Back in the day before there was such a thing, the lack of Capitol Hill ice cream was a neighborhood meme. In 2017, the situation has changed. While there isn’t yet a scoop shop on every block, Capitol Hill is home to some of the city’s finest — and most interesting — ice creams and frozen treats. And now the you scream, I scream, we all scream for ice cream scene is about to get even more interesting.
Portland’s Salt and Straw has been flirting with Seattle since last summer. This year, CHS has learned the culinary-focused ice cream brand known fascinating flavors will continue its expansion beyond PDX and LA with a new shop on Capitol Hill at Pike and Boylston inside the preservation-friendly Pike Motorworks development that stretches a full block in the heart of Pike/Pine.
Plans filed with the city indicate a shop directly on the corner of the huge complex neighboring three other tenants and, eventually, the big investment, 10-barrel Redhook brewery and pub that is slated to open this summer.
Founded in 2011, Salt and Straw owner Kim Malek says she moved to Portland around twenty years ago but didn’t get around to her dream for years. “We’re hoping to create the kind of company that’s fun to support, work for, and partner with. We’re about building strong local community – both in the neighborhoods where we do business and by purchasing as many local products as possible (to keep our money in Oregon and help create stronger local economies),” she writes on the company’s “about” page. “But at the end of the day, we just really hope you enjoy the ice cream.”
UPDATE: Salt and Straw’s Tyler Malek tells CHS the new shop is targeting a late summer opening and is planning a menu emphasizing local Seattle-area partners and ingredients.
“We are rewriting the menu to create new stories based on new partnerships,” Malek said.
One of those partners will likely be Rachel Marshall. The Maleks have already tried about five different flavors featuring her Rachel’s Ginger Beer.
The partners and special ingredients make Salt and Straw unique, Tyler Malek said. So does change. You can expect a new menu every four weeks or so.
Malek said he the company’s some 300 employees are also an important part of the business and Salt and Straw is looking forward to operating under Seattle’s recent labor-friendly changes in business regulations. Though he says he hasn’t yet sorted out how best to handle tipping. “We’re trying to figure that out,” Malek said.
As for choosing Capitol Hill as the beginning of expansion in the Seattle area, Malek said the cousins were surprised by how much Pike/Pine has changed and excited to be part of the new energy in the neighborhood.
“The growth on Pike was something that we had no idea was going on until we came up,” he said. “There’s a new life.”
Born as a pushcart business, Salt and Straw currently operates three shops in Portland, five around Los Angeles, and is planning a San Francisco expansion along with its E Pike plans. In comparison, Molly Moon’s — perhaps Salt and Straw’s most comparable existing player in Capitol Hill ice cream — scoops in eight locations around Seattle… and none in LA.
Salt and Straw will open in late summer at 711 E Pike. Watch for a few more pop-ups in the meantime. You can learn more at saltandstraw.com.
Capitol Hill food+drink notes
- The Harvard and Olive Delicatessen is coming to E Olive Way.
- Now open on 15th Ave E: Olive Tree. And coming soon: Aviv Hummus Bar.
- Now open in Chophouse Row: Sundry.
- Now open on Bellevue: Ghost Note Coffee.
- Now open on 10th Ave: The Runaway.
- Poquitos and Rhein Haus guys opening yet another thing… this time White Center.
- Looking good, Scratch Deli
- What happened to Meltdown Pizza? Plus bonus First Hill pizza news.
- Trove’s Rachel Yang talks about parenthood and chefhood.
- Super hyperlocal. Broadway/Pike QFC upgrading its Starbucks kiosk!
- Sir Richard Branson supposedly partied in “downtown Seattle” at Q Nightclub this week.
- Seattle Times sticks a fork in Broadway’s Dueminuti: The spaghetti provoked the most disappointment: “Stiff,” “wheaty,” “starchy” and “tough” were among the descriptors…
- Stumbling Monk: Capitol Hill time capsule.
- With help from Victrola, “Volvo put a Seattle coffee shop in the back of an XC90…”
- In the CD, “Kansas City Meets Texas” at Wood Shop BBQ.
- Goodbye to the First Hill McDonald’s.
I’m all about ice cream, but could the name “Salt and Straw” be any more derivative? This is like “Meat and Bread” all over again where the title is supposed to be hip, but just comes off as really sterile and uninspired.
Enough with this shit! http://www.hipsterbusiness.name/#
Can’t wait for “Ampersand & Ampersand” to open.
Or is it “& And &”?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=TBb9O-aW4zI
Dave….hilarious! It IS a satire, right?
Salt and Straw has been around since 2011, so I would guess they were one of the first. Anyway, their ice cream is fantastic.
After I read about this announcement on another website, of course I couldn’t wait to leave my snarky comment here (lucky you!) about the prices people are willing to pay for unhealthy food. Snark said.
Single scoop $4.90 ! Gotta get me down to Grocery Outlet and buy an ice cream scoop..
The most delicious, locally-sourced, made-from-scratch ice cream in Seattle, is only to be found at Cupcake Royale. If you love great ice cream, eat ice cream at Cupcake Royale.
And your commercial message was brought to you by your capitalist overlords and addiction to sugar.
Now what happens to the male calves born of the cows at the dairy farm? Oh never mind, we all know what happens. While only some of us care.
That’s a nice post, Zach. Too bad you posted it from a device that’s destroying the environment. Computers and phones are non-recyclable, non-renewable, wars are being fought over the precious metals used in their construction, and they’re built by slave labor. You’re a monster, Zach.
I post my messages via short-wave.
Zachary made me hungry for some veal.
Dueminuti is awesome. I got there as often as I can — it’s cheap, tasty and healthy. I’ve taken several people there and they’ve all loved it. If anyone needed more reasons to ignore the Seattle Times forever, there ya go.
I like the idea of Dueminuti and eating healthily, but realistically, the taste is not, well, good.
Thanks for sharing this information