Food & Culture

Raccolto’s House-Made Pasta Steals the Show

Pasta is the modest showstopper at this new West Seattle restaurant

By Chelsea Lin March 28, 2017

0317_eatdrink_Raccolto


This article originally appeared in the March 2017 issue of Seattle Magazine.

You can tell a lot about a restaurant by its simplest dish. At Raccolto, the West Seattle restaurant opened by chef/owner Brian Clevenger in a new building just beyond the Junction in early November, that dish is cavatelli ($11). It’s a narrow, extruded pasta shell, which here is set in a pool of warm Irish butter and dusted in just enough sea salt and black pepper. It’s toddler food that’s grown up—restrained yet comforting. And it illustrates what Clevenger (whom you may know from Madrona’s Vendemmia and also neighboring East Anchor Seafood) and his team are doing best at Raccolto: The bowls of fresh pasta, made and extruded in house daily, are showstoppers.

Vendemmia, too, made a name for itself with pasta, although there, Clevenger is limited to fresh, handmade pastas. Here, he’s introduced a pasta extruder, which allows him to make the twisty, interesting shapes that hold sauce so well. The chef promises to change the menu frequently, so you may find al dente bucatini, a hollow spaghetti of sorts, tangled with anchovy, Calabrian chiles and marjoram ($14), or it may be prepared with bacon, egg and zucchini in a take on carbonara ($14). The lamb Bolognese ($14), and whatever pasta it’s served with, is the culinary equivalent of a warm hug, perfect for these cooler months.

The menu isn’t focused on pasta exclusively—there are also small plates, which can serve as individual or shareable bites (get the delicata squash soup, $6, if available), and heartier proteins such as whole roasted branzino ($23) and New York steak (price varies). Clevenger has also introduced a chef’s counter, at which five guests can sit facing the open kitchen. Whatever you do, don’t skip the carbs. West Seattle, 4147 California Ave. SW; 206.397.3775; raccoltoseattle.com

Join The Must List

Sign up and get Seattle's best events delivered to your inbox every week.

Follow Us

Decolonizing dining in Seattle

Decolonizing dining in Seattle

Hillel Echo-Hawk is at the forefront of Seattle’s Indigenous food movement

In 2022, an Indigenous-owned restaurant serving a precolonial menu — Owamni, in Minneapolis — earned a James Beard Award as the best restaurant in the country. Names like Sean Sherman and Crystal Wahpepah (respectively, a Beard award finalist for best emerging chef, and the first Native American chef to compete on the Food Network’s Chopped)…

Pastry: An Affair to Remember

Pastry: An Affair to Remember

Chef Ewald Notter of Dote Coffee Bar makes it easy to fall in love with pastry and chocolate

Most romances unfold in predictable ways. An invitation for lunch, where you share sandwiches in a loud café, silently wishing your bread was crisper, but never giving up on the idea that one day it might be. An awkward laugh as your fingers touch while you both reach across the table for sugar in that…

Mix It Up. Try old-school cocktails this holiday season

Mix It Up. Try old-school cocktails this holiday season

These 10 drinks may not be on the menu at your local bar, but all pack a punch as well as some colorful history

Editor’s note: A version of this story previously appeared in “Seattle” magazine. Impress your guests this holiday season with these 10 concoctions from a vintage bar guide from Glenn Shaw Creations – supposedly from the 1950s – found in an antique shop in Olympia a few years back. Keep in mind that these drinks may…

Sip, Slurp, Celebrate at Frank's Oyster House

Sip, Slurp, Celebrate at Frank’s Oyster House

Let’s be Frank about Champagne

The best bubbles in Washington state may very well be found at an East Coast-style restaurant in Seattle’s Ravenna neighborhood. That, at least, is the opinion of The Champagne Bureau, USA, which has named Frank’s Oyster House and Champagne Parlor as one of the top 10 bars and restaurants in the nation for the quality…