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One of Capitol Hill's Most Celebrated Restaurants Has Abruptly Closed

One of Capitol Hill's Most Celebrated Restaurants Has Abruptly Closed

Eater2 days ago
Capitol Hill's Stateside, where the Vietnamese-French food has been drawing rave reviews since it opened a decade ago, is now permanently closed, owner Eric Johnson announced in a short Instagram post on Monday, August 4. 'Thanks for the memories Seattle!!!' read the announcement in full.
This is something of a shock to the Seattle dining world. Stateside has been a critical darling since it opened; it was Seattle Met's Restaurant of the Year in 2015, and the magazine singled out its iced-coffee creamsicles, crispy duck fresh rolls, and chili cumin pork ribs. Stateside was also known for its crispy chicken served with a master stock that Johnson and his team have been using and reusing for literal years. In 2016, Stateside opened a sibling bar next door, called Foreign National, and together the two businesses have become cornerstones of the local scene. 'Almost a decade in, Stateside is still a Seattle go-to,' wrote the New York Times when it put Stateside on its most recent list of the city's best restaurants.
Johnson opened Stateside after years of working in high-end kitchens in Paris, New York, and China. In 2016, he told Munchies that 'I start with Vietnamese food as a baseline for my cooking and I take some liberties in Chinese and French directions.' In that interview, he said that Stateside has dealt with skepticism from a couple different directions — from Vietnamese people skeptical that a non-Vietnamese chef knows his way around their cuisine, and from diners conditioned to think that Vietnamese food should be cheap. Judging by the restaurant's success and longevity, there aren't a lot of skeptics left.
On Thursday, July 31, Johnson announced that Foreign National would be closing after that night. Stateside is closing with even less notice — there will be no farewell tour, no time for guests to get one last taste of that master stock. Reached by email, Johnson said that the closures were due to the lease being up.
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