Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Gone to Market

Wherein we respectfully suggest renaming Hillyard "Hill-licious."

Blair Tellers
Ha Ha's owner John Ha, right, and his mother Soon Ha. [Photo: Young Kwak]
Ha Ha's owner John Ha, right, and his mother Soon Ha. [Photo: Young Kwak]
Ha Ha's owner John Ha, right, and his mother Soon Ha. [Photo: Young Kwak]

In 1979, a vagabond named Daniel Leen wrote and self-published a book called The Freighthopper’s Manual for North America, in which he describes the Hillyard trainyards as having “the feel of warmed-over death.”

Leen’s is a gritty (and dated) picture of the rough times weathered by Spokane’s railroad district, which — thanks to recent construction facelifts, community investment and eclectic entrepreneurship — is seeing a revival of its small-town USA glow.

Hillyard’s growing food pocket along Market Street harbors an off-the-radar melting pot of nosh spots, marking a low-profile collective defined by quirky variety, historic funkiness and a dogged character no other Spokane neighborhood can lay claim to. If this stretch of street isn’t on your radar, it should be.

01.HA_HA_Pork.JPGKOREAN | On the outside, Ha Ha’s Grill House (2710 E. Garland Ave., two blocks off Market) looks like the other industrial buildings on this stretch of Garland. Then you open the door and are hit full in the face by a lovely atmosphere of green and yellow walls, dotted with various (mostly classical) record albums and contemporary décor.

Chef/owner John Ha plays with recipes inherited from his mother, Soon Ha, and only works with organic and natural ingredients. He describes Ha Ha’s fare as “Euro-Korean fusion.”

“I lived in Seattle for four years,” he said. “And we would go around to these hole-in-the-wall spots in neighborhoods like [this].” He sees Hillyard being a little Ballard (Seattle’s once scruffy, now chic fishing/ industrial neighborhood) in the making.

Ha’s Garland Burger ($8) satisfies like a burger should — minus the greasy gut-bomb coma. Its Korean-marinated patty comes perched on a fluffy Kaiser bun with cilantro aioli and cabbage coleslaw, and is teeth-sinkingly juicy, somehow without any pinkness to the meat.

The Fusion BBQ pulled-pork sandwich ($7) pays gourmet homage to the classic. It’s blanketed in caramelized onions for sweetness that play nicely off the pork rub, which contains hints of cinnamon. The whole thing struck a nice equilibrium of moisture and chewiness. We also devoured the tofu salad ($8/$10.30), tossed in a subtly sweet Korean dressing that complements the charred flavor of the silky-smooth tofu.

Their entrees — we suggest the spicy/smokey Daeji Bulgogi Korean marinated pork ($13) and their futuristic take on bibim bap ($11) — come with the traditional sides of various types of kimchi.

01.Flautas.JPGARRIBA! | Spokane can brag about its huckleberry products, artichoke dips and bleu cheese burgers. Mexican food? We’re getting there. And Rincon Tapatio (3207 N. Market St.) is at the top of the family-owned-Mexican-restaurant ladder (taco trucks and De Leon/Tacos Tumbras get their own climbing apparatus), especially if you’re one of those people who differentiate between a taquito and flauta. We appreciate the menu’s variety (extended categories include “eggs,” “vegetarian” and “American”), the presentation of entrees (on hubcap-sized platters with bowl-like rims, so your rice, lettuce and beans don’t fall overboard when you’re shoveling) and the authentic atmosphere, like overhead sombrero lamps.


View Hillyard in a larger map

LUCK O’ THE IRISH | A stroll up the street is Spokane’s other favorite place to be rowdy, drink Guinness and eat delicious bar grub (besides O’Doherty’s): Whiskey Dick’s (3027 E. Liberty Ave.). Bartender Sandra Teal says the Irish Cadillac ($8.95) — shredded corned beef and roast beef, Swiss cheese and Russian dressing on dark rye with cream cheese and fresh onion (are you drooling yet?) — is the thing to try, and bartender Justin Ross Hale opts for the sweet ’n’ spicy chicken salad ($7.95) because “it’s healthy and still has some zing to it.”

ITALIAN-AMERICANA | It’s hard to describe the sheer comedic euphoria incited by the awesomeness of the sign for Tony Ferraro’s Burgers & Italian Bistro (3547 N. Market St.), which features a triumphant unification of the Italian and American flags.

Formerly the Steer Inn (the awning still bears the bovine insignia), Ferraro weds a drive-thru business model with sit-down, home-cooked dining, and says his penne ($5) is the best in town.

“[The fancy places] don’t make it like I do. I make it like I do at home,” he says, simulating holding a giant pot while stirring with one hand.

01.Dragon_Interior_2.JPGCHINESE | On a sleepy side street off Market is the Red Dragon (3011 E. Diamond Ave.), which, situated in a 1913 brick building painted fireengine red, is one of those niche jewels you discover when you’re lost. This chill nook opened in December 2009, has a sleek full bar and bistro-ish interior.

“It’s amazing how tight-knit the community is,” says waitress Chelsea Haynes, who suggests trying the Green-Eyed Angel ($5.25; fresh lime, gin and orange liqueur muddled and topped with cooling apple soda). “We’ve had a great response from the whole neighborhood.”

The hand-folded crab wontons with cream cheese ($4.24/$8) are fried morsels of joy, and the general’s chicken ($10) gives other take-outs a serious run for their money. And talk about cultural fusion: Red Dragon features live belly dancing (!?) the second Saturday of every month.

RANCH GRUB | At home among Hillyard’s antique stores is the adorable Outlaw Café (5012 N. Market St.), a breakfast/lunch venue that’s family-run in the 1907 Nebraska building (the second floor of which used to be a brothel, according to the menu).

We love the farmhouse feel and the speckled blue enamelware Outlaw serves its coffee in (the kind you use when you go camping). Proprietor Lynn Moore says the cowboy bean soup, homemade quiche and loaded Hardin patty melt ($8.95) are house favorites.

01.Barbary_Interior.JPGPUBALICIOUS | Opened just last Friday, Barbary Coast (5209 N. Market St,) is ripe for the plundering. An intimate beer-and-wine bar whose attractive green walls, old wooden piano and padded leather chairs lie incognito until you venture inside (a decorative 5-foot barber pole outside suggests it’s a place to get haircuts). There’ll be live music on weekends and brick oven pizza, spaghetti and meatballs, biscuits and gravy, and chili coming in early October.

ALSO CONSIDER: Perusing Hillyard’s eccentric features when you’re done eating, like Pilot Books, the Hillyard Heritage Fire & Rail Museum, or the plethora of antique malls. Further south: the wonderful community of writers and artists that gather around Olive It Café (3402 N. Crestline St., near Bridgeport Ave.).

Also in Food Feature

Moss and Culture

Tribal elders work to sustain tradition in Wellpinit

Annemarie C. Frohnhoefer |
Tuesday, June 11,2013

Guilty Pleasures

Baja Mexican Restaurant dishes out old-school burritos in Medical Lake

Annemarie C. Frohnhoefer |
Tuesday, June 11,2013

Family Feel

The neighborhood gathers at Red Rooster to spill their souls and drink coffee

Anna Clausen |
Tuesday, June 11,2013

Fresh and Free

A school program proves that kids really will eat their fruits and veggies

Lisa Waananen |
Tuesday, June 4,2013

Summer Hub

The recently transformed Shop draws in the neighborhood for food and films

Jo Miller |
Tuesday, June 4,2013

Also By Blair Tellers

Let's Be Friends

Local society blooms, celebrates first birthday

Blair Tellers |
Thursday, February 25,2010
TV

Memphis Beat

Earl is back. As a cop.

Blair Tellers |
Wednesday, June 16,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Kevin Sampsell

He's from around here, and he didn't get along with his dad. In other words, he's a lot like you.

Blair Tellers |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Fresh & Tasty

Luna Goes Pick-Up

News at the South Hill institution. Plus, the second annual One Night One World celebration and Feast With Friends.

Kirsten Harrington, Blair Tellers |
Wednesday, September 8,2010

What He Saw

A Spokane surgeon gives a firsthand account of the disaster in Haiti

Blair Tellers |
Thursday, February 11,2010


Thanks for the Hillyard love! I´m always trying to get people to come up to the neighborhood to eat, the food´s awesome.

One piece of constructive criticism, I would have when with "Hill-Yum" instead of "Hill-licious." It´s much easier to say. Thanks again. Sep 24, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
Close
Close
Close