Restaurant in Seattle, United States
Joule
255Pearl PointsDecorated, hard to book, worth the effort.

About Joule
Joule is one of Seattle's most consistently recognised New Asian restaurants, earning OAD Casual North America rankings in both 2024 and 2025. Chefs Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi run a lively, sharing-format room in Wallingford that rewards repeat visits. Book well in advance — walk-ins are not a realistic option — and arrive ready to order broadly across the menu.
Is Joule worth booking for dinner in Seattle?
Yes, and if you've already been once, it's worth going back. Joule is one of the most consistently decorated New Asian restaurants in the Pacific Northwest, ranking #361 on the Opinionated About Dining Casual North America list in 2025, up from #486 in 2024. That upward trajectory matters: it signals a kitchen that is improving, not coasting. Chefs Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi have built something in Seattle's Wallingford neighbourhood that rewards repeat visits, where the menu rewards familiarity and the room rewards regulars.
What Joule feels like
The energy at Joule skews lively. Expect a room that fills quickly after 5 PM, with a noise level that suits groups and date nights better than quiet conversation. If you're looking for a hushed, ceremonial dining environment, this isn't the right call. If you want a restaurant with genuine momentum — plates moving, tables talking, a kitchen that's clearly engaged — this is it. The atmosphere is confident without being self-conscious, which is harder to pull off than most restaurants make it look.
Multi-visit strategy: what to try across two or three visits
On a first visit, use it as an orientation. Joule's cuisine blends Korean and Asian influences with Pacific Northwest ingredients in a way that feels specific rather than generic. The key move on visit one is to sample broadly: the menu is built for sharing, and ordering across multiple sections gives you the clearest read on what Yang and Chirchi are doing. Don't anchor to a single dish too early.
On a second visit, go deeper into whatever caught your attention the first time. The kitchen has enough range that a second pass rarely feels repetitive. This is also when bar seating starts to make sense , if it's available, taking seats at the bar gives you a closer view of the kitchen's rhythm and occasionally surfaces off-menu conversation with staff.
By a third visit, you're essentially eating like a regular. That means knowing the cadence: Friday and Saturday service runs to 10 PM (versus 9 PM on other nights), so late-week visits allow for a more relaxed pace if you're booking the later window. Joule has held an OAD Recommended designation since 2023 with consecutive ranked appearances, which tells you the consistency is there across visits, not just on a single good night.
Booking and logistics
Getting a table at Joule is hard. Book as far ahead as your planning allows , this is not a walk-in venue on any evening that matters to you. The restaurant operates Tuesday through Sunday starting at 5 PM (closed Mondays), with Friday and Saturday service extending to 10 PM. If your schedule is flexible, targeting a Tuesday or Wednesday booking will give you better availability than a weekend. For groups, plan ahead and communicate size at the time of reservation; the room is not configured for large parties to land without notice.
How Joule compares in Seattle
For New Asian cooking at this level of recognition in Seattle, Joule has few direct equivalents. If you're comparing across cuisines, Canlis is the city's benchmark for special-occasion dining but operates in a completely different register , more formal, higher price point, less kinetic energy. Altura is the comparison to make if Italian-influenced New American is on your list. For the specific Korean-Asian fusion approach, look at Dailo in Toronto or Atomix in New York City as the ceiling of the format, with Joule sitting comfortably in the tier below those on national rankings but well above casual alternatives in Seattle itself.
See our full Seattle restaurants guide for a broader view of the city's dining options, or explore Seattle bars, Seattle hotels, Seattle wineries, and Seattle experiences to round out your trip.
FAQs about Joule
- What should a first-timer know about Joule? It's a sharing-format New Asian restaurant with OAD recognition and a lively room. Book well in advance, arrive planning to share across the menu, and expect a full house most nights. The kitchen is the draw, not the service theatrics.
- What should I order at Joule? Specific current dishes aren't confirmed here, but the menu follows a Korean-influenced New Asian format that typically spans small plates and larger proteins. Order broadly on a first visit and use the second visit to return to what worked. The OAD rankings suggest the kitchen is consistent enough to back that approach.
- Is lunch or dinner better at Joule? Dinner only , Joule does not serve lunch. Service runs from 5 PM daily, with Friday and Saturday going until 10 PM. If you want a later, more relaxed meal, book the late window on a weekend.
- Is Joule good for a special occasion? Yes, with caveats. The energy is lively rather than hushed, which suits celebrations more than intimate dinners requiring quiet. The OAD recognition and the calibre of the kitchen make it a credible special-occasion choice; just don't expect the formal ceremony of Canlis or the tasting-menu architecture of somewhere like Alinea in Chicago.
- Can I eat at the bar at Joule? Bar seating is likely available based on the restaurant format, but confirm at booking. It's a good option for solo diners or pairs who want proximity to the kitchen.
- Can Joule accommodate groups? The restaurant can handle small groups, but larger parties should communicate size when booking and not assume walk-in group accommodation is possible. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm arrangements for parties of six or more.
- Does Joule handle dietary restrictions? Contact the restaurant directly before your visit to discuss specific dietary needs. Given the Korean-Asian format, expect bold flavours, fermented ingredients, and proteins as menu anchors , worth flagging restrictions in advance rather than on arrival.
- What are alternatives to Joule in Seattle? For New American at a higher formality level, Canlis and Altura are the comparisons to make. For Pacific Northwest-focused cooking, Archipelago and Atoma are worth considering. For a more casual evening, Ba Bar covers Vietnamese cooking without the booking difficulty.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Joule handle dietary restrictions?
Contact Joule directly before booking — dietary needs are best communicated in advance at a restaurant where the kitchen works with Korean and Asian-influenced preparations that often involve sauces, fermented ingredients, and shared formats. Joule's menu reflects Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi's cooking style, which means substitutions may have limits depending on the night's dishes. Don't wait until you're seated to raise it.
What are alternatives to Joule in Seattle?
Canlis is the comparison to reach for if you want a more formal special-occasion setting with a longer track record in Seattle. Altura covers Italian-influenced tasting territory for a different flavor profile at a similar level of seriousness. Ba Bar is the lower-commitment option if you want Southeast Asian cooking without the booking difficulty. None of them replicate Joule's specific Korean-meets-Pacific Northwest register.
Can Joule accommodate groups?
Groups can dine at Joule, but the room fills quickly and reservations are hard to secure — larger parties should book as far out as possible and call ahead to discuss seating options. The lively atmosphere suits groups well once you're in. For a party of six or more, confirm logistics directly with the restaurant before assuming a standard reservation covers you.
Is Joule good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. Joule's Opinionated About Dining ranking (top 400 casual in North America in 2025) and the consistent recognition it draws make it a defensible choice for a birthday or anniversary. The atmosphere skews lively rather than hushed, so if you need quiet and ceremony, Canlis is a better fit. If the occasion is better served by great food and energy than white-tablecloth formality, Joule works well.
What should I order at Joule?
Specific menu items are not documented here, and Joule's menu changes — don't rely on any fixed dish list. The kitchen's direction under Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi centers on Korean and broader Asian influences combined with Pacific Northwest ingredients. Ask your server what's current on the night; this is a kitchen where that question will get a useful answer.
Is lunch or dinner better at Joule?
Dinner is the format at Joule — the restaurant opens at 5 PM every day of the week and does not serve lunch. Friday and Saturday service runs until 10 PM; all other nights close at 9 PM. Plan accordingly and book dinner.
What should a first-timer know about Joule?
Book as far ahead as you can — this is not a walk-in restaurant on any evening that matters. Joule has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining rankings in North America's casual top 500 since 2023, so demand is consistent. The cuisine blends Korean and Asian influences with Pacific Northwest ingredients, which means it rewards ordering across the menu rather than anchoring on one dish. Come with an appetite and without a rigid plan.
Location
3506 Stone Way N, Seattle, WA 98103
Seattle, United States
Compare Joule
Also Consider
- Canlis — New American, New American
- Altura — New American, New American
- Ba Bar — Vietnamese, Vietnamese
- Bakery Nouveau — Bakery, Bakery
- Bateau — Seafood, Seafood
Joule is the most direct choice in Seattle if New Asian cooking with documented national recognition is what you're after. Its OAD Casual North America ranking puts it in a different tier from most of the city's Asian dining options, and there is no close local equivalent for its specific Korean-influenced format. If you're deciding between Joule and Canlis, the decision comes down to formality and format: Canlis is Seattle's premier special-occasion room with a higher price point and more ceremonial service; Joule is where you go when you want serious cooking in a room with genuine energy rather than hushed reverence.
Altura is the better pick if Italian-influenced New American is what you actually want, and it operates in a similarly intimate, reservation-required mode. For a lower-stakes evening with good cooking and easier booking, Ba Bar handles Vietnamese well and is far more accessible without advance planning. Bateau is the call for serious beef and seafood in a butcher-driven format — a different agenda entirely from Joule, but worth knowing if your group is split on cuisine direction.
On booking difficulty, Joule and Canlis are the hardest to secure in this peer set. Altura is similarly demand-driven. If you are flexible on cuisine and want to eat well without the planning burden, Ba Bar is the practical alternative. For the specific experience of Korean-inflected New Asian cooking at a nationally recognised level, Joule is the Seattle option — the comparison venues that truly match its format are in other cities: Dailo in Toronto or Atomix in New York City.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–9 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–9 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–9 pm
- Thursday
- 5–9 pm
- Friday
- 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- 5–9 pm
Recognized By
Explore Seattle
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