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Central Smoke goes poof on E Jefferson — Plus, Seattle Times asks if city’s restaurant boom is over

Central Smoke, another big restaurant project that can be traced to the ambitious and sizable class of 2015, has closed. Meanwhile, the city’s food and drink industry leaders seem a little worried — “Is Seattle’s booming restaurant scene showing signs of slowing?,” the Seattle Times asked over the weekend.

At Central Smoke, which debuted as Seven Beef from the Monsoon and Ba Bar family of restaurants in 2015, the mood was melancholy with a dash of hope.

“Our 7 Beef/Central Smoke space still has the same warm ambience it had the day we opened, a state-of-the-art kitchen, inviting bar and gracious patio, making it a very attractive venue for other enterprising restauranteurs. We are confident that our beloved space will not remain dark for long,” the ownership wrote in its goodbye message.

“Much thanks to our loyal guests and dedicated, professional staff for making this venture so very rewarding and memorable.”

Seven Beef was born in 2015 as a “steak shop” featuring classic, “familiar” cuts like the “porterhouse, T-bone, New York Strip” and the “unfamiliar” including “oyster, belly, Teres Major.” Owners/chefs/siblings Eric Banh and Sophie Banh and crew received quartered cows from Rochester, Washington’s Heritage Meats which they broke down into steaks — and much, much more — in the 4,000 square foot restaurant that had nearly as much kitchen work space as room for diners.

In the Central Smoke goodbye message, the restaurant explained what came next. “But in 2018, the unforgiving economics of the Seattle restaurant scene compelled us to pivot from 7 Beef to the more casual Central Smoke, high-end barbecue at very reasonable prices,” it reads.

The result was Central Smoke, a Central District barbecue joint so dedicated to the cause, the Banhs and chef Mike Whisenhunt imported an 8,000-pound smoker from Texas.

Now, five years after the meaty adventure began, the restaurant space transformed from an old office building is in search of a new tenant.

Given recent trends, there will likely be a taker. The most recent example of new blood being pumped into the system comes on North Broadway where CHS reported a Japanese barbecue joint — Ishoni Yakinikuis lined up to replace departed Tex Mex joint Rooster’s.

Hopefully the next new food and drink entrepreneurs don’t read the Times.

In her look at a few key closures to end 2019 centered around Capitol Hill’s Sitka and Spruce, Seattle Times restaurant writer Bethany Jean Clement documents an uneasy industry faced with this stark reality: Seattle is too expensive, and too competitive to create restaurants in the old way. “The cost of living just went up so high …” Poncharee “PK” Kounpungchart of the late Little Uncle told Clement. “You feel that squeeze. It’s good for growth, but it isn’t good for affordability.”

Clement also reports restaurateurs like Kounpungchart and Ethan Stowell face never-ending challenges hiring and training new, well-paid staff. Meanwhile, Sitka and Spruce’s Matt Dillon talked with Clement about the cost pressures that stopped him from staying the course in the Melrose Market.

The takeaways mirror what CHS learned when we talked with Dillon in October and heard from the James Beard winner about the realities of a Capitol Hill restaurant lease: a huge tax bill after the Melrose Market was sold to Regency Centers, a Florida-based real estate investment trust, for $15.5 million last year.

The Seattle Times report also includes some interesting data. Seattle’s restaurant total grew by 450 in the 2010s, with growth around 20% that number trailed the city’s 23% population increase, the total industry is a more than $3 billion business in Seattle, and the average annual sales per restaurant hit a high of 7.73% in 2015. “By the start of 2019, that figure had become a decrease of -0.2%,” the Seattle Times reports.

Meanwhile at Central Smoke, the 4,000-square-foot venue is a bit far from some of the area’s food and drink cores but it has gained a couple small and nimble neighbors along the way. The block now boasts “#pacifiquenorthwest” seafood joint L’Oursin debuted in late 2016 and Machine House’s Central District taproom turned Capercaillie Pub.

So, is Seattle’s booming restaurant scene showing signs of slowing? Sure seems so. But that probably won’t mean Central Smoke will stand empty for long.

 

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13 Comments
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Another J Seattle
Another J Seattle
4 years ago

Central Smoke with “very reasonable prices” of nearly $25 for a plate of brisket, no matter high end or not, wasn’t bound to end well. The place always seemed empty compared to somewhere like Woodshop that is frequently busy.

Neighbor
Neighbor
4 years ago

They really needed better marketing.

I live nearby and had never heard of them until walking by a week ago and getting a nose full. A group of us had been excited to go, but I guess that’s not happening now!

Capt. Awesome
Capt. Awesome
4 years ago

It was a shame when they moved from 7 Beef to Central Smoke. The food and wine at 7 Beef was amazing, they had great prices and the place was always packed.

Jesse
Jesse
4 years ago
Reply to  Capt. Awesome

Agree! Also they launched the new identity in a year with bad smoke from forest fires and it felt like the last thing we needed was more smoke.

I like Monsoon and Ba-bar but I’m happy to see Central Smoke go and hope we get something great in the space.

CD Jimmy
CD Jimmy
4 years ago
Reply to  Jesse

It will be vacant for months and something else will fail there.

No foot traffic. People in the hood there don’t have money to spend and college kids walk towards Broadway. Reminds me of the wave of restaurants failing in Portland. Just not enough traffic and spenders in this economy for the surplus of them.

CapHillGay
CapHillGay
4 years ago

Always sad to see another local restaurant go, but this doesn’t come as too much of a surprise to me.

BBQ in this city is a joke, no one in their right mind wants to pay that much for BBQ especially in a city that isn’t known for that kind of food.

dave
dave
4 years ago

That place was super tasty and we were excited about all of the gluten free options too. Sad to see it not succeed.

SEATOWNGUY
SEATOWNGUY
4 years ago

Local, really good, cheap/affordable, authentic, bbq is probably NEVER going to happen in the CD or CapHill. I just don’t ever see it. Rents/ leases and minimum wages being what they are…modern business plans just can not function and prosper at the same time by offering a quality product, great service, and consistency. Not for long anyway…and I refuse to lower my personal standards to accommodate sub-par options that currently exist around Seattle. At this point, I can only state that I do frequent “Chuck’s Hole in the Wall BBQ” on James St. as the only worthy bbq joint, I patron.

FNH
FNH
4 years ago
Reply to  SEATOWNGUY

I second the Wood Shop recommendation. It’s good BBQ and sides. Unfortunately we didn’t make it to Central Smoke before it closed.

Crowking
Crowking
4 years ago

Not sure why they changed from 7 Beef, which was unusual (delicious roasted yams) and delectable. Smoke said it all, everything was smoked including the oysters, once was enough. Hope the next iteration is a hit.

Mike J Bracco
Mike J Bracco
4 years ago

I like seven beef quite a bit but admittedly didn’t go very often. With wood shop in the neighborhood, there’s no way any other barbecue place is going to grab significant market share. Woodshop’s brisket and wings are awesome and the set up is too perfect for barbecue with the outdoor area. The rent at Central smoke had to be astronomical and you could drive by and not even really notice that it was there.

FNH
FNH
4 years ago

Oops, I didn’t mean to reply to comment above. Just seconding the recommendation for nearby Wood Shop in the CD. It’s good BBQ and sides, and bonus it’s right across the street from Standard.

Taylor
Taylor
4 years ago

It’s too bad they didn’t work out. My husband liked the place, but once we realized Wood Shop BBQ was so close to our house, we just kept going there instead. I wonder if that was the case for a lot of others.