Last month, the New York Times Dining & Wine section began a series called "Coast to Coast: Restaurants That Count." #9 on the list is Seattle’s Tilth, of which dining critic Frank Bruni writes:
Did I let in a draft? Should I take off my shoes?
As I stepped into Tilth, I felt as if I were dropping by somebody’s home, not entering a restaurant.
There’s
no proper vestibule, no host stand. And the tables — for only 40 diners
— are squished together in two downstairs rooms of a Craftsman-style
bungalow with a humble fireplace in which squat, fat candles flicker.That’s
a big part of what distinguishes and recommends this sweet, sweet
restaurant, but Tilth, whose name refers to tilled earth, also boasts
an organic certification — from the exacting Oregon Tilth association.That
doesn’t mean that everything Tilth serves is organic, because wild fish
and foraged mushrooms, for example, aren’t eligible for such
designation. But the restaurant is consistently finicky about its
suppliers, and that was abundantly clear in meaty, juicy, snowy slices
of albacore tuna, pan-seared, oil-glossed and served with celery root
in various forms: a purée, crisp wedges like French fries.
Above right photograph by Stuart Islett. Visit the Tilth Blog.
There’s a similar styled restaurant here in Los Angeles (actually, in the heart of Hollywood to be exact) called Off Vine:
http://offvine.com/client/offvine/homepage.htm< It's a 1908 Craftsman that serves good food and has a really nice vibe. My [future] wife took me there as a birthday present knowing I loved old homes and here we are happily married 14 years later.