Oyster stew
  • Mix-and-match fried or sautéed combination dishes
  • Endearingly old-fashioned ambience
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.–Thurs.

Something incorrect in this review?

Jacqueline

$$$
This sophisticated but unfussy neighborhood restaurant on a quiet corner of Clinton Street presents a nightly changing menu of superb small and large plates, with an emphasis on seafood. Oysters on the half shell and yellowtail crudo are typically stellar raw-bar offerings, while you might find Dungeness crab toast with saffron hollandaise or sea scallops with a lime leaf-coconut curry elsewhere on the menu.
2039 S.E. Clinton St., OR, 97202, USA
503-327-8637
Known For
  • Raw oysters ($1 each during Monday happy hour) sourced exclusively from the Pacific Northwest
  • Fantastic wine selection
  • Family-style supper option ($90 per person)
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Jake's Famous Crawfish

$$$ | West End

Diners have been enjoying fresh Pacific Northwest seafood in Jake's warren of wood-paneled dining rooms for more than a century. The back bar came around Cape Horn during the 1880s, and the chandeliers hanging from the high ceilings date from 1881. The restaurant, now operated by the McCormick & Schmick's chain, gained a national reputation in 1920, when crawfish was added to the menu. White-coated waiters take your order from an almost endless sheet of daily seafood specials—which can include cedar-plank-roasted salmon, pecan-crusted catfish, Dungeness crab, and Bay shrimp cakes. If you're dining during crawfish season (May–September), sample the tasty crustacean in pie, cooked creole style, or in a Cajun-style stew over rice. The daily happy hour in the bar is one of the best deals in town, with handcrafted drinks, $4 cheeseburgers, $5 fish tacos, and other toothsome bargains.

401 S.W. 12th Ave., Portland, OR, 97205, USA
503-226–1419
Known For
  • Almost endless sheet of daily seafood specials
  • Dungeness crab and Bay shrimp cakes
  • Oregon Triple Berry Martini
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

Something incorrect in this review?

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

Something incorrect in this review?