Tallulah’s: Classy, Glassy, and All Grown Up

The slackers who once hauled their hangovers to brunch at Linda’s Tavern are married and mortgaged Mad Men now, preferring their neighborhood restaurants sophisticated and their Bombay Sapphire tonics with a pinch of ginger. For them, there’s Tallulah’s[1], the North Capitol Hill latest from Linda’s own Linda Derschang (King’s Hardware, Oddfellows, Smith, Bait Shop)—a classy, glassy marvel of midcentury good taste, with Dusty Springfield on the system and nary a taxidermic animal head in sight. At booths and tables around the window-clad corner room, beneath floating globe pendants and sweeping sight lines, aging hipsters chat loudly while enjoying refined eggy brunches (chunky corned beef hash with poached eggs, a fine wild mushroom omelet with crispy onion frizzles) and evening noshes of topped flatbreads, veggie small plates, and some half dozen solidly achieved and healthy mains. Cocktails are creative, coffee is Stumptown, “gluten free” and “vegan” are carefully marked on the menu, and a general wave of bonhomie wafts about the room, borne on the goodwill of a genuinely friendly crew. 550 19th Ave E, Capitol Hill, 206-860-0077; aneighborhoodcafe.com $$ [2][3][4][5][6]

References

  1. ^ Tallulah’s (www.seattlemet.com)
  2. ^ King’s Hardware (www.seattlemet.com)
  3. ^ Oddfellows (www.seattlemet.com)
  4. ^ Smith (www.seattlemet.com)
  5. ^ Bait Shop (www.seattlemet.com)
  6. ^ aneighborhoodcafe.com (www.aneighborhoodcafe.com)

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