Seattle is a lovely place! I went the weekend of November 20th to the 22nd and I did my best to try as many pastrami places as I could, but there were a few miscues that led to me not getting to all the places I wanted to for the blog. However I enjoyed my trip very much and made it to the Seattle Center, University of Washington, the Fremont neighborhood, and various other cool locations. Above pictured is Pike's Market from Pike and 1st Ave.
I pulled out my umbrella and made the right turn on Occidental. As I made the turn I saw a bicycle cop kinda just wave his finger at a group of 6 or 7 menacing looking vagrants smoking crack in the middle of the rain....This place is a lot like Frisco! As I came to the door of Tat's (around 2 PM on Friday, they normally close at 4) a lady was standing in the middle of the doorway. "Yeah, we're closing...we ran out of bread." I pleaded with her "I came all the way from SF just to try Tat's pastrami, could I just sample a piece of the pastrami and I'll be on my way?" the one lady who was leaving from I presume finishing the last sandwich of the premature day backed me up "Aww, come on, let him try a little piece." she said to the woman. She kinda looked back at the interior and then back at me and finally said "No, the grill is off, we're closed. We'll be open on Sunday for the Seahawks game though come back Sunday." and then shut the door in my face. I continued back up 1st street in the rain, upset...as I got back near Pike's market area the rain cleared up and the weather was nice enough for me to enjoy the rest of Friday evening. Sadly, She was wrong about being open Sunday as the Seahawks were out of town and they were closed. I never got to try a tatstrami in Seattle.
The next day I woke up early and had a plan to try Barney's pastrami in Everett, Washington about 20 minutes North of Seattle. I had talked to the owner about 10 days prior to my coming up there and he assured that he would be "open to 4 PM for lunch on Saturday." I got started early and tried to make it for opening, so I didn't call....causing a huge detour for no reason in my trip to Seattle.
I was tired and cold when I took the picture of the Met's Country labeled front door then I entered a truly wonderful and warm place! As I entered the same smell that had emanated from my box yesterday filled room. This was truly the complete picture of a nice neighborhood deli complete with everything under the sun. The small stand at Pike's market only had a small number of items compared to the more complete location in the University district. I walked up to the counter and asked about Jon the owner, to my dismay he wasn't around, luckily I was to reach him and tell him over the phone how impressed I was with his deli!
The special of the day was 1/2 sandwich with soup which sounded great to me on a cold, rainy day. I also ordered a potato latke on the side.
I enjoyed this rye more than the marble rye because it had a crispier more flavorful crust. The split pea soup and latke warmed my inside. When I arrived, I was tired and weary and upon leaving I felt like a new man! I had the rest of the afternoon to check out University Ave known to locals simply as "The Ave". The whole scene really reminded me of Telegraph by UC Berkeley. Lots of Thai restaurants, pizza joints, smoke shops, and just funky side shops with odd items worth looking at just once. I also got to check out the Mercer Museum which had some intersting Native American Art from the Pacific Northwest. I highly recommend you take a trip to the U District on your visit to Seattle. Make sure to have lunch at I love NY Deli at 52nd and Roosevelt! They have a webaddress http://www.ilovenewyorkdeli.net/menu.html. Check it out for a full menu.
Sunday, my last day in Seattle, I planned to go to the Fremont district where a small diner named Roxy's was pointed out by many people on Yelp as the best pastrami sandwich in Seattle. Fremont has an interesting Farmer's Market and Hypermarket (swap meet) on Sundays which I checked out just before going to Roxy's Diner. The whole neighborhood district itself was very cool to check out. They have a large rocket, a statute of Lenin, and a self proclaimed center of the Universe just a block from Roxy's Diner.
I had a really great time in Seattle. It's now one of my favorite cities along with SF and Paris. I just wish it didn't rain so much! When I got back to the Bay Area I got to try a place by my work Sage Lounge which has a Reuben for 8$.
I phone ordered ahead and when I got to the place about 10-15 minutes later I was informed that they were out of rye bread. I made an upset face and the lady said "you can wait, our other co-worker is out getting the bread. she should be back very soon." I sat down in the bright white, ultra modern chair and started reading SF weekly. A few minutes later a lady with a TRADER JOE'S bag walked in the restaurant and into the back. The pastrami didn't have a large brine and tasted a bit of hot dogs - the sign of bad pastrami. The "coleslaw" didn't taste like slaw and reminded me of the shredded lettuce you get at Subway - no tang or anything to it. I recommend skipping over this place and going to Ted's market or AK subs. You seem to pay a bit more for the atmosphere at the Sage Lounge.
I hope everyone had an excellent Thanksgiving! I'll be in the Bay Area for the next for posts. Looking foward to meeting some new people and trying some new sandwiches.
9 comments:
It's probably a blessing in disguise that you couldn't eat at those two pastrami shops. The chief statue made it rain to protect you from food poisoning (and terrible sandwiches)!
Now that I've learned you put Russian dressing on a pastrami sandwich I'm no longer following your Blogs and I've placed your book in the has been file.
It's really funny that an anonymous commenter said they won't read you anymore because you use russian dressing on a pastrami sandwich.. That's just rich. Anyways, nice entry..bummer about the place in Everett though..yellow paper of death!!
I thought about deleting the above comment but have decided not to. I think he was referring to David Sax because he put a link on his Save the Deli website. Sax himself admonished me for putting Russian dressing on pastrami, so don't hate on him for my preferences.
The fact is I'm not Jewish. I'm a Polish guy. I do not answer to Kosher laws and I do not mind saying that I prefer my pastrami on rye with Russian dressing. That's the way the way Langer's does it and I'm from LA. Anyone that has an issue with it can go read other blogs. I'm not your man.
Nice blog addition, Ted !
I've just been to Seattle once, and would never think of Seattle and Pastrami in the same sentence..
until reading your latest entry,
of course!!
I guess that marble rye is a Seattle thing, lol ...
I used to go with mustard on my
pastrami, but the last bunch of years, I've become a RUSSIAN DRESSING girl !
Let's here it for Russian dressing on pastrami , Ted !
Actually, I often start eating a good part of the pastrami without anything on at first, so I could
really taste the meat...
then halfway thru, I'll start getting messy and putting the russian dressing and cole slaw on
it!
I particularly like your last sentence on your reply to "anonymous", when you told them that if they have an issue with your blog, then "I'm not your man".
You ROCK, Ted !
The comment above is from me, ELLEN...
I wanted to write ELLEN in there,
but somehow I came out as "anonymous" ...
I LOVE russian dressing on pastrami, as well !
here's a list of more LA delis than you've seen so far.
Nice post! I was really impressed by I love NY Deli and Roxy's (Froyd & Glick do good pastrami) although the latter doesn't make as generous a sandwich. Did you get to Goldberg's on the Eastside?
Funny. You missed the best Pastrami in the Seattle area, by not eating at Barney's or Tats.
Post a Comment