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Dining: Shabu Chic

By Allison Austin Scheff March 15, 2013

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This article originally appeared in the April 2013 issue of Seattle magazine.

In Seattles ChinatownInternational District, there is no shortage of hot pot, the Chinese fondue in which you cook presliced meats, seafood or vegetables in a pot of boiling broth set in the middle of your table, customizing with hot sauce or garlic or soy sauce as you choose. But until recently, the Japanese version, shabu-shabu (named for the swish-swish sound the food makes as you move it through the hot broth), had remained elusive. At the sleek, new Shabu Chic, emerald walls and countertops fitted with personal cooktops are a fashionable backdrop for the spare, clean flavors of the food. First, youll choose a broththe kombu (flavored with seaweed) is the most traditional, although the spicy miso is a nice choice, too. You can opt for vegetable or pork dumplings ($10.99 for eight), tofu and veggies ($9.99), thinly sliced ribeye steak ($11.99 for 10 slices) or the gorgeously marbled American Kobe ($24.99 for 10 slices). Along with your choice of protein, youll be served a plate piled high with cabbage, udon noodles and seasonal vegetables, and a small bowl of white or brown rice. Finally, there are two sauces: a citrusy ponzu and a creamy goma (sesame), each set in small bowls before you. Youre meant to swish-swish your food through your personal broth, dip a bite into one of the two sauces and eat. Its fun, its healthy, and hovering above a pot of boiling broth in the cold of a Seattle spring has its benefits. To drink: house cold sake or a Sapporo, both better choices than the wine on offer.

Lunch and dinner FridaySunday. 1032 S Jackson St., Suite 202B; 206.329.0988; shabuchic.com.

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