Food & Drink
Artusi
Spinasse's Jason Stratton does lighter bites and striking cocktails at this aperitivo bar.
By Seattle Mag September 16, 2011

This article originally appeared in the October 2011 issue of Seattle magazine.
In a window-wrapped corner space next to the recently expanded Spinasse (which now has a new, open pasta-making station, but retains its utterly charming trattoria), chef Jason Stratton has debuted Artusi, a drop-in-friendly, wildly decorated—zebra-patterned walls, ceilings hung with tubular light fixtures—aperitivo bar.
Stratton, named one of Food & Wine magazine’s best new chefs of 2010, oversees the menu here. And it’s a very affordable assemblage of dishes: buckwheat grissini (aka breadsticks) with anchovy and olive butters ($5); cured trout with pickled turnips and horseradish ($6); and shaved raw mushrooms with hard-boiled egg ($6) in an herbal lovage, pine nut, honey and fish sauce “Apicius,” a reference to the cookbook author and infamous epicurean of the Roman empire.
You’ll notice that, among the dozen or so smaller plates, there’s much that’s fishy and/or pickley; the food acts as a foil for a gin martini. I like that.
There are a few slightly larger dishes on the menu: stewed morels with the slightest echo of juniper oil ($14); local truffles with Asian spices and verjus over buttery soft polenta ($16). But delicious as they may be, those dishes aren’t meant to suffice as dinner.
Stratton’s aim is to lure you with his menu of sleek cocktails (try the Bambi Warhol, $8: gin, vodka, Cocchi Aperitivo Americano, orange bitters and citrus zest) and a few snacks; if a full dinner is your goal, you could do much worse than supping next door. Allison Austin Scheff
Dinner Wed.–Mon. Capitol Hill, 1535 14th Ave.; 206.251.7673; artusibar.com $