10 Best Restaurants in The Olympic Peninsula and Washington Coast, Washington

Blue Moose Cafe

$ Fodor's choice

Convivial, cozy, and a bit off-the-wall, this is one of Port Townsend's best sources of generous, unfussy breakfasts and lunches, like thick pancakes and decadent eggs Benedicts, plus hefty burgers and sandwiches. Long popular with sailors and shipwrights who work in the surrounding Port Townsend Boat Haven, this hole-in-the-wall fills up fast on weekends, but you can help yourself to a mug of drip coffee while you wait.

8th Avenue Ale House

$

Count on comforting, hearty Pacific Northwest pub fare at this long, narrow, and dimly lit eatery, with an ample selection of regional beer on tap. Look for pizza, seafood, and appetizers like deep-fried pickles, beer-battered mushrooms, crab cakes, and a pound of clams. Fish-and-chips, sandwiches, and burgers like the Naughty Nellie, with American and Swiss cheese and crushed red pepper, round out the menu. There's a small beer garden in back and more seating out front. Hoquiam is about a 30-minute drive from Ocean Shores. 

8th Street Ale House

$

You can count on finding deftly prepared Pacific Northwest pub fare—thin-crust pizzas, beer-braised pot roast, house-made black-bean burgers seafood, cod fish-and-chips, and crab-rockfish cakes—at this long, narrow, and dimly lit neighborhood pub in downtown Hoquiam. There's an ample selection of regional beer on tap, which is best enjoyed in the cozy beer garden in back.

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Billy's Bar & Grill

$

The most popular local saloon and brothel during Aberdeen's rough-and-tumble logging and seafaring years, this colorful tavern has a collection of prints recalling those bawdy days and remembering the life of the notorious original owner, Billy Ghol, who was rumored to have killed more than 100 men. The standard comfort fare includes steak and eggs, grilled local oysters, French dip sandwiches, and fish-and-chips. If you're looking for a challenge, try the Billy's Belt Buster, a burger with four patties, cheese, and bacon.

322 E. Heron St., Aberdeen, Washington, 98520, USA
360-533–7144
Known For
  • good array of beef and chicken burgers
  • potential sightings of Billy Ghol's ghost
  • caramel apple tarts with vanilla ice cream
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Blakeslee's Bar and Grill

$

In an area with precious few dining options, this casual tavern just a little south of downtown Forks is a sight for sore eyes and hungry stomachs, offering up big portions of reliably good pub food. After a day of hiking or beachcombing, tuck into the half-pound Mill Creek bacon cheeseburger, a rib-eye steak, or a platter of batter-fried local seafood.

1222 S. Forks Ave., Forks, Washington, 98331, USA
360-374–5003
Known For
  • nachos (both traditional and Irish-style)
  • craft beer and potent cocktails
  • playing pool
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

Blue Buoy

$

Venture inside this endearingly dive-y diner with wood-paneled walls and nautical decor for formidable portions of stick-to-your-ribs breakfast and lunch fare. Consider the Dungeness crab omelet or fluffy biscuits and sausage gravy in the morning; top lunch offerings include New England–style clam chowder and the shrimp Louie salad.

2323 Westhaven Dr., Westport, Washington, 98595, USA
360-268–7065
Known For
  • fried oysters in everything from omelets to po'boys
  • marina view from tables in front
  • platters of assorted fish and shellfish
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Chestnut Cottage

$$

There can be a wait for a table at this homey country cottage–inspired restaurant, especially on weekend mornings when hikers and families pile in for sustenance before visiting Olympic National Park. Favorites include bacon-and-Brie egg scrambles, crème brûlée French toast, and—for lunch—barbecue chicken pizzas. 

Green Lantern Pub

$

The Copalis River flows beside this cash-only, cedar-shake-covered local favorite, in business since the 1930s and known for filling comfort food throughout the day, starting with bay shrimp breakfast scrambles and continuing later in the day with BLTs, burgers, chicken-fried steak sandwiches, clam strips, and fish-and-chips served in baskets. The laid-back dining room has a 10-foot-long clam-digging shovel in the corner.

3119 Hwy. 109, Copalis Beach, Washington, 98535, USA
360-289–2297
Known For
  • picnic tables overlooking the river
  • French dip and German sausage sandwiches
  • tasty fried seafood

Next Door Gastropub

$$

Chatter-filled and nearly always packed, this downtown neighborhood tavern with TVs airing Seattle sports games and ample sidewalk seating is popular for casual but creative comfort fare. Best bets include the citrus-crab salad with feta and avocado and the mac-and-cheese with buffalo chicken, plus an extensive list of beef and elk burgers.

113 W. 1st St., Port Angeles, Washington, 98362, USA
360-504–2613
Known For
  • well-curated craft beer list
  • good people-watching from the patio
  • locally line-caught albacore tuna melts
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues.

Oak Table Cafe

$

Carefully crafted breakfasts and lunches are the focus of this well-run, family-friendly eatery, a Sequim institution since 1981. Breakfast is served throughout the day, and on Sunday morning the large, well-lit dining room is especially bustling. The selection is extensive: thickly sliced bacon and eggs are a top seller, but the restaurant is best known for its creamy blintzes, golden-brown waffles, and variety of crepes and pancakes. Lunch choices include several salads, sandwiches, burgers, and a soup du jour.

292 W. Bell St., Washington, 98382, USA
360-683–2179
Known For
  • eggs Nicole with veggies and hollandaise sauce on a croissant
  • huge soufflé-style apple-cinnamon pancakes
  • char-broiled burgers at lunch
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner