
The Resy Hit List: Where In Portland You’ll Want to Eat in May 2025
There’s no question we hear more often: Where should I go eat? And while we at Resy know it’s an honor to be the friend who everyone asks for restaurant advice, we also know it’s a complicated task. That’s where the Resy Hit List comes in.
Consider it your essential resource for dining in Portland: a monthly-updated guide to the restaurants that you won’t want to miss — tonight or any night.
Four Things In Portland Not to Miss This Month
- Mother of all Celebrations: Celebrate your mom or a mother-figure in your life with brunch (or a nice dinner!) at one of our favorite spots in town. Book a Middle Eastern brunch at Ya Hala’s Fairuz Room, head to the very fitting Mother’s Bistro for classic comfort food, explore The Love Shack for a theatrical take on breakfast, or Besaw’s for a familiar old standby.
- Beard Bites: Another year, another round of hopeful James Beard Foundation Award winners. This year, Portland’s healthy presence includes Scotch Lodge, the subterranean whisky-lovers’ haven in Southeast, alongside Mt. Tabor’s Coquine, the ultra-luxury sushi tasting menu Nodoguro, and one of our favorite bakeries in town, Jinju Patisserie.
- Local Favorites: During May, Oregon Wine Month and the AAPI Food and Wine Fest converge, offering plenty of opportunities to enjoy the bounty of the region through events and tastings across the Willamette Valley. Stop by Tina’s or make a reservation for Anthology, both in Dundee, for special meals or buy tickets to the AAPI Food & Wine Fest to celebrate the diversity of Asian chefs, producers, and winemakers helping make some of Oregon’s best food and wine.
- Now Open: Award-winning Cuban cocktail bar Palomar finally reopened on the West side in sparkly new digs, but with the same great drink and food list. Sip shaken, stirred, bubbly, or frosty drinks alongside plantains, mojo-braised wings, and jackfruit ropa vieja.
New to the Hit List (May 2025)
Champagne Poetry, Jade Rabbit, Tastebud Pizza, Tina’s.
1. Heavenly Creatures Sullivan's Gulch

The original St. Jack duo that brought Portland its beloved and longstanding French bistro got back together to recreate this bit of magic. The can’t-miss wine bar offers a short-but-sweet menu of French-inspired drinking foods that helps keep the wine flowing all night. Snacks like whipped Camembert with potato chips and the young yellowtail toast have risen to signature status, while heartier snacks and plates like poached halibut and manila clams with lobster-garlic bread and braised oxtail with cherry tomatoes and sauce verte mean you won’t need to stop elsewhere for “real” dinner. Wine, of course, is the main event, ranging from a lengthy glass pour list to a robust bottle selection, available to enjoy on site with a corkage fee or at home.

2. Lone Star Burger Killingsworth
If there’s one thing you can say about Portland, it’s that we love our burgers. Last November, the team behind the popular Podnah’s Pit BBQ launched a simple burger pop-up in the former La Taq space on Killingsworth. Barely a month later, the pop-up went official, formally taking over the space to become Lone Star Burger Bar with a short but sweet menu of options built around a burger blend ground fresh every day. Alongside a quartet of burgers served with aioli on Dos Hermanos buns, Lone Star also serves fresh-cut fries, Sabrett hot dogs, Coney Island dogs, and onion rings.
Find more info here.
3. Kann Southeast Portland
Portland’s arguably most sought-after restaurant proudly focuses on chef Gregory Gourdet’s Haitian heritage. And it’s still worth trying to snag a reservation. The James Beard Award-winning menu is truly best suited for joyous reunion, with groups of four to six (or more in the private dining space!) getting a chance to try a little bit of everything if you’re sharing across the table. Don’t miss the signature dishes — the plaintain brioche and the griyo twice-cooked pork — as well as any number of plates emerging from the wood-fired hearth. We’re partial to the red cabbage with smoked herring and African pepper sauce and a glazed duck breast and leg, lacquered with cane syrup. Add in sides to share, and desserts, and you’ll see why Gourdet is so lauded.
4. Ancestro Park Blocks
One of the city’s newest brunch spots has quietly risen through the power rankings. Popping up in the Park Blocks’ Cadejo coffee shop on Thursday-Sunday mornings, Ancestro’s simple but well-executed menu of Mexican dishes like chilaquiles with pork belly, sopes with pickled cactus and black bean, buttery crisp tortas, and black bean-laced tlacoyos topped with scrambled eggs and tomato-onion sauce has been quickly gathering a cult following. Like the best restaurants in town, everything is excellent, so either come with a group or plan a return trip soon.
Find more info here.
5. Takibi Northwest

Taking up residence behind 23rd Avenue’s Snow Peak store — a high-end, Japanese outdoors gear retailer — this restaurant celebrates that feeling of sitting around a campfire at the turn of the seasons. After a fire earlier this year, the beautiful outdoors-meets-indoor Japanese American restaurant has reopened with a new team and menu. Find seasonal, wood-fired dishes alongside crunchy chicken karaage; silky dashi-simmered squash; hearth-fired American wagyu; and simple sushi and sashimi. Dream about your next camping trip from the dining room, with a cocktail in hand. Everything you need is just around the corner.

6. Someday Richmond
Down an alley along Southeast Division, is Someday, the neighborhood cocktail bar from bartending vets-turned-back-alley cocktail patio and mini food cart pod. Sip old and new cocktail recipes from a classic Scofflaw to a reimagined daiquiri, here infused with pandan. Bites (from the bar itself) focus heavily on snacks, with dishes like olives, cheeses, anchovies, simple veggie plates and a fancier old-fashioned weiner. But if none of the bar’s options fit your fancy, or you missed snagging a reservation for the bar’s Sunday evening oyster grill, explore Ruthie’s, the wood-fired pizza cart located just behind the bar.
7. Monty’s Red Sauce Sellwood Moreland
The newest restaurant in the Montelupo family, opening right around the corner from its Sellwood focacceria, is Monty’s Red Sauce, chef and owner Adam Berger’s version of an East Coast Italian American restaurant. Here, among low-slung, red vinyl booths, find dishes like generous portions of spaghetti and meatballs; thick, golden cutlets of chicken Parm; chicken marsala; and fried starters like mozzarella sticks and calamari alongside Monty’s creative spin on the antipasti plate: the mozzarella bar, with a you-pick selection of cheese, dips, and veggies.
8. Jade Rabbit Buckman
This former vegan dim sum pop-up from chef Cyrus Ichiza, whose restaurant Ichiza Kitchen was a destination, just moved into its own digs on Southeast Belmont. Here, find deceivingly good vegan variations of many popular Chinese and dim sum dishes like grilled bean curd dumplings, turnip cake, spicy wontons, siu mai and char siu bao. Elsewhere on the menu, larger dishes like Jade’s take on dan dan noodles, mapo tofu, and a ramen-esque “mami noodle soup” fill out the rest of the table.
9. Champagne Poetry Asian Fusion/Lounge Portland
A second, pink-flooded Champagne Poetry just landed on NW 23rd. This bold, unapologetic patisserie known for its Asian-inspired mirror-glazed cakelets, macarons, and occasional X-rated Valentine’s Day sweets, has expanded across the river with a cocktail lounge menu. At the new location, find the same beloved baked goods alongside an expanded Champagne list, creative cocktails, and new savory dishes like duck leg ramen, Hokkaido uni over rice, and sliced wagyu with purple sweet potatoes.
10. Tusk Buckman

The vibey, Millennial-pink Tusk remains a mainstay for Mediterranean-inspired foods built with locally sourced produce. A hefty snacks and dips menu with favorites like silky hummus and labneh with preserved lemon kicks off a lengthy menu that allows for any customization you’d like. Find a heavy vegetable presence here, with options like crunchy falafel, chicories tossed in green tahini, and rainbow carrots scattered with puffed sorghum. Meat and seafood mains range from za’atar-crusted albacore and lamb belly to whole trout and beef kofta. If you don’t want to choose, the restaurant offers a kitchen-guided experience for $55-$65/person.

11. Silk Road Portland
Drawing inspiration from the famed Eurasian trade route, expect to find cocktails and food at this Pearl District late-night bar infused with east and west Asian ingredients. The glamorous bar is a collaboration between LULU’s Vijay Kumar and Chinese stalwart Ambassador’s Lexy Foong, who is supplying the Chinese American food menu. Snack on wagyu beef-stuffed dumplings, salt and pepper calamari and General Tso chicken while sipping on seasonally shifting cocktails scented with five spice, shiitake mushrooms, curry, and genmaicha.
12. Dame Concordia
After years of bouncing around town as a pop-up, Luna Contreras’ Guadalajara street food and casual fonda-style restaurant finally has a permanent and familiar home. Early this year, Chelo officially took over Dame, the shared Northeast Killingsworth restaurant space, which has hosted a slew of pop-up residencies (including Chelo), between the main corner space and its next door Lil’ Dame kitchen almost every day of the week. Now, on Thursdays-Sundays, find many of Contreras’ signature dishes like mushroom gorditas, stuffed with kale, epazote, and Gruyere, and the tlayuda, currently topped with roasted carrots, charred chicories, and winter squash. Close out dinner with another signature, the ultra popular tres leches cake, scented with almonds and dolloped with matcha cream.
13. Estes Ristorante Mississippi
Dame’s former anchor restaurant Estes is now taking up residence in Mississippi’s Broder Nord. Four evenings a week, chef Patrick McKee will be serving his Italian-inspired menu after the popular Scandinavian brunch spot shutters for the day, trading Swedish hash and aebleskivers for fresh pastas stuffed with butternut squash and porchetta paired with polenta and braised kale. The short but sweet menu changes frequently, swapping out seasonal veggies and pasta sets as winter continues to wane. For those that want to bring a bite of Estes home, neighborhood favorite Bella’s Italian Bakery in Southeast Portland stocks fresh pastas and sauces from the Estes team in the grab-and-go fridge.
14. Fair Weather Clinton
This pandemic-era coffee shop and bakery has returned with a full brunch and lunch menu five days a week. Taking over its sister restaurant Jacqueline’s former corner space on Clinton, Fair Weather’s menu will look somewhat familiar to fans of the previous oyster bar. Here, find pastries and smaller morning bites like yeasted waffles with hazelnut praline butter, an egg and pork belly slider on a milk bread English muffin, and cured Chinook salmon. Larger plates also channel the previous seafood scene, with dishes like shrimp & grits with Calabrian chiles and chilled Dungeness crab with avocado on toast. There’s also Dear Francis coffee, wines-by-the-glass, and cocktails behind the bar.
Find more info here.
15. Tastebud Pizza Multnomah Village
Portland’s long-beloved wood-fired pizza restaurant recently reopened its doors after five years of takeout only. Though pies and Sunday you-bake bagels were available from the cozy counter, we’re glad to be able to sit back in the restaurant again. Like many of the best pizzas that rise to glory across Portland, Tastebud’s arrive decked out in seasonal fashion, topped with fiddlehead ferns with shiitake bechamel and oyster mushrooms, roasted asparagus and baby bok choi, or sausage and broccoli raab. Salads, too, highlight the best of the market with one of the city’s OG kale Caesars and the simple-but-lovely spring greens with hazelnuts in a mint vinaigrette.
Find more info here.
16. Bamboo Sushi NW 23rd Multiple locations
This fully sustainable sushi restaurant-turned-West Coast chainlet has been a go-to spot for years. Find TikTok-inspired crispy rice rolls, here topped with spicy salmon, albacore, and tuna, or smashed avocado. Daily changing hand roll specials, poke, nigiri, sashimi, and signature rolls make up the rest, with abundant vegan options to boot. The green machine is one, filled out with tempura-fried green beans, and can be boosted with albacore, salmon, and crab for those craving fish. Landlubbers, too, will be happy here, with a short menu of sea-free options, including a wagyu burger and a grilled truffle teriyaki rib eye.
17. No Saint Vernon
No Saint’s excellent bread program and creative seasonal vegetable dishes earn this Northeast Portland restaurant a spot in the strong class of pizza and pizza-adjacent restaurants that have become pillars of the area’s culinary scene. Even in the winter months when seasonal options are limited, the menu continues to shine, and especially now with spring on the horizon. Salads are a must, like mache with preserved citrus and green daikon in a tahini vinaigrette. Elsewhere, housemade pastas are worth the table space and of course, the main event: Wonderfully chewy and creative pies that support a cast of toppings like nowhere else in town (cabbage alla gricia? Sign us up). These cycle through frequently and we’re consistently impressed.
18. Tina's Dundee
This longstanding wine country outpost was one of the area’s few fine dining destinations when it opened in 1991. It maintains its stance as a regional culinary leader with its short but sweet menu of seasonal dishes using local produce and wild-caught proteins, plus classic desserts and timeless cocktails. Wine country menus don’t get more classic than this, with dishes like fried Willapa Bay oysters with sorrel aioli, rack of lamb with mint-hazelnut-Dijon persillade, and a souffle Provencal studded with fresh herbs and Cypress Grove goat cheese. Desserts include a vanilla bean crème brûlée and a chocolate Victoire, while cocktails harken back to a different generation with Spanish coffees, grasshoppers, and Sambuca affogatos.
19. Jacqueline Clinton
This Clinton neighborhood oyster favorite — now in a new home a few blocks down — is one of the city’s few seafood-centric spots. Lines start to form at the door before opening as folks hope to snag a seat for the ever-popular $1 oyster happy hour (harvested and delivered the same day!) and a seasonal menu of fresh fare. The menu kicks off with a trio of oysters on the half-shell, as a mezcal verdita-spiked shooter or roasted with bacon date butter before diving into crudos, seasonal veggie salads, and larger format dishes with seafood of course playing a starring role. Can’t decide what to order? For $90/person (with whole table participation required), the restaurant will cook for you.
20. Matta Portland

After setting his pop-up aside to open Mémoire Cà Phê, the long-awaited Vietnamese American brunch spot from Richard Le, Cà Phê’s Kimberly Dam, and Heyday’s Lisa Nguyen, chef Le is reviving his restaurant residency. Taking over the brunch spot three nights a week, the latest iteration of Matta will focus on foods Le loved to eat growing up, alongside fun new creations. “Lil’ bites” like shrimp toast on a Heyday bun and a steak salad tossed with apples and herbs in a fish sauce vinaigrette balance out “big bites” like dry-fried chicken with fish sauce caramel and salt and pepper pork ribs with serrano and daikon. A duo of desserts — the fried banana, strawberry basil jam “sundae scaries” is calling to us — and a short NA drink list fill out the rest of the menu.
