Cozy, romantic restaurants in Tacoma & Pierce County

At the coziest restaurant in Pierce County, you can make new friends around a fire pit, roast marshmallows with a s’mores kit, and sip cider under a pavilion by a handcrafted water mill.

Mill Haus Cider Co., the expansive outdoor taproom and restaurant in Eatonville, won readers’ hearts in our TNT Diner poll. About 17 percent of more than 200 tallies went to this year-old destination not far from the Ashford entrance to Mount Rainier National Park.

A close runner-up, Marzano Italian Restaurant in Parkland garnered almost as many votes. In third place is Tacoma icon Over the Moon Cafe, commonly cited as the city’s most romantic restaurant.

A chunk of voters said their favorite was missing from the list. Shout-out to Cooks Tavern, which was nominated by a couple of readers. We tried to bring a wide variety of price points, cuisines and styles to the list of 40 choices.

Others that snagged several tallies: Bar Rosa, en Rama, Crudo & Cotto, Netshed No. 9 and Bourbon Street Creole Kitchen.

Read on for a look at the Top 5 and a few of TNT Diner’s favorites for all your cozy restaurant needs this winter and beyond.

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Fire pits and pavilions make the outdoor taproom at Mill Haus Cider Co. in Eatonville a great choice for a family-friendly outing. Donna Ragazzo and her son Jarin play corn hole on the lawn on July 7, 2022. Clare Grant [email protected]

MILL HAUS CIDER CO.

303 Center St. E, Eatonville, 253-487-7065, drinkmillhaus.com

Wednesday 4-8 pm, Thursday 4-9 pm, Friday-Saturday noon-9 pm, Sunday noon-8 pm

Longtime Eatonville resident Steve Schmidt built much of the unique fixtures on the property, from that water mill to a steel chandelier and a steam donkey replica above a stovepipe fireplace in the equally cozy lodge. Outside, there are several pavilions, ample fire pits, picnic tables with umbrellas, a stage for live music and an area dedicated to lawn games.

Schmidt started the cidery several years ago with son Caleb and his childhood friends, brothers Nick and Justin Baublits. While the taproom is a great choice for a cold one after a day in the mountains, it has quickly become a beloved Eatonville gathering place — the parking lot is regularly filled up on most days for lunch and dinner.

In addition to house ciders, the bar offers local craft brews and wines, while the kitchen churns out highly shareable plates, including flatbreads and Hawaiian pork sliders.

MARZANO

516 Garfield St., Tacoma, 253-537-4191, dinemarzano.com

Tuesday-Saturday 4-8 pm (8:30 pm weekend nights)

Elisa Marzano and her son Brian brought their seasonal Italian cooking to Parkland in 1998. Nearing its 25th birthday, the intimate restaurant inside a restored Craftsman house continues to hold the line as one of the region’s best.

Relish dishes like Northwest cioppino with Pacific clams, mussels, fin fish and prawns in a tomato-vermouth sauce; an assagi plate of homemade charcuterie and Sardinian-style crackers; classic spaghetti carbonara and “marvelous” meatballs. Pair with a glass of Rossa Toscana and finish with the light Swedish cream dessert. Reservations highly recommended.

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Marzano has been serving fine Italian fare focused on Northwest ingredients since 1988. The individual tent tables outside are almost as cozy as the dining room inside a vintage Craftsman in Parkland. Kristine Sherred [email protected]

OVER THE MOON CAFE

709 Opera Alley, Tacoma, 253-284-3722, overthemooncafe.net

Tuesday-Thursday 4:30-9 pm, Friday-Saturday 4:30-10 pm

More than two decades later, chef Deanna Harris-Bender’s Opera Alley getaway continues to be a sought-after table for anniversaries, graduation dinners and everyday celebrations. Its speakeasy sensibility stems from its two-story dining room with plush chairs, white tablecloths, heavy curtains, dim lighting and complementary background music.

Order a classic cocktail from the short-but-sweet list and start with a wedge salad, share the duck and try the vegetarian butternut squash “lasagna.” Wrap with a slice of the unique berry dessert. Reservations highly recommended.

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End your romantic meal at Over the Moon with a slice of chef-owner Deanna Harris-Bender’s unique berry pie, a date crust and dense mousse-like creation sweetened with coconut manna. Pete Caster [email protected]

DUSTY’S HIDEAWAY

723 E 34th St., Tacoma, 253-292-0106, dustyshideaway.com

Daily 11am-11pm (midnight Friday-Saturday)

Dusty’s website describes the McKinley Avenue pub as “a cozy little pit stop,” and how could you not agree? Owners Dana and Dave Verellen transformed this old Craftsman house into a kitschy desert oasis that feels like going to your friend’s place, where vintage trinkets mingle with plenty of houseplants in macrame hangers.

As a family-friendly restaurant, the menu features a few delicious burgers, fun sandwiches like the Sam Elliot with turkey, cream cheese and blackberry jam, and one of the best breakfast burritos in town. (Hint: Breakfast all day!) Cocktails are great here, too. When it’s not raining, find a seat in one

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At Amira’s Kitchen, Middle Eastern home cooking marvels in Riverside

Many years ago, in a simpler time, my youngest child read “The Red Pyramid,” part of the “Kane Chronicles” by Rick Riordan. It’s a fantasy series that pits Egyptian gods against plucky teen wizards, seasoned with glimpses of far-off lands.

What’s sahlab? she asked. The book describes it as a warm, sweet winter drink with vanilla, cinnamon and coconut. Turns out it’s traditionally made with orchid root flour, whipped into a frothy beverage renowned for its ethereal fluffiness, a sort of Tom & Jerry of the Levant. Minus the booze, of course, the Ottoman Empire being officially dry.

Orchid flour being quite dear in the United States, cooks here usually make it with cornstarch, like the packet of instant sahlab that I tracked down at Buffalo Fresh, the Arabic supermarket on Genesee Street. We both shrugged at the disappointingly bland result.

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Something for everyone at Amira's Kitchen

Dishes available at Amira’s Kitchen, including rotisserie chicken, falafel, kibbeh and hummus.


Libby March/Buffalo News


So imagine my delight when I found sahlab on a restaurant menu in Buffalo, all these years later. It augured well, a message from ancient gods to venture on. As it turned out, Amira’s Kitchen, run by a grandmother from Jerusalem, is making some tasty magic in Riverside.

It’s a spare no-nonsense space with seating at tables or a counter, decorated with hand-painted pottery vessels, silver-plated camels, and a platter depicting the Dome of the Rock, the Islamic holy place in the Old City.







Mini-manakeesh assortment at Amira's Kitchen

A mini-manakeesh assortment, with za’atar, cheese and meat versions, at Amira’s Kitchen.


Libby March/Buffalo News


Starters worth noting include mini-manakeesh, flaky griddled breads topped with olive oil and za’atar ($12 for 10), a dry spice mix including thyme, sesame seeds and puckery sumac that crisps aromatically when heated. There’s also versions in mild cheese ($13/10), beef-onion-parsley ($14/10), or a combination platter thereof ($15/9).







Falafel plate with pickles and tahini sauce at Amira's Kitchen

The falafel plate, with pickles, vegetables and tahini sauce at Amira’s Kitchen.


Libby March/Buffalo News


Falafel plate ($8) with refreshing turnip pickles, dill cucumbers and fresh vegetables along with capable chickpea fritters, for one of the better traditional vegan plates in town. In the mujadara plate ($12), Amira’s Kitchen presents one of the great vegan feasts of the Levant, found nowhere else in town. This Palestinian version offers seasoned rice and lentil pilaf, topped with onions caramelized into jammy onion candy.







Mujadara rice-lentil pilaf at Amira's Kitchen

Mujadara, a rice and lentil dish with caramelized onions, at Amira’s Kitchen.


Libby March/Buffalo News


The big three of Lebanese meze – tabouli, parsley, tomato and bulgur wheat salad; hummus, chickpea puree with sesame paste; and babaganoush, with roasted eggplant instead of chickpeas – were vibrant versions. Notably crispy french fries arrived tossed in salt and za’atar.







Mixed grill platter at Amira's Kitchen

A mixed grill plate with kefta kebab, lamb kebab and chicken tawook at Amira’s Kitchen.


Libby March/Buffalo News


Arabian salata at Amira’s is the usual Jerusalem salad – chopped cucumbers, tomatoes, onions and parsley, in olive oil and lemon, plus a dollop of the ground sesame paste called tahini. That adds a rich nuttiness, enriching it without involving animals.

Her Syrian-style kibbie ($9) is among the best I’ve met in town. This beloved Middle Eastern appetizer offers allspice-scented ground beef, sautéed onions and pine nuts encased in a fried crust of beef pounded with wheat. Crisp stout exterior yields to lush interior, if the cook knows what they’re doing, and gets to do it right. Check out Riverside’s entry for a textbook version.

Lamb kabob salad ($16) was a steal for the generous helping of tender lamb chunks grilled with a whisper of smoke but still pink inside, over a robust salad, tomatoes, cucumbers, Kalamata olives and feta, with your choice of dressing. (I would suggest tahini. When in Jerusalem, and so on.) The beef kefta ($19), featuring seasoned grilled sausagelike links, gets a bed of rice with fried almonds and vermicelli.







Roast chicken at Amira's Kitchen

Whole chickens roast in the rotisserie oven at Amira’s Kitchen.


Libby March/Buffalo News


For all the Middle Eastern delights in Amira’s Kitchen, the meat of the order, so to speak, is the rotisserie chicken. You can certainly pay less for a gummy bird next to the candy rack at the supermarket. Treat yourself to a slightly larger chicken that is marinated, cooked and served so on-point crispy that skin must be the first course. Tender meat encourages hands-on eating, with pieces dabbed in garlic mayonnaise or green jalapeño-level-spicy herbal citrus tonic.

A half chicken with two sides ($17) makes a fine dinner for two people who aren’t ravenous, or one who is. The whole chicken with two sides ($22) and a chicken and a half with four large sides ($50) is good for a tableful of hungry mouths.







Rotisserie chicken with garlic and spicy herb sauce at Amira's Kitchen

Rotisserie chicken with green and white sauce at Amira’s Kitchen.


Libby March/Buffalo News


The mint lemonade ($5) was refreshingly aromatic, and there are fruit smoothies

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Le Bernardin Named #1 Restaurant In The World By La Liste

Paris-based global restaurant guide names chef Eric Ripert’s New York City icon best in the world as restaurant celebrates 50 years

NEW YORK, Nov. 28, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Today, Le Bernardin was named the number one restaurant in the world by La Listethe global restaurant guide and ranking system of the world’s top 1,000 restaurants.

The top ranking, which Le Bernardin shares with Paris’ Restaurant Guy Savoy and Frantzén of Stockholmcomes on the heels of the New York seafood temple’s 50th anniversary this fall.

Le Bernardin is the only New York City restaurant among the top 10, and one of 101 United States restaurants, including San Francisco’s Atelier Crenn, Addison in San Diego and New York’s Atomix, featured throughout the entire list.

“To see our team’s dedication recognized by La Liste is incredibly rewarding,” said chef and co-owner, Eric Ripert. “It pushes us to keep striving for excellence everyday, even 50 years in.”

This is the sixth consecutive year La Liste has named Le Bernardin the number one restaurant in the US, and the third time it has placed it at the top spot globally. Le Bernardin continues to hold three stars from the Michelin Guide and a four-star rating from The New York Timeswhich has maintained across each of its five reviews since opening in New York in 1986. Le Bernardin is also ranked number 44 on the World’s 50 Best Restaurants List.

La Liste debuted in Paris in 2015, providing an objective and democratic ranking of the world’s most outstanding restaurants powered by a proprietary algorithm that gathers information from hundreds of reviews from such global publications as The New York TimesMichelin Guide and TripAdvisor, and thousands of consumer ratings from all over the world.

About Le Bernardin
A fine dining icon for 50 years, Le Bernardin is the internationally acclaimed seafood restaurant from chef Eric Ripert and co-owner Maguy Le Coze. Opened in 1986 in New York by Maguy and her brother Gilbert after the siblings helmed their beloved Paris location for 14 years, the restaurant has held three Michelin stars since the guide’s 2005 New York launch, five consecutive four-star reviews from The New York Times, and is currently ranked number 44 on the World’s 50 Best Restaurants list, a testament to its timeless appeal. More info available at le-bernardin.com.

About La Liste
La Liste is an international restaurant ranking system and guide, originally launched in 2015 by president and founder, Philippe Faure. La Liste provides a one-of-a-kind objective ranking of the world’s most outstanding restaurants powered by a proprietary algorithm that reviews restaurants based on over 600 leading food guides, user-generated review sites and global publications. The list reviews nearly 16,000 restaurants, with the result that restaurants are located in 180+ countries, on five continents. More info available at laliste.com.

Contact:
Liz Pierson
[email protected]

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View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/le-bernardin-named-1-restaurant-in-the-world-by-la-liste-301688134.html

SOURCE Le Bernardin

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