Tucked along Seaview Avenue near Shilshole, Secret Congee is built around a deceptively ambitious idea. The team behind the small daytime kitchen puts it plainly: they want Seattle to be the first place in the world with a shop dedicated to different styles of congee from across Asia and beyond. It is a bold claim for a compact space with limited hours, but it captures exactly what makes the place worth knowing about.
This is not a restaurant that happens to have congee on the menu. Everything here is organised around the dish and its regional variations, treated less as a single recipe than as a global category with centuries of history and genuine room for reinvention.
Congee is among the oldest comfort foods in the world, with roots stretching back thousands of years across East Asia, China, and the Indian subcontinent before spreading outward into Southeast Asia and beyond. At its simplest, it is rice simmered in broth until it becomes a porridge, finished with whatever proteins or aromatics go on top. Secret Congee leans into that lineage rather than flattening it, using the dish as a framework for exploration rather than a fixed recipe to be replicated.

The menu reflects that range. The classic chicken congee is the reliable anchor, the bowl you order when you want something right without thinking too hard about it. The Tom yum shrimp congee, described by the shop as “probably the one and only,” is the dish that has become something of a signature, a tangy, aromatic bowl that applies the flavours of Thai cooking to a Chinese base with results that are difficult to find elsewhere in the city. Alongside the porridge, the shop serves youtiao, the long fried Chinese dough sticks traditionally eaten with congee for breakfast across much of East Asia. The suggestion is to tear them apart and dip them directly into the bowl, turning what might otherwise be a light meal into something more substantial.
The economics are worth being clear-eyed about. Secret Congee is small, seats fill up quickly, and the kitchen runs only from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Bowls start in the mid-teens and climb with premium toppings such as blue crab or roasted lamb. Some visitors have flagged the pricing as steep for a dish whose base ingredient is rice. The counter-argument, raised just as often in reviews, is that the toppings, the sourcing, and the breadth of the menu are not things you can easily replicate at home, which is rather the point of going.

The owner’s own Seattle eating habits offer a useful window into his sensibility. For late-night food, he goes to Dick’s in Wallingford. For a burger, he lands on Li’l Woody’s. For brunch on the water, he favours the fish and chips at Little Chinook’s at Fishermen’s Terminal on Salmon Bay. It is an unfussy, neighbourhood-first map of the city that fits naturally with what he has built.
What Secret Congee ultimately represents is a small wager on Seattle’s appetite for specificity. The city has long rewarded single-subject obsession in coffee, in seafood, in ramen. This is the same instinct applied to a dish that much of the Western world still associates primarily with illness. Whether Seattle ever becomes the congee capital of anything is beside the point. The more interesting story is that a tiny shop near the marina near Shilshole is asking the question.
Secret Congee is located at 6009 Seaview Avenue NW and is open daily from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.



