Culture

The fearless one, the cheapskate, or the (dubious) insider

Pick your Seattle guidebook: Three will hit shelves soon, offering spin and snark-filled tips on where to eat, drink, shop, and hang out.

The fearless one, the cheapskate, or the (dubious) insider
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by

Ronald Holden

Pick your Seattle guidebook: Three will hit shelves soon, offering spin and snark-filled tips on where to eat, drink, shop, and hang out.

Three ambitious books are about to hit the market, purporting to tell  you where to eat, drink, shop, and live in Our Fair City. Some solid  hits, some wild misses.

The Fearless Critic franchise, launched by New  York wine writer Robin Goldstein, is a puzzling series: guidebooks to  local restaurants ostensibly written by "undercover local critics who  dine incognito." The authors of the inaugural Seattle guide, however,  are reasonably well-known around town, have their own blogs and write  for mainsteam publications like Seattle Weekly and Seattle Metropolitan magazine.

That's not the puzzling part,  though. Helpfully organizing the 250 local eateries by neighborhoods, Fearless Critic assigns Blueacre Seafood (7th & Olive) to Belltown  on the argument that it's north of Virginia (not so! it's at 7th and  Olive), but keeps Etta's, which really is north of Virginia, in  Downtown. Attempting to categorize restaurants by poshness, Le Pichet is  called Upmarket while the spare yet elegant Sitka & Spruce  qualifies as Casual, as does Le Pichet's sibling, Cafe Presse. The  selection is full of obscure taverns and coffee shops, and a wide array  of Asian eats (Canton Noodle House, Chiang's Gourmet, Fu Man Dumpling  House, Hing Loon, and on and on).

Some entries sound like they were rewritten back at headquarters.  Flying Fish, now in South Lake Union, was never part of the Pike Place  Market "tourist trap." (And why do writers keep referring to the city's  leading attraction as if it were a den of iniquity or a disgusting  swamp?)

On the other hand, there are enough snarky remarks to keep you  reading. Kingfish Cafe's "cuisine no longer dazzles." Delancey "isn't  worth the two-hour wait." (Oh yes, it is.) Service at Harvest Vine is  spotty. Wild Ginger's food is dated, its kebabs too dry, its noodles too  wet; but its wine list is "a work of profound beauty, elegance and deep  obsession...a gift to the city." (The wine lists at Canlis, Rover's,  Daniel's Broiler, Cafe Juanita and Spinasse also get high praise.)

The best French restaurant in town, according to FC, is Le Pichet,  described as a simple bistro (and yet, as noted, categorized as  "Upmarket Restaurant") with "masterful" food.

It would be hard  to disagree with FC's top choices for "Most Delicious." Cafe Juanita  in Kirkland leads the list, followed by Joule (local blogger Jay Friedman's avowed favorite),  Crush, Le Pichet, Sitka & Spruce, and Spinasse. For "Good Vibes,"  there's some overlap; Le Pichet, Sitka & Spruce and Spinasse lead  the list. Friedman probably could have written the book on the basis of  his own blog alone; he's closing in on 400 reviews posted on Gastrolust.

Fearless Critic's local editor, Carissa Bluestone, knows how to  wrangle a consensus out of the advisory panel (and it's a prestigious  group: Seattle Food Geek, Surly Gourmand, and Lorna Yee among others), with  Friedman serving as chief editorial voice. This manages to avoid the  kinetic, frazzled style of the Zagat guides, though you get the feeling  that the snarkiness is doled out in quarter-teaspoon doses. After all,  if a restaurant were truly terrible, it wouldn't deserve to be in the  book in the first place. Which makes one wonder why so many "not  particularly pleasant" strip-mall takeout joints are featured, be they  Chinese, Japanese, Indonesian, Laotian, Thai, Filipino, Korean, or  Vietnamese.

The good news is that updates for the entire book are posted regularly on the Fearless Critic Seattle website, and the whole book is also online for a modest subscription.

And then we have the Cheap Bastard series from Globe Pequot Press, with  the estimable David Volk recruited to compile and write the Seattle edition. Volk has to live up to  his reputation as a humorist, so some of the capsule reviews are a bit  forced, but in general this is an impressive compilation.

The reader is torn between Volk's put-upon persona, as he struggles  to uncover one bargain after another, and admiration for the results.  Best bargain, he says, is the Seattle International Film Festival, which  offers free seats to volunteers. (Volunteering is a great way to see  live theater, too.) One freebie new to me was the offer of online language  lessons from Mango Languages, via the Seattle Public Library website, www.spl.org.  No need for expensive Rosetta Stone if what you want is a quick  refresher.

Volk helpfully lists addresses for all the branch libraries, names restaurants where kids eat free, and tries to get his arms around  Seattle's strangest institution, Happy Hour. He gives it 10 pages of  listings. More good stuff: thrift stores and consignment furniture  shops, cheap haircuts, and a list of websites that find good deals, day  in and day out.

Next up: The Insider's Guide to Seattle, penned for the Globe Pequot  series by Shelley Seale, a journalist who started her career in  Austin, Texas, and whose previous book concerned children living in the  slums of India. She moved to Seattle, and learned enough about the city to  start writing for far-away magazines.

I don't know where she got the notion that Greenlake is connected to  Lake Union by water; perhaps she knows things I don't. Belltown's  "gritty urban scene"? A matter of opinion. The book's publication date  is December 2010, yet Washington Mutual bank — seized by federal regulators  two years ago — is listed as a major employer. Alex Haley, to take  another entry, was never a Seattle resident; he merely died here.

On the  other hand, she notes that locals don't carry umbrellas. Yes, into each  life a little drizzle must fall.

Finally, a bit of nostalgia, published earlier this year. It's the Dining In Seattle Past & Present  Cookbook from Elliott Wolf's Peanut Butter Publishing. The  "Dining In..." series was launched in 1977 to give diners recipes  from their favorite restaurants. It ended up covering 38 volumes in 30  cities.

Public attitudes have changes in the 25 years since the first  book was published — attitudes toward cooking, toward ingredients, toward  "classical" cuisine. So the book is in two parts, one historical, one  contemporary. Present day is represented by the Usual Suspects (Cafe  Juanita, Canlis, Metropolitan Grill, Wild Ginger). More interesting for  some of us: Brasserie Pittsbourg's menu (Quenelles Nantua, $8.25;  Cervelle de Veau aux Capres, $8.25, Gigot d'Agneau Provencale, $9). The survivors: Canlis, celebrating its 60th anniversary this month, and The Georgian, whose chef at the time,  Ludgar Szmania, signed his name to a menu featuring $14.50 foie gras and  grilled lamb chops with kidneys, $21.50.

Ronald Holden

By Ronald Holden

Ronald Holden is a regular Crosscut contributor. His new book, published this month, is titled “HOME GROWN Seattle: 101 True Tales of Local Food & Drink." (Belltown Media. $17.95).