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    Restaurant in Portland, United States

    Kachka

    220Pearl Points

    Portland's serious Russian kitchen. Book it.

    Kachka, Restaurant in Portland

    About Kachka

    Kachka is Portland's most seriously regarded Russian restaurant, ranked by Opinionated About Dining and earning a 4.6 from over 2,500 Google reviewers. Chef Bonnie Morales runs a sharing-plate format with a genuine Eastern European wine and vodka program. Book one to two weeks out for weekends; lunch is an easy walk-in most days.

    Portland's Only Serious Russian Restaurant Earns Its Reputation

    The most common misconception about Kachka is that it's a novelty — a fun, themed night out for dumplings and vodka shots. That framing undersells it significantly. Chef Bonnie Morales has built something with real culinary depth at 960 SE 11th Ave, and Opinionated About Dining has tracked that trajectory closely: Kachka ranked #370 in Casual North America in 2024, climbed to recognition as Highly Recommended in 2023, and held a parallel rank of #165 in Gourmet Casual Dining in the same year. This is a restaurant that serious diners across the country have on their lists, not just Portland locals looking for something different on a Friday night.

    The Space: Designed for a Night, Not a Quick Meal

    The room at Kachka is set up for a particular kind of evening. The layout leans into communal warmth — think close tables, a lived-in aesthetic that references Soviet-era nostalgia without being kitsch, and a pace of service that encourages lingering. For a special occasion or a date where the conversation is as important as the food, the physical environment works in your favor. It is not a quiet room , expect noise at peak hours, particularly on Friday and Saturday evenings when service runs to 10 PM. If a calmer atmosphere matters for your occasion, aim for early seating on a weeknight. The lunch service (11 AM to 3 PM daily) offers a noticeably different experience: less crowded, lower-energy, and easier to hold a conversation across the table.

    Drinking at Kachka: Where the Program Gets Interesting

    Russian and Eastern European cuisine has a natural pairing architecture that most Western diners haven't spent much time with, and Kachka's beverage program is built around that gap. The vodka selection is the obvious entry point , the house infusions and curated spirits list is genuinely considered, not a gimmick , but the more interesting territory is the wine list. Eastern European producers, including Georgian natural wines and selections from Moldova and Ukraine, appear alongside more familiar options. These aren't token inclusions; they're choices that actively make the food taste better. Georgian amber wines in particular have the grip and oxidative character to cut through fat-rich dishes and hold up against pickled preparations in a way that a standard Burgundy or California Chardonnay simply doesn't. If you're approaching Kachka as a wine dinner, request guidance from your server on the Eastern European options rather than defaulting to what you know. The list rewards curiosity. For context on how a wine program can anchor an entire dining experience, compare the approach here to what Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or The French Laundry in Napa do with hyper-regional pairing , Kachka is doing something structurally similar at a fraction of the price and formality.

    Is It Worth Booking for a Special Occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. Kachka is a strong choice for a birthday dinner, an anniversary, or a date where you want to eat something genuinely different in Portland. It is not a white-tablecloth experience , the room is casual and the format is sharing-focused , but the cooking has enough intention and the beverage program enough depth that it holds up against more formally positioned restaurants in the city. For a special occasion that calls for more ceremony, Langbaan offers a tasting menu format that Kachka doesn't attempt. For a celebratory meal where you want strong food, a distinctive drinks program, and a room that feels lived-in rather than staged, Kachka delivers. If you're benchmarking against destination-level restaurants in other cities , Alinea in Chicago or Le Bernardin in New York City , Kachka occupies a different tier, but it's the leading version of what it is doing in the Pacific Northwest.

    Booking and Logistics

    Booking is relatively easy by Portland standards. Given the OAD rankings, weekends do fill , particularly Friday and Saturday dinner , but you are unlikely to need more than a week or two of lead time for most nights. Lunch is walk-in friendly most days. Hours run Monday through Thursday 11 AM to 9 PM, Friday and Saturday 11 AM to 10 PM, and Sunday 11 AM to 9 PM. No phone number is listed publicly; check the restaurant's website directly for reservations. Dress code is casual , Portland norms apply, and no one will look twice at you in jeans.

    Pearl Picks: More Portland Worth Your Time

    • Kann , Haitian wood-fire cooking that belongs in any serious Portland itinerary
    • Langbaan , Portland's most serious Thai tasting menu, for when format matters
    • Berlu , Vietnamese fine dining that punches well above its price point
    • Nostrana , Wood-fired Italian that holds up on any night of the week
    • Ken's Artisan Pizza , The easy answer when the group can't agree

    Explore more with our full Portland restaurants guide, Portland hotels, Portland bars, Portland wineries, and Portland experiences.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Kachka good for solo dining?

    • Kachka works for solo dining, particularly at lunch when the room is quieter and the pace is more relaxed. The sharing-plate format is better suited to groups of two or more at dinner, since ordering broadly is how the menu makes most sense. Solo diners at dinner should plan for a more focused, smaller order rather than trying to work through the full range of the menu.

    What should I wear to Kachka?

    • Casual. Portland restaurant norms apply , there is no dress code, and the room skews relaxed regardless of the occasion. Smart casual is fine for a date or birthday dinner, but you will not feel underdressed in jeans and a clean shirt.

    How far ahead should I book Kachka?

    • One to two weeks is typically enough for weekday evenings. Friday and Saturday dinner, particularly given Kachka's OAD recognition, can fill earlier , aim for two weeks minimum on weekends. Lunch is easier to secure and is often available with shorter notice or as a walk-in.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Kachka?

    • Dinner is the fuller experience , the room has more energy, the beverage program is more relevant, and the occasion format fits the sharing-plate structure better. Lunch makes sense if you want a lower-key introduction to the cooking or if a quieter, more conversation-friendly setting matters. Both services run the same hours split (11 AM to 3 PM lunch, 4 PM onward dinner) every day of the week.

    Can Kachka accommodate groups?

    • The sharing-plate format actually favors groups , more people at the table means a wider range of dishes. For larger parties (six or more), contact the restaurant directly about availability and any group booking requirements. No public phone number is listed, so reach out via the website. Weeknight bookings are easier to arrange for groups than weekend prime-time slots.

    Can I eat at the bar at Kachka?

    • Bar seating is typically available at Kachka and is a reasonable option if you want to eat without a reservation, particularly on slower weeknights. It also gives you direct access to the vodka and wine program, which is worth exploring. Confirm bar dining availability when you arrive, as capacity can vary.

    What should a first-timer know about Kachka?

    • Order broadly and share , the menu is designed for the table, not individual plates. Engage with the drinks program beyond the obvious; the Eastern European wine and vodka selections are a genuine differentiator. Come with an appetite and time: Kachka is not a fast meal. If you're comparing it to other Portland restaurants, it sits closest to Kann in terms of ambition and distinctiveness, though the cuisines are entirely different.

    What should I order at Kachka?

    • Specific menu items are not confirmed in our data, so we won't invent them. What's consistently noted by OAD evaluators is the quality of the overall cooking program under Chef Bonnie Morales. Focus on the zakuski (small plates and starters) as a way into the menu, and ask your server which dishes are current highlights. For the drinks, ask specifically about the Eastern European wine options , this is where Kachka separates itself from any comparable restaurant in Portland. For Russian dining outside the US, Palkin in St. Petersburg and 1924 İstanbul offer different regional takes on the cuisine.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Kachka good for solo dining?

    Yes. The bar and close-set room make solo visits comfortable, and the format — shareable dishes from a focused Russian menu — works fine for one if you order selectively. Kachka's OAD recognition means the cooking rewards attention, which solo diners can give it more than a noisy group. Lunch hours (11am–3pm daily) are a lower-stakes entry point if you want to try it alone first.

    What should I wear to Kachka?

    Casual to neat casual. Kachka is ranked by Opinionated About Dining in the casual category, and the room has a lived-in, unpretentious feel. There is no dress code documented for this venue. Clean jeans and a shirt are fine; you won't be out of place, and overdressing is equally unnecessary.

    How far ahead should I book Kachka?

    Book at least a week out for weekday dinners; aim for two weeks if you want Friday or Saturday. Kachka has climbed from OAD Highly Recommended in 2023 to ranked #370 in 2024 and #662 in 2025 in North America casual dining, which means weekend demand is real. Lunch slots are easier to land on shorter notice.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Kachka?

    Dinner gives you the fuller experience. The kitchen runs until 10pm Friday and Saturday, which suits the communal, paced style of Russian table dining. Lunch (11am–3pm daily) is a practical option if your schedule is tight or you want to test the kitchen before committing to a full evening. For a first visit, dinner is the better call.

    Can Kachka accommodate groups?

    Yes, though the room is not large, so larger parties should book well in advance and confirm directly with the restaurant. The sharing-forward format of Russian cuisine makes Kachka a natural fit for groups of four to six. Parties bigger than that may find the close-set layout tight; contact them ahead to discuss options.

    Can I eat at the bar at Kachka?

    Yes. Bar seating is available and is a solid option for solo diners or pairs who didn't plan ahead. It also puts you close to the beverage program, which is a notable part of the Kachka experience given its Russian and Eastern European focus. Walk-in chances at the bar are better at lunch or early weekday dinner.

    What should a first-timer know about Kachka?

    Kachka is not a novelty Russian-themed restaurant — it's a chef-driven operation by Bonnie Morales with consecutive OAD rankings in competitive North American casual lists. The format rewards ordering broadly rather than playing it safe. Come with an appetite for sharing, and don't skip the beverage program, which reflects the same seriousness as the food.

    Location

    960 SE 11th Ave, Portland, OR 97214, United States

    Portland, United States

    Compare Kachka

    Worth the Price? Kachka vs. Peers

    What to weigh when choosing between Kachka and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    Within Portland's casual dining tier, Kachka occupies a distinct position: it has the OAD credentials of a destination restaurant but operates at the price point and informality of a neighborhood spot. That combination makes it a stronger choice for a special weeknight dinner than most of its peers. Kann is the closest comparison in terms of culinary ambition and distinctiveness — both restaurants are doing something with a specific cultural cuisine that you genuinely cannot find at the same level elsewhere in the city. If the question is which to book for a meaningful occasion, the choice comes down to format: Kann's wood-fire cooking skews more dramatic, Kachka's sharing plates are more social and drink-pairing-friendly.

    For pure ease and reliability, Nostrana is the answer — excellent Italian cooking, consistently available, and a room that works for groups or dates without the planning overhead. Ken's Artisan Pizza and Apizza Scholls sit in a different category entirely — both are worth eating at in Portland, but neither competes with Kachka on ambition or the depth of the drinks program. If your group is split between wanting something casual and something more considered, Kachka is the better call over either pizza option.

    Blue Star Donuts doesn't compare directly to Kachka — different meal, different occasion. But if you're building a full Portland food day, Blue Star for the morning and Kachka for dinner is a reasonable itinerary. On booking difficulty, Kachka is easier to get into than Kann on short notice, which matters if you're planning within a few days of arrival.

    Hours

    Monday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–9 pm
    Tuesday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–9 pm
    Wednesday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–9 pm
    Thursday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–9 pm
    Friday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–10 pm
    Saturday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–10 pm
    Sunday
    11 am–3 pm, 4–9 pm

    Recognized By

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