Cafe$$
Lighthouse Roasters on a Fremont corner three blocks off the main drag is a loyal espresso room with an old-school dark roast and a weekend no-laptop policy.
Why locals love it: On a Fremont corner three blocks off the main drag; the regulars are loyal, the espresso program is old-school dark, and tourists never quite arrive.
Tip: Weekends bring a no-laptop policy; come for the espresso, not for the workday.
Cocktail bar$$
Hazlewood is on market street one block back from ballard avenue's noise, with no exterior signage; the room is candlelit, brown-leather and quiet.
Why locals love it: On Market Street one block back from Ballard Avenue's noise, with no exterior signage; the room is candlelit, brown-leather and quiet.
Tip: Cash and card; the bar takes walk-ins only and turns slowly, so come early.
Cambodian$$
Phnom Penh Noodle House in Seattle: cambodian room. Tourists charge past on Jackson Street toward The Boat; the Sam family's Cambodian kitchen sits one.
Why locals love it: Tourists charge past on Jackson Street toward The Boat; the Sam family's Cambodian kitchen sits one block south and rarely makes guidebooks.
Tip: Closed Monday and Tuesday; bai sach chrouk sells out by 14:00 on weekends.
International$$Mon-Fri 10:00-19:00, Sat-Sun 10:00-20:00
Mike's Noodle House is on maynard, half a block off the international district's main drag and overlooked by anyone who has not been told by a local.
Why locals love it: On Maynard, half a block off the International District's main drag and overlooked by anyone who has not been told by a local.
Tip: Cash and card; the brisket noodle soup is the order if it is on the board.
French bistro$$
LOursin sits in the no-mans-land between First Hill and the Central District, a French oyster and cassoulet room with unmarked windows from the sidewalk.
Why locals love it: Sits in the no-mans-land between First Hill and the Central District, so neither neighbourhood claims it and the windows look unmarked from the sidewalk.
Tip: The cassoulet runs winter through spring; the oyster happy hour at 17:00 is the cheap entry.
Japanese sushi$$
Wataru is tucked into a saxe building ground floor in ravenna, far from any tourist corridor, with a 10-seat bar and no signage at street level.
Why locals love it: Tucked into a Saxe Building ground floor in Ravenna, far from any tourist corridor, with a 10-seat bar and no signage at street level.
Tip: Tock booking opens at midnight three weeks out; the 19:30 second seating is easier than the 17:00.