The Best Restaurant in Seattle, Washington

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Thanks to inventive chefs, first-rate local produce, adventurous diners, and a bold entrepreneurial spirit, Seattle has become one of the culinary capitals of the nation. Fearless young chefs have stepped in and raised the bar. Fresh and often foraged produce, local seafood, and imaginative techniques make the quality of local cuisine even higher.

Seattle's dining scene has been stoked like a wildfire by culinary rock stars who compete on shows like Iron Chef, Top Chef, and regularly dominate "best of" lists. Seattle chefs have won big in the prestigious James Beard competition, with Renee Erickson of Bateau, Walrus and the Carpenter, and the Whale Wins taking the "Best Chef Northwest" title in 2016 and creative genius Edouardo Jordan named one of Food and Wine Magazine's "Best New Chefs." The city is particularly strong on new American, Japanese, and Vietnamese cuisines. Chefs continuously fine-tune what can best be called Pacific Northwest cuisine, which features fresh, local ingredients, including anything from nettles and mushrooms foraged in nearby forests; colorful berries, apples, and cherries grown by Washington State farmers; and outstanding seafood from the cold northern waters of the Pacific Ocean, like wild salmon, halibut, oysters, Dungeness crab, and geoduck. Seattle boasts quite a few outstanding bakeries, too, whose breads and desserts you'll see touted on many menus.

Seattle is also seeing a resurgence in American comfort food, often with a gourmet twist, as well as gastropub fare, which can mean anything from divine burgers on locally baked ciabatta rolls to grilled foie gras with brioche toast. But innovation still reigns supreme: local salmon cooked sous vide and accompanied with pickled kimchi or fresh-picked peas can be just as common as aspic spiked with sake and reindeer meat. Many menus feature fusion cuisine or pages of small-plate offerings, and even high-end chefs are dabbling in casual ventures like pop-up eateries or gourmet food trucks. Many, if not most, of the top chefs own their businesses as well, and in recent years they’ve spread their talents around, operating two or three complementary ventures (or, in Ethan Stowell’s case, more than a dozen and counting, while Tom Douglas has nearly 20, plus a cooking school and farm). The trend toward informality and simplicity particularly plays out when it comes to dessert; most neighborhoods boast branches of at least one of the city’s popular, independently owned cupcake, doughnut, or ice-cream shops. Regardless of the format or focus, one thing's for sure: chefs are highlighting their inventions with the top-notch ingredients that make Pacific Northwest cooking famous.

Red Cow

$$$ | Madrona
One of the latest from restaurateur Ethan Stowell—and a well-received departure from his usual Italian fare—this new French brasserie in beautiful tree-lined Madrona serves up excellent house-made charcuterie and expertly prepared grass-finished beef. A 10-minute trip from Downtown or Capitol Hill, Red Cow is a bustling modern space with knowledgeable, personable servers. Start with a selection of the restaurant's many nose-to-tail delicacies, such as lamb terrine, beef marrow, or a chicken-liver mousse so exquisite you'll want to scrape up every last bit of it with a side of frites. Beef cuts range from a flavorful hanger steak to a splurge-worthy New York strip from Mishima Ranch; if you can't decide on one classic sauce (béarnaise, compound butter, red-wine reduction, and horseradish cream), ask for a sampling of all four. Other entrées include fresh local shellfish and a succulent half roast chicken. A well-curated wine list—several bottles cost less than $40—features French imports alongside a noteworthy selection of Northwest whites and reds.
1423 34th Ave., Seattle, 98122, USA
206-454–7932
Restaurant Details
No lunch

Something incorrect in this review?