Where to find the freshest PNW seafood, incredible Cambodian noodles, and the best fancy pizza.
LessBar Bistro is the best place in town for creative New American dishes and cocktails that also happen to be affordable. The menu changes often, but you’ll find innovative stuff like elk sliders with pimento cheese and lingonberry jam on pretzel buns, or a super-saffrony Portuguese stew with sea scallops, sausage, and mussels. It definitely works for date night, although we love to sit at the bar to watch deep-cut house music videos while we quiz the bartender on their rare liquor collection.
In Tacoma’s Stadium District, Le Sel does French-inspired food in a shabby-chic farmers market kinda way. The space is pretty cozy and low-key, and although they do a nice brunch, dinner is really when you want to be here. Go for the lamb chops with grits and a sunny-side-up egg or the seared duck breast over green lentils, as well as a Bloody Mary with a big slab of seared pork belly on a skewer. Soak it all up from the heated balcony overlooking Commencement Bay.
The Lobster Shop’s been an upscale dinner staple for 40 years, and it has an incredible view of Commencement Bay. There’s one plot twist, though: the best thing here isn’t actually lobster. It’s local oysters that we’re willing to say are the best on Earth (and the rest of the universe while we’re at it). Get a dozen, then go to town on the PNW scallops, served with pork belly and brown butter farro, and the Dungeness crab cakes that are somehow better than any other crab cake we’ve ever tried.
Yes, this is a fast-food counter in a strip mall, but the Cambodian dishes off the long menu are some of the best you’ll find in the area. Our go-tos are the stir-fried student noodles, to which we like to add prawns, as well as the banh chao, an eggy crepe folded around stir-fried vegetables. The fish sauce-loaded lot cha is another star: a plate of rice noodles, green onions, fried garlic, and chili sauce that’s sprinkled with chili powder, bean sprouts, crushed peanuts and a runny fried egg.
The pupusas here are what you want, as they’re enormous and loaded with mozzarella, but they also have something called a “putaco,” which is basically a taco built inside a pupusa shell. Make sure to try everything in the salsa bar: the pickled curtido is so good, you’ll find yourself eating the leftovers with a fork long after your pupusas are gone. Also, nothing on the menu is over $12, the portions are huge, they’re always playing bachata music, and the staff are absolute sweeties.
Cuerno Bravo is from the team behind the Ballard steakhouse Asadero, and the Tacoma outpost is more of the same, except a little sexier with an old-world Guadalajara style. You should order a steak—they have lots of options, but we always go for the eight-ounce A5 Japanese wagyu ribeye, sizzled tableside on a hot stone. This place is also good if you just want to post up at the bar for cocktails and split the papa loca, a massive baked potato heaped with butter, crema, bacon, and wagyu bits.
Fancy pizza is having a moment in Tacoma: there are new shops like Apizza and Italy Paola Pizza Napoletana, but the best of the bunch just might be Tacoma Pie. The pizza here is intense: one slice of the thick, square, Detroit-style pies could be a full meal. The crust is fluffy, the frico is tall, and the sauce has a spicy kick. You can get it delivered, but it’s way more fun to dine in with the pinball machines and a breezy outdoor space with a bocce court.
As the most old-school diner in a city known for its old-school diners, Marcia’s Silver Spoon is a place where time stands still alongside plates of chicken-fried steak, fluffy pancakes, and biscuits with pepper-flecked sausage gravy. We’re not kidding about these portions—the Silver Spoon Scramble takes up a whole platter and could feed three or four people. There are a few unique menu options too, like spicy hot links, fruit-stuffed waffles, and omelets made with oysters from Hood Canal.
Maculoso’s is an upscale-ish neighborhood Italian joint that’s good for a date, a girl’s night, or a family dinner. Focus on the handmade pastas: It’s hard to pick a favorite, but we always go straight for the pappardelle with a meat sauce that’s loaded with perfectly tender beef, or the alfredo tagliatelle with chicken, sausage, and mushrooms. Seafood starters like vongole saltate and octopus carpaccio are both musts, and the osso buco and cioppino are lovely entrees, too.
This Lincoln District spot is run by a father-and-daughter duo who make some of the best barbecue crispy pork and duck around. The most expensive things max out at $16, and you can decide whether you want your meal as a soup with egg noodles, or as a lunch plate over rice. We’re suckers for the roast pork with the crispy skin attached. If you’re not feeling the full meal deal, you can just get a box of delicious roasted meat with nothing else to distract you. There are no wrong choices here.