10 Best Restaurants in Portland, Oregon

Langbaan

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Guests reach this tiny 24-seat spot with an open kitchen by walking through the Phuket Cafe, which is itself a wonderful option for flavorful Asian cuisine. The restaurant serves the most interesting and consistently delicious Southeast Asian food in Portland via a weekly changing 10-course tasting menu that features unusual dishes like pickled mackerel with melon, sumac, and Thai chilies, and oxtail with bone marrow, chanterelle mushrooms, lentils, and tendon chips.

1818 N.W. 23rd Pl., Oregon, 97214, USA
971-344–2564
Known For
  • some of the most inventive Thai food in the country
  • a carefully curated wine list
  • wonderfully creative and flavorful desserts
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Thurs. No lunch, Reservations essential

Le Pigeon

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Specializing in adventurous Northwest-influenced French dishes of extraordinary quality, this cozy and unassuming restaurant consistently ranks among the city's most acclaimed dining venues. James Beard award–winning chef Gabriel Rucker presents a five-course tasting menu ($135), with a vegetarian option available as well, and although the lineup changes nightly, dishes like Iberico pork jowl and tenderloin and gnocchi with lobster and black truffle are typical.

738 E. Burnside St., Oregon, 97214, USA
503-546–8796
Known For
  • open kitchen in which diners at the counter can interact with chefs
  • lavish, leisurely five-course meals
  • less expensive à la carte next door at Canard
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch, Reservations essential

Mucca Osteria

$$$$ Fodor's choice

This narrow, bi-level space with exposed-brick walls, rustic chandeliers, and tall windows overlooking a busy Downtown space ranks among the more sophisticated and romantic dinner spots in the city. Charming chef-owner and Roman expat Simone Savaiano prepares complex modern Italian dishes using mostly local and organic produce and meats, in everything from the selection of cured meats to Dungeness crab salad with endive, arugula, apple, marcona almonds, and champagne vinaigrette. Handmade pastas, including an outstanding maltagliati with rabbit, olives, and pine nuts, are another strength.

1022 S.W. Morrison St., Oregon, 97205, USA
503-227–5521
Known For
  • five- and eight-course tasting menus
  • slow-roasted pork shoulder with wild mushrooms and crispy polenta
  • one of Oregon's most extensive wine lists
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No lunch

Recommended Fodor's Video

Ox Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Specializing in "Argentine-inspired Portland food," Ox is all about prime cuts of meat—along with flavorful garden-fresh side dishes—prepared to perfection. In a dimly lit dining room with hardwood floors, exposed brick walls, and a bar against the front window, the flannel-shirt-and-white-apron-clad waitstaff serves beef, lamb, pork, and fish dishes cooked over flames in a large, hand-cranked grill.

2225 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd., Oregon, 97212, USA
503-284–3366
Known For
  • the asado Argentino platter (lots of amazing meaty grills)
  • creative side dishes, a few of which could make a full meal
  • vanilla tres leches cake dessert
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

República

$$$$ | Pearl District Fodor's choice

The flagship restaurant of a fast-growing, nationally acclaimed group of sensational Latin American–inspired bars and eateries that include Lilia Comedor, Comala, and several others, this high-ceilinged, unpretentiously elegant spot serves prix-fixe tasting menus of gorgeously plated dishes that often utilize Pacific Northwest ingredients. The nightly offers change according to what's in season but might feature venison with Oaxacan chiles, king trumpet mushrooms, pears, and walnuts, or albacore with avocado and chile de agua.

100 N.W. 10th Ave., Portland, Oregon, 97209, USA
541-900–5836
Known For
  • charming setting in the historic EcoTrust Building
  • always inventive desserts
  • outstanding mezcal selection
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch

Andina

$$$$

This popular upscale Pearl District restaurant offers an inventive menu—a combination of traditional Peruvian and contemporary "Novoandina" cuisines—served in a large but nook-filled space that features live music most evenings. The extensive seafood offerings include several ceviches, grilled octopus, and a Peruvian-style paella that abounds with shellfish. A late-night bar offers sangria, small plates, and cocktails. 

1314 N.W. Glisan St., Oregon, 97209, USA
503-228–9535
Known For
  • Peruvian-style pisco sours
  • stylish yet casual lounge with great happy hour
  • ceviche with mixed fish and shellfish
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

Higgins

$$$$

One of Portland's original farm-to-table restaurants, this classic eatery, opened in 1994 by renowned namesake chef Greg Higgins, has built its menu—and its reputation—on its dedication to local, seasonal, organic ingredients. Higgins' dishes display the diverse bounty of the Pacific Northwest, incorporating ingredients like heirloom tomatoes, forest mushrooms, mountain huckleberries, Pacific oysters, Oregon Dungeness crab, and locally raised pork.

1239 S.W. Broadway, Oregon, 97205, USA
503-222–9070
Known For
  • homemade charcuterie plate
  • tender duck confit
  • casual and more affordable bistro menu in adjacent bar
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Tues. No lunch weekends

Portland City Grill

$$$$ | Downtown

On the 30th floor of the U.S. Bank Tower, the Portland City Grill has bragging rights for best dinner view in town, which makes up for the rather unremarkable steakhouse fare. Gaze over the city skyline and the distant Cascade and Coast mountains from a window table. The adjoining bar and lounge has comfortable armchairs along its windowed walls, which are nearly always occupied.

111 S.W. 5th Ave., Portland, Oregon, 97204, USA
503-450–0030
Known For
  • Portland's highest-up happy hour
  • extensive regional wine list
  • "Bridge view" buffet brunch on Sunday
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch Saturday, Credit cards accepted

RingSide Steakhouse

$$$$

This retro-cool Portland institution has been famous for its beef since it opened in 1944, though seafood lovers will find plenty of choices as well. Dine in cozy booths on rib eye, prime rib, and New York strip, which come in regular or king-size cuts, as well as Dungeness crab, broiled lobster tails, deep-fried prawns, and plank-roasted steelhead trout.

2165 W. Burnside St., Oregon, 97210, USA
503-223–1513
Known For
  • one of the few white-tablecloth dining rooms in town
  • big portions of tender steaks
  • sweet Walla Walla onion rings
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

St. Jack

$$$$

This always-crowded Slabtown restaurant takes its inspiration from the bouchons, or rustic cafés, of Lyon, the culinary capital of France. The menu changes weekly, with recurring favorites including such flavorful plates as beef tripe in a bouillabaisse of clams or pig's head with a confit of jowl and date puree, and there's an exceptional selection of French and Pacific Northwest wines.

1610 N.W. 23rd Ave., Oregon, 97210, USA
503-360–1281
Known For
  • superbly crafted house cocktails
  • mussels served with baguette
  • aged-cheese menu
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch