Sitka and Spruce

Pacific Northwest restaurant (US) · Capitol Hill

Sitka and Spruce

Pacific Northwest restaurant (US) · Capitol Hill

10

1531 Melrose Ave, Seattle, WA 98122

Photos

Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by Nate Watters
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null
Sitka and Spruce by null

Highlights

Nestled in Melrose Market, this rustic-chic eatery offers upscale small plates that celebrate local Northwest ingredients—perfect for sharing over wine.  

Featured in The Infatuation
Featured in Eater
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1531 Melrose Ave, Seattle, WA 98122 Get directions

sitkaandspruce.com
@sitka.and.spruce

$$$ · Menu

Information

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1531 Melrose Ave, Seattle, WA 98122 Get directions

sitkaandspruce.com
@sitka.and.spruce

$$$ · Menu

Features

alcohol
beer
cocktails
coffee
wine
lunch
dinner
dessert

Last updated

Jul 21, 2025

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@infatuation

Sitka and Spruce Review - Capitol Hill - Seattle - The Infatuation

"Austin is proud of their tacos. Nashville does hot chicken. Los Angeles is the capital of $15 juice. Seattle’s claim to fame? Coffee, obviously. Oysters too. But there’s another category that Seattle is very serious about: foraged food. There’s always some new leaf popping up, there’s no such thing as an unfamiliar type of edible fungus, and restaurants here are extraordinarily proud of their seasonal ingredients. Which brings us to Sitka & Spruce, the Seattle restaurant that flies its foraged food flag higher than just about anyone else. But just like your friend who knits their own clothing with artisanal yarn, Sitka & Spruce ends up being too Seattle-y for its own good. Your friend’s clothes don’t fit her, and also she spent three times more making the artisanal yarn clothes than she would have buying them in a store. Sitka & Spruce’s obsession with rare ingredients is so intense that it gets in the way of the food actually tasting good. At first we thought that maybe we hadn’t been able to figure out the right combination of dishes here. But even the recommendations from the servers were disappointing, and none of the crazy ingredients - like pineapple weed and yolk emulsion - really taste like much. Most things on the menu feel less like a meal and more like a plate of composting materials. Portions are small, the food is pricey, and the atmosphere is strange: the place is inside Melrose Market, squeezed in next to flower and cheese shops. Moreover, if you don’t get a spot at the spacious chef’s table, you’re stuck shoved against a concrete wall in the corner. Provided you can get a spot at that communal table, Sitka & Spruce is fine for sitting down with a date, sharing cocktails and charcuterie, and watching the cooks hurry around the stove - but a full meal isn’t worth the price tag. Our advice? Get some wine to-go from Sitka & Spruce’s awesome bottle shop (in the same market), Bar Ferdinand, and drink it at home. The only thing you’ll have to worry about foraging is some delivery pizza and something actually-good to watch on Netflix. Food Rundown Sourdough With Whipped Butter We’ll just take six plates of this, thanks. Young Lettuce Salad This salad has hazelnuts and an ash-roasted shallot vinaigrette. We have no idea what ash-roasted means, but it tastes like a normal vinaigrette. It’s a nice set of greens, but if we get promised ash-roasted shallot, it’d be nice if it tasted like a campfire. And if we’re paying so much for it, please make it rain with hazelnuts. Parsnips Braised In Nduja Parsnips, spicy crumbled sausage, a fermented lime sauce, and fennel seed. When we had a bite that happened to be tender and with a mouthful of nduja, this was excellent. But if your menu lists the parsnips as braised, they probably shouldn’t still be mostly raw in the middle. Also, the fermented lime reminds us of a sour warhead. Crispy Porchetta Close, but still not quite there. We’ve got a couple thick slices of porchetta where just right by the skin, there’s a couple millimeters-worth of the most delicious pink cured meat, and the rest is plain brown cooked pork and doesn’t have that same salty preserved flavor (and thus exponentially not as tasty). Plus, the side of mustard greens and squash puree needed more flavor just as badly as you needed more of that sourdough bread." - Aimee Rizzo

https://www.theinfatuation.com/seattle/reviews/sitka-and-spruce
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@afar

"Sip & Share at Sitka & Spruce You’ll want to arrive early at Sitka & Spruce to allow time for browsing the other shops inside Melrose Market: Calf and Kid’s artisanal cheeses, Rain Shadow Meats’ sausages and steaks, Glasswing’s home decor, and Marigold & Mint’s fresh flowers. At Sitka & Spruce, chef Matthew Dillon features a rotating menu of hyper-local Northwest cuisine in shareable small plates and mains. The artfully arranged charcuterie platter is a must-try, and don’t skip the bread — the Columbia City sourdough loaf with whipped butter is a local favorite. Just want a snack? Try Bar Ferd’nand next door, also co-owned by Dillon, for a glass of wine and simple bar snacks, or take home a bottle."

Capitol Hill: Seattle’s Hipster Haven
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@afar

"Sip & Share at Sitka & Spruce You’ll want to arrive early at Sitka & Spruce to allow time for browsing the other shops inside Melrose Market: Calf and Kid’s artisanal cheeses, Rain Shadow Meats’ sausages and steaks, Glasswing’s home decor, and Marigold & Mint’s fresh flowers. At Sitka & Spruce, chef Matthew Dillon features a rotating menu of hyper-local Northwest cuisine in shareable small plates and mains. The artfully arranged charcuterie platter is a must-try, and don’t skip the bread — the Columbia City sourdough loaf with whipped butter is a local favorite. Just want a snack? Try Bar Ferd’nand next door, also co-owned by Dillon, for a glass of wine and simple bar snacks, or take home a bottle."

The Perfect Day in Seattle
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@afar

"Sip & Share at Sitka & Spruce You’ll want to arrive early at Sitka & Spruce to allow time for browsing the other shops inside Melrose Market: Calf and Kid’s artisanal cheeses, Rain Shadow Meats’ sausages and steaks, Glasswing’s home decor, and Marigold & Mint’s fresh flowers. At Sitka & Spruce, chef Matthew Dillon features a rotating menu of hyper-local Northwest cuisine in shareable small plates and mains. The artfully arranged charcuterie platter is a must-try, and don’t skip the bread — the Columbia City sourdough loaf with whipped butter is a local favorite. Just want a snack? Try Bar Ferd’nand next door, also co-owned by Dillon, for a glass of wine and simple bar snacks, or take home a bottle."

If You Only Have Three Days in Seattle
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@eater

Seattle’s New Self-Pour Wine and Beer Bar Rapport Is Now Open on Capitol Hill - Eater Seattle

"Chef Mike Law earned his stripes at acclaimed Capitol Hill restaurants such as Sitka and Spruce." - Gabe Guarente

https://seattle.eater.com/2020/8/10/21362581/self-pour-wine-and-beer-bar-rapport-is-now-open-capitol-hill
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