5 Best Restaurants in Washington Cascade Mountains and Valleys, Washington

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Olympia and especially Tacoma have increasingly hip and sophisticated dining scenes, with everything from laid-back cafés to seasonally driven restaurants with water views. After those cities, Gig Harbor and Bellingham have the best food scenes—they’re not terribly big, but support fine little crops of notable restaurants. You’ll also find good brewpubs and indie coffeehouses in most of the larger towns in the area. Edmonds also has a growing bounty of exceptional eateries.

On the road, refueling takes place at country-style cafés, farm stands, and kitschy or specialty shops like the ’50s-style sweets shops of Port Gamble and Snoqualmie or the Norwegian bakeries of Poulsbo. None of these is in short supply, and many eateries, however small, pride themselves on using local ingredients.

Rifugio's

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Country-style Italian cooking is the specialty at this delightful roadside restaurant on Mt. Baker Highway, which offers seats in a cozy art-filled dining room or outside on a glorious pine-scented patio. Hearty dishes like lasagna Bolognese and seafood stew with crusty house-baked bread feature locally grown or harvested ingredients. A thoughtful wine list draws from both the Pacific Northwest and Italy. 

5415 Mt. Baker Hwy., Glacier, 98244, USA
360-592–2888
Known For
  • Après-ski and post-hike dining
  • Festive Sunday brunches
  • Double chocolate tiramisu with balsamic sauce
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Thurs. No lunch

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Storia Cucina

$$ Fodor's Choice

Reasonably priced pastas and pizzas with local and seasonal ingredients, expertly crafted cocktails, a large covered sidewalk seating area, and a convenient downtown location are the hallmarks of this casually hip trattoria. Menu highlights include squid ink mezze maniche pasta (a ridged, tube-shape pasta) with shrimp, clams, pancetta, and chiles in white wine sauce, and the starter of house-made pork-beef meatballs with focaccia. 

En Rama

$$

The rarefied setting—soaring ceilings, Palladian windows, polished-wood tables—inside downtown's neoclassical 1910 post office building is one good reason to book a table here. But don't overlook the well-prepared classic Italian and Spanish fare, which ranges from simple but hearty meatballs in red sauce and garganelli pasta (a short, tubular variety) with venison Bolognese to Spanish lentil stew with chorizo, paprika, and sherry.

1102 A St., Tacoma, 98402, USA
253-223–7184
Known For
  • Attractive sidewalk terrace
  • Rich and robustly flavored pastas
  • Impressive selection of fine sherries
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Europa Bistro

$

Set in the middle of the genial and hip Proctor retail and restaurant district on the city's north side (not too far from Point Defiance), this charming, affordable neighborhood spot focuses on regional Italian recipes. Regulars feast on traditional panfried zucchini with goat cheese and crostini, slow-roasted lamb over pappardelle noodles, seafood risotto, and thin-crust pizzas.

2515 N. Proctor St., Tacoma, 98406, USA
253-761–5660
Known For
  • Great selection of Italian wines
  • Seafood risotto
  • Meatball pizza
Restaurant Details
No lunch Sun.

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Vivi Pizzeria

$$

The wood-fired pizzas with thin, blistered crusts and gourmet toppings are just one draw of this cheerful neighborhood restaurant within steps of the many wineries of Woodinville's Hollywood District. Vivi also serves first-rate arugula-pear salads, spaghetti carbonara, and prawn- and clam-studded cioppino.

14505 148th Ave. NE, Woodinville, 98072, USA
425-408–0711
Known For
  • Superb Washington-based wine list
  • The tartufo pizza (mozzarella, wild mushrooms, sausage, and truffle oil)
  • Pleasant patio seating

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