Seattle Mag
Datebook: Food Fests!
Sample some of the best treats in Seattle available at the many food festivals this summer!
Category: Eat + Drink Articles Open wide: July is an unofficial monthlong celebration of the foods we Northwesterners love best. First up are dueling berry festivals on the same weekend: The Vashon Island Strawberry Festival (7/17–7/19; free; times and locations vary; along Vashon Highway; 206.463.6217), celebrating its 100th anniversary with a “berry” grand parade…
Datebook: Alice Wheeler
'90s-inspired art takes the stage with a focus on women
Category: Arts + Events Articles The ’90s revival may be in full swing, but teenagers and hipsters, take note: Combat boots and flannel weren’t the only things born from the grunge movement. Art took a turn in the mosh pit as well. Seattle photographer Alice Wheeler gained acclaim for her vibrant, sometimes shocking portraits…
Datebook: High School Musical
The young members of new local band VerleeRose are hoping to take the city
Category: Arts + Events Articles Keira Verlee and Ellie Rose are two local 15-year-olds with one busy summer—and it bears little resemblance to the usual teen schedule (work, mall, party, repeat). Verlee, a spunky blonde with a huge grin, and Rose, a sweet, bubbly brunette, will be playing gigs around the state and promoting…
Datebook: Lip Service
Local sculptor John Grade brings miles of mouths to Bellevue Arts Museum
Category: Arts + Events Articles The eyes may be the windows to the soul, but the mouth says a lot about a person, too. Nowhere is this more evident than in Seattle sculptor John Grade’s new piece, “Preserve,” at the Bellevue Arts Museum. It’s part of the 40-piece group show ÜberPortrait, which explores and…
Island Getaways: Whidbey Island
Slender and 45 miles long, Whidbey Island
Category: Articles Slender and 45 miles long, Whidbey Island—a 20-minute ferry ride from the Mukilteo dock—is one of the region’s most accessible getaways. Though Whidbey is more populated than many of the more remote Puget Sound islands, the laid-back island vibe isn’t hard to find on quiet roads and in tiny villages. SEATTLE’S BACKYARD VACATION LAND: WHIDBEY ISLAND Browse…
Knee High Stocking Company
Capitol Hill's hidden Knee High is worth seeking out
Harking back to the days of the unpopular 18th Amendment, Capitol Hill’s new hot spot, open since March, flies way under the radar. The Vibe Most of us weren’t around to hit the real speakeasies during Prohibition, so this is as close to the experience as we’ll get. Knee High hides behind an unmarked door…
Meet the Producer: Billy Allstot
The time is ripe for Billy's heirloom tomatoes
Category: Eat + Drink Articles The time is ripe for Billy’s heirloom tomatoes When the calendar page turns to July, customers start lining up at Billy Allstot’s farmers’ market stall to choose from his harvest of organic heirloom tomatoes. Allstot chats with customers (some of whom he’s served for 15 years) as they choose…
Cravings: Holy Guacamole
Dig into delicious guacamole at these Seattle restaurants
Category: Eat + Drink Articles Dig into delicious guacamole at these Seattle restaurants When Seattle summer is in full swing, there’s nothing better than digging into fresh-mashed bowl of guacamole. Agua VerdeA zesty guacamole, this one is chock-full of habañeros, onion, cilantro, lime juice and salt (plus a secret ingredient), made daily by Grandma Guadalupe (the…
Grey Matters: In the Bust of Times
Even in hard times, there are signs that livable Seattle can still make progress
Category: Articles Author Roger Sale, who wrote one of Seattle’s must-read histories, Seattle Past to Present, argues that we’re at our best during busts, not booms. Seattle boom times tend to bring out our worst qualities—a tendency to overdo development and be derivative, copycatting New York or Los Angeles with “world-class” ambitions. Economic busts…
The Snoqualmie Tribe’s Big Gamble
Can the once-proud Snoqualmie Tribe regain its heritage and future by following the casino path?
Category: Articles Can the once-proud Snoqualmie Tribe regain its heritage and future by following the casino path? According to a Snoqualmie legend, Moon the creator, on his way upstream in search of the people from whom he was snatched as a baby, came upon a place in the river where a large weir obstructed…
Hot Button: Uphill Climb
The Mountaineers, one of the region
Category: Articles The rock felt like real granite. Scoping out the route ahead, I marveled at the variety of holds and the coarse texture of the surface, perfect for frictioning with rock shoes. Ten feet up I clipped into a bolt, ensuring the rope would catch me if I fell. Taking a deep breath,…
Voice: Team Green
In Seattle
Category: Green Living I recently received a brochure from the City of Seattle explaining the new recycling program, and according to my calculations, I should have them figured out by 2020 or so. One of the most confusing changes is new pick-up days. As I found myself dragging my giant-ass carts and cans to and…