SEAReview
photo credit: Nate Watters
Lioness
Included In
Any Italian wine bar can serve some fizzy Campari business alongside appetizers that merely require assembly. But Lioness in Phinney Ridge is a prosciutto-wrapped gift to North Seattle—and makes aperitivo hour actually exciting.
The galley-style space feels effortlessly cool, like Ray-Bans or anyone who rides a Vespa. A soundbath of date night chatter swirls with high-BPM tunes. Flickering tea candles and a couple of chandeliers are the only light sources. The marble standing-only bar makes sitting seem passé, as folks mingle and sip frothy garibaldis, buddha’s hand-infused spritzes, or martinis so squeaky clean you could mop the floor with any rogue sloshes. And it takes serious restraint to not flip over the olive green-freckled ceramic to learn who the heck designed such criminally adorable plates.
photo credit: Nate Watters
photo credit: Nate Watters
photo credit: Nate Watters
photo credit: Nate Watters
photo credit: Nate Watters
The bites served on that dishware go way beyond the call of small plate duty. A would-be-boring ball of lemon-oiled burrata has a surprising kick and salumi is shaved thinner than parchment paper, an achievement in salt-cured pork we wish more restaurants gave a damn about. Past the excellent drinks and starters, we’d pump the brakes for the most part, since the larger items can be underwhelming (we’re looking at you, $18 overspiced meatball).
If you’re only in it for the lighter bites anyway, that should soften the blow of the hassle it takes to get in. With limited reservations, you can expect to wait upwards of 45 minutes for a table, even on a weekday. But it’s worth it for a night out fueled by falanghina and salami—stick it out and snack on.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Nate Watters
Burrata
photo credit: Nate Watters
Smoked Black Cod Mousse
photo credit: Nate Watters
Clams
photo credit: Nate Watters
Beef & Pork Meatball
photo credit: Nate Watters
Cavatelli Pasta
photo credit: Nate Watters