Un petit expansion: In 2023, Isak and Cecilia Lystad took over neighborhood staple Madison Park Bakery, and now the couple has expanded to Queen Anne. Mon Chou, their newest venture, opened this week ...
Soap Lake gets the title for reasons both scientific and supernatural, writes Matthew Sullivan, author of a new novel set there.
Inspired by the floating saunas of Oslo, Norway, David Jones designed his own barge setup and had it constructed in Louisiana ...
Smart. Authoritative. Entertaining. With a bold design, eye-catching photography, and an editorial voice that’s at once witty and in-the-know, Seattle Metropolitan is our city’s indispensable news, ...
Luxe coworking areas, bays of foosball tables—apartment amenities, much like New Year’s gym memberships, tend to inspire a lot of early enthusiasm, followed by a long period of pretending they don’t ...
The blank screen was already intimidating enough. Then, out of nowhere, an incorporeal know-it-all popped up to make us feel even worse about the novel notion of word processing in the mid-’90s. “It ...
Seattle’s Habesha—Ethiopian and Eritrean—community took root in the 1970s, fleeing a war at home that would persist for decades to come. When the city’s first Ethiopian restaurant opened in 1982, ...
When Naomi Mittet gave birth to her first and only child, her sleep went topsy-turvy. The West Seattle resident didn’t think much of it at first—after all, infants aren’t exactly known for their ...
Sticker shock struck often for Seattleites out to eat this year, so when we named our Best New Restaurants of 2025, we also scanned the menus to find a few good things that $5 still buys. Hey Bagel ...
The golden god first appeared in suburban Washington in 1977. Let’s put aside for the moment whether Ramtha is best described as a god, or the God—or a ghost, or an alien, or a total fiction.
It wasn’t supposed to be a podcast about Taco Time. James Lim and Amy Faulkner launched Dear Elite Reviewer to discuss how crowdsourced reviews, like Yelp, can affect restaurants and small businesses.
For all it promised, all it was not, and all it actually became, Seattle’s Capitol Hill Occupied Protests (better known as CHOP) has but one clear consensus: It existed for 23 precarious days in June.