The Restaurant
Surrell operates out of a century-old house on East Madison Street — a building whose domestic scale and weathered exterior give no hint of what happens inside. Chef Aaron Tekulve's tasting menu restaurant has become one of the most quietly consequential dining rooms in the Pacific Northwest, a place where the ambitions of the kitchen are matched by the singularity of the experience. In 2026, Tekulve was named a James Beard finalist for Best Chef in the Northwest and Pacific region — the recognition Seattle's food community had been expecting for years.
The restaurant's organizing principle is unusual, and deeply considered: the wine list features only Washington State producers. Every bottle on the list — from the entry-level glass to the prestige cuvées — comes from within the state's borders. This is not a marketing position or a sustainability gesture; it is a culinary argument. Washington's wine industry, centered in the Yakima Valley, Walla Walla, and the Columbia River Gorge, produces wines of genuine international quality. Tekulve's kitchen is built to demonstrate this, with ingredients that mirror the wine's latitude: Cascades farm products, Puget Sound shellfish, mountain-foraged fungi, coastal fish from the same waters that feed the grapes.
The result is a menu that feels like an argument for a place — for Washington specifically, its landscapes, its seasons, its particular way of growing things. This is among the most articulate expressions of Pacific Northwest cuisine currently being produced, and in a city that has spent forty years developing that cuisine, that distinction means something.
The Food
The full tasting menu runs eleven to twelve courses and unfolds over three hours. Each course is calibrated to demonstrate an ingredient at its seasonal peak — not its most complex preparation, but its most essential expression. A September course might present a single variety of Walla Walla onion in three preparations, each revealing a different aspect of its character. An October course might build around a single mushroom foraged from a specific elevation in the Cascades.
The technical foundation is classical European — Tekulve trained with precision — but the vocabulary is entirely Pacific Northwest. Dungeness crab from Hood Canal, prepared with the restraint of Japanese service cooking and the flavor framing of French technique. Wild salmon from the Columbia River, presented with a sauce that has been developing on the stove for two days. Vegetables from farms Tekulve has worked with since the restaurant opened, prepared with the familiarity of a chef who has received the same boxes every week for years and understands their contents intimately.
The five-course option ($150 per person approximately) distills the full menu's argument into a shorter sequence without sacrificing depth. The Washington wine pairing is available for both formats and is strongly recommended — the pairings demonstrate the list's seriousness and the kitchen's dialogue with the growers.
Why It's Perfect for Impressing Clients
Surrell offers something Seattle's established fine dining options cannot: genuine critical momentum. When you book Surrell for a client dinner in 2026, you are booking a James Beard finalist — a restaurant that food professionals currently consider among the best in America's most competitive category. The recognition is not retroactive; it is current. The argument the table makes on your behalf is not "we have always been here" but "I know what's happening right now."
The tasting menu format removes the anxiety of menu navigation while creating natural conversation points — the courses invite discussion, the wine pairings generate questions, and the unusual Washington-only list gives the sommelier material for genuine storytelling. For clients in technology, aviation, or natural resources — industries where the Pacific Northwest's economic identity is central — a dinner at Surrell makes an argument about your understanding of the place they've come to do business in.
For a proposal, the intimate scale of the century-old house — no more than thirty covers on any given evening — creates the privacy that larger restaurants cannot provide. Alert the team when booking; they will accommodate the moment without making it theatrical.
Reservations
Surrell books through Tock. Reservations open thirty days ahead and fill completely within hours for Saturday seatings. Weeknights — Thursday and Friday — are more accessible, typically with availability two weeks out. The restaurant is closed Sunday through Wednesday. Cancellation policy is firm; the small size of the room means that late cancellations materially affect the kitchen's economics.