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Editor's Note: Beast & Cleaver has discontinued their wine bar nights, but is still open for tasting menu dinners and retail.
You’ll have one of the best meals all year at Beast & Cleaver, a tiny butcher shop in Ballard. This isn’t in reference to the porterhouse you could pick up and grill at home, but rather to their after-hours wine bar nights on Tuesdays through Thursdays. With a menu of expertly cooked steaks, snacks, and surprises, this operation makes for one of the most unique dining experiences in Seattle.
Once you walk into their makeshift wine bar setup, the butcher shop energy melts away. Eating here feels like sneaking into a museum to have a sleepover, only the display cases here showcase your prospective dinner instead of fossilized pterodactyl tracks. You get to sit catty-corner to their selection of raw links, patties, and chops while cradling a glass of German weissburgunder trocken and snacking on pâté en croûte. And even though you’re seated among teal wallpaper patterned with chickens and a metal sign behind the counter that says “meat” in all caps, the space works wonders for any kind of special occasion you don’t feel like dressing up for.
photo credit: Amber Fouts
The menu changes each week, but the constant is the surplus of beef that you should shape your meal around. Steaks are cooked with the technical precision of a robot, from a barely-seared, browned butter-glistened London broil to our favorite ribeye in town complete with enough marbling to be a West Elm coffee table. But the meat options stretch beyond steaks, like a hefty smashburger you should cut into quarters and treat like an appetizer for the table and some fried, snappy homemade sausages. Do not miss dessert either, which typically involves rich custard, a genius application of salt, and immediate sadness after you scrape it all clean.
While we wouldn’t suggest a vegetarian go out of their way to eat here, the vegetable-based dishes are exceptional supporting characters. You might see things like a baguette with local honey and chevre, heirloom tomato salads with smoky blistered corn and umeboshi vinaigrette, and puffy beer-battered squash blossoms showered in grated cheddar shavings. Sharing everything is a must, and peppering in some sides rounds out the meal tremendously.
photo credit: Nate Watters
We also love Beast & Cleaver for the interesting wines they serve, especially bottles sold at retail prices without any corkage markups. Let us stress just how monumental it is to casually pop open a stellenbosch from South Africa or a Walla Walla carbonic syrah to drink with dinner and then take a second bottle home for the same cost. And even though you may be itching for a bold red by default alongside your steak, don't underestimate their bubbles, fuller whites, or orange selections. They're there for a reason.
Wine bar nights are merely one piece of the Beast & Cleaver puzzle. They serve elaborate sandwiches during Thursdays and Fridays at lunchtime, transform into The Peasant (their multi-course tasting menu and impossible-to-get-into alter-ego) on the weekends, host sausage-making classes, and obviously sell slabs of short ribs and wine during the day. But wine bar night is when Beast & Cleaver feels most special, where you can gulp markup-free wine in a transitioned butcher shop alongside some pretty spectacular meat.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Nate Watters
Sausages
Heirloom Tomato Salad
Beer-Battered Squash Blossoms
photo credit: Nate Watters
Pork Adobo With Pork Fat Fried Rice
photo credit: Nate Watters
Smashburger
photo credit: Nate Watters