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The Crosscut Blog »

Apr 23, 2008 5:00 AM | last updated Apr 23, 2008 1:27 PM
Pike Place Market

A view of the market. (Flickr contributor bh88keys)

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This little start-up went to Market

By Yazmin Mehdi

Crosscut turned one this month, and to celebrate, we hosted a party in our offices. As with most start-up companies these days, we wanted to host something festive, but not break the bank. So, we opted to host the event in our downtown Seattle headquarters, and to organize the food ourselves.

I immediately began fretting about refreshments. Where to go and what to buy? Costco is an obvious choice: good prices, quality food, and large quantities. However, if you don't want to pay for delivery, you need a vehicle and parking to transport Costco merchandise. A number of caterers downtown produce nicely presented and fresh food, and they'll deliver it right to your door. Mel's Market, Specialty's, and Gretchen's come to mind, but though the quality is high, so are the prices.

I needed something simpler. Publisher David Brewster didn't hesitate when I asked his opinion. "The Market," he said. The Pike Place Market? Well, yes, it is located only blocks from our offices, and they do have wonderful produce. The Market has been in the news lately because it turned 100 on August 17, 2007. Its colorful history is well-chronicled at HistoryLink, or read Arne Zaslove's recent profile of the Market as cultural refuge on Crosscut. But I always thought of it more as a tourist destination or a place to shop occasionally.

I decided to give it a try. It turned out the only hard thing about using the market as your caterer is trying to choose from the abundant options.

Everything else was easy. The staff brought in wine, a few platters, a basket for bread, and paper plates. And on the day of, at T minus 2 hours, I simply walked over and hand-picked what I wanted. I chose DeLaurenti's for cold cuts — rosemary turkey, and a sharp and peppery Salumi salami — and cheese — a buttery, double-cream Brie, a smoky Gouda, and slices of Gruyere. I bought sweet, crisp Muscat grapes (a seedless wine grape that is surprisingly delicious), bright red strawberries, and easy-peel mandarins at Sosio's. Le Panier sold me baked-that-morning baguettes and tasty little chocolate, almond/orange and hazelnut sablés cookies.

I was back in the office arranging the food in just over an hour. Despite slightly sore arms from carrying my bounty, the experience was more fun than ordering from a menu on a Web site. We brought in our own wine but could have easily purchased it from several shops at the Market. All the money was spent on food only — no catering overhead here. When our guests arrived, many remarked on the food and were surprised we'd purchased it all at the Market.

Next time you have to host a party, give yourself a treat and walk to the Market. You'll actually enjoy the preparations, and the results will be delicious.

Comments
Leftie Capitalists
Report a violationPosted by: dltooley on Apr 23, 2008 9:23 AM
One of the most ironic things about Seattle is that Downtown's most liberal icon, the Pike Place Market area is also the purest capitalist endeavor in the City.

Leftie values and business are not contradictory things, though the right wing folks that control our current system would certainly like you to believe they are. I would go so far as to argue that the worst, tolerated, excesses of PC Hate are in fact de facto employees of these very same folks.

Free markets and free societies should go hand in hand - coming together most signicantly in the free market of individual labor. As it stands now our labor market is really nothing but a finely crafted 'dungeon' of economic 'torture' and harrassment. Sure, some folks succeed, and even quite a few lefties in Seattle.

But bet your life, for every 'Scuppie' or limousine liberal in Seattle there are dozens of suffering salt of the earth folks everywhere. Seattle Arts may well in fact be nothing more than the bitch smile on Ted Bundy's face. :-)

This type of business writing can lead the way to improving this situation - if not revolutionizing business itself. Mehdi may well emerge as the equal of Virgin and Voelpel in local business news, in addition to his Crosscut business duties, but he's still got a long ways to go to prove that.

-Douglas Tooley

My earliest writing on the subject.
RE: Leftie Capitalists
Report a violationPosted by: yazmin.mehdi@crosscut.com on Apr 23, 2008 11:30 AM
Crosscut WriterDouglas - It's always interesting to read your commentary on Crosscut stories. Thanks for takng the time. You are probably right about my future as a business writer, although I really intended this to be more a piece about food. One thing you have wrong, however, is my gender! :)

Yazmin
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