Welcome to Architectural Digesting, Our 2008 Dining Guide

The word restaurant comes from the French verb restaurer, "to refresh or restore," but restoring the body is hardly the primary mission of restaurants these days. They're full-on entertainment venues, or rather sets for us to play out some new scene in our personal dramas. Sure, we often choose to go to a particular restaurant because we love its food, but we're also hoping to feed off—and become part of—the ambience it creates: boisterous and scenester-y. Restrained and reverent. As familiar as Grandma's den. Dining in the wrong

atmosphere will sour any occasion, whether it's Thursday lunch with a co-worker or your 10th-anniversary blowout. By the same token, when your vision of the evening lines up with the mood of the place you're eating at, you'll be talking about your meal for months to come. So that's the organizing principle for this year's Favorite Restaurants issue: an even 100 of our writers' best-loved places divvied up by atmosphere, from "laboratory" to "living room." Pick a setting and make the scene. -- Jonathan Kauffman


FEATURED CATEGORIES

Circus

Brasa
Tamarind Tree
Steelhead Diner

Tulalip Casino
FareStart
Tea Garden

Art Gallery

Monsoon
Joule
Lark

Restaurant Zoe
May Thai

Gazebo

Kingfish Cafe
Sunlight Cafe
Jade Garden
Cafe Flora

Mioposto
Tempero do Brasil
35th Street Bistro

Farmhouse

La Medusa
Harvest Vine
The Alki Homestead

Le Pichet
Le Gourmand
Cafe Juanita

Laboratory

Crush
Elemental @ Gasworks
La Carta de Oaxaca

Veil
Ka Won
Mashiko

Barber Shop

Cafe Yarmarka
Rosticeria y Cocina El Paisano
Geraldine's Counter
Volunteer Park Café
Pan Africa Market

Cafe Presse
Salumi
Cafe Lago
Silver Fork