SEAReview
photo credit: Kyler Martin
Atoma
Included In
Does "contemporary new American" mean anything? That’s the question we ask ourselves every time we see yet another restaurant with quince on the menu and servers repeating “locally sourced seasonal produce” 47 times per night. Atoma does this too—although they use the term “bountiful offerings of our surroundings.”
But unlike the million other upscale Seattle restaurants with an alleged dedication to PNW produce, Atoma walks the walk. Sure, you’ll see some usual suspects like sturgeon and beef tartare on the menu, but inside this contemporary New American restaurant, there’s vegetable-based excellence happening.
photo credit: Kyler Martin
photo credit: Kyler Martin
Atoma is inside an old Wallingford house, and it still looks like one. So don’t expect white tablecloths while speaking in a whisper here. Between the clinking-clanking open kitchen, groups toasting with miniature martinis, and those echoey ol’ craftsman acoustics, this dimly lit dining room with a forest green paint job buzzes with energy by 7pm. Which is a perfect setting to scarf down a bunch of vegetable dishes that make us want to be anything but silent.
A non-negotiable order is the lion’s mane schnitzel. This fried mushroom slab takes on the properties of pork, pounded down into cutlet form with a silky fennel caper sauce and a salt-flecked crust. Roasted sunchokes have a home fry-like crunch, drizzled with peppery aioli and tart preserved lemon jam. And grey ghost squash cooked three ways (tempura-battered, roasted, and pickled) with pepita salsa macha is a fun mix of textures that has us architecturally engineering bites to include the whole trio.
As great as the vegetable dishes are, just don’t bother with the carnivorous plates. Black cod is underseasoned, and the bitter tatsoi can’t save it. You’ll also want to pass on the too-chewy pork collar accompanied by chunks of braised fennel, quince jam, and pickled chanterelles strewn in that add an abrupt acidity the dish just doesn't need. Except for a tasty radish cake that features tiny slices of sweet geoduck, the proteins pale compared to the plant-based stuff.
Atoma is luxurious enough to warrant celebrating a special occasion. They have a price tag to prove it. But don't keep this place in your restaurant arsenal for just anyone. Bring people who can appreciate all of the spectacular things Atoma does with stuff that grows from the ground.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Kyler Martin