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Farm to market for Pike Place restaurant

The restaurant known as Campagne is reopened as Marché.

Farm to market for Pike Place restaurant
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Ronald Holden

The restaurant known as Campagne is reopened as Marché.

The farm-to-table movement hasn't always existed; it's been a long, not  always easy campaign. We idealize the bucolic countryside, that distant  vista of fields and farms, but it takes a leap of faith to "eat your  view." The French know better. Spending a weekend à la campagne isn't an abstract concept (or going camping),  it's just "getting out of town." The concept of Campagne, in the Pike  Place Market, was to reconcile the two notions, to bring the farms  closer to the city.

So here we are a quarter-century later. Peter Lewis, the  restaurant's creator, sold it in 2005 to a Bay Area real estate  developer named Simon Snellgrove and became a writer of murder mysteries. The kitchen was in the  capable hands of Culinary Institute of America-traiined Daisley Gordon; Cyril Fréchier,  Seattle's best French sommelier, had been on staff for four years. The  Café downstairs was full of Market-visiting tourists. But in  the sheltered courtyard upstairs, the sails of the fine-dining flagship  were luffing. A big, big breath of fresh air was called for.

Snellgrove closed Campagne in January for a remodel and  repositioning. Like all do-overs, it took a lot longer than expected,  but the results are stunning. Except for the dining room chairs, it's a  completely new restaurant. Now named Marché, the French word for market,  it promises a much simpler, less expensive menu (pork shoulder, $22, is  now the most expensive item on the menu) along with a short list of  approachable wines.

A francophile cycling enthusiast named Cameron Williams has been  recruited as general manager, and the Australian-born Snellgrove,  satisfied with the transition, has formally passed the baton as managing partner to his Jamaica-born chef, Gordon. The transition from field to market is complete.

If you go: Marché, 86 Pine St. (in the courtyard of the Inn at the Market), Seattle, 206-728-2800.

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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).