With World Cup 26 underway, Seattle is full of visitors looking for the obvious things: the stadium, a jersey or scarf, a good pint (or three), and a great place to eat. But some of the region’s most interesting food is waiting a few miles south of the downtown crowds, in Seattle Southside, near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, where people from all over the world live, work, travel through, and gather. So, it makes sense there’s also good food.
The World Table District makes it easy to find, with 30 independent restaurants, cafes, bakeries, and markets in the mix. You can build the day around Peruvian chicken, Mexican pastries, Korean BBQ, Ethiopian coffee, Salvadoran pupusas, Indian-inspired pizza, Japanese teriyaki and yakisoba noodles, Thai food, or a cozy neighborhood diner regulars have been coming to for generations.
Created by Explore Seattle Southside in partnership with the City of SeaTac, the district is designed to spotlight locally owned businesses that people might otherwise miss. Colorful little passports are available at participating locations to mark off with stickers. It’s useful for out-of-towners, but really, it may be even better for locals who think they already know the area.
Chontong Thai Restaurant
Courtesy of Explore Seattle Southside
At Pancake Chef, a SeaTac diner established in 1959 and recently reopened under new ownership, the pull is the nostalgia of tucking into an old-school diner. Barbara Harkness has worked there since June of 1980, when she was 16 and her first job was “coffee girl.” She met her husband there. Her baby shower was there. She has watched customers grow up, have children, and come back with grandchildren.
“I just enjoy people and the customers, and becoming friends with everyone,” Harkness says.
The new owner, Sarbjit Singh, bought the restaurant after its longtime owner retired and reopened it in December. He has worked in restaurants from Boston to New York to West Seattle, and talks about diners as places that can hold a little bit of everything.
Pancake Chef
Courtesy of Explore Seattle Southside
Boulevard Market and Pizza Station take that idea in another direction. The market is stocked with South Asian groceries, sweets and snacks (gulab jamun and milk cakes), pantry staples, and cold drinks. Next door, Pizza Station serves Indian-inspired pies built around spices such as turmeric, with a masala-style tomato base and toppings like paneer and tandoori chicken. There are vegetarian and meat pizzas, and the shop also offers a gluten-free crust. For a World Cup crowd, this is exactly the kind of food that makes sense because it’s fast, easy to share, and delicious.
Get your game-day snacks at Boulevard Market
Courtesy of Explore Seattle Southside
Pizza Station
Courtesy of Explore Seattle Southside
San Fernando Peruvian Chicken
Courtesy of Explore Seattle Southside
There are plenty of full-meal stops too. San Fernando Peruvian Chicken has deeply seasoned roasted chicken (served with thick fries), ceviche, lomo saltado, and ají de gallina. Masae’s Teriyaki offers generous, no-fuss comfort food, including fried rice worth ordering even if you came in for teriyaki. Langano Coffee & Sandwich brings East African flavors and, for those who have time to linger, a traditional Ethiopian coffee ceremony.
Natnael “Nate” Goytome, general manager of Langano Coffee & Sandwich, describes the ceremony as more than just having a drink. It’s a way to welcome people, slow down, and spend meaningful time together.
“It’s more like relaxing,” he says.
That may be one of the coolest features of the World Table District. It sits near one of the busiest places in the region, but so many of its restaurants are built around the opposite feeling. Come in, sit down, and try something, whether it’s new to you or familiar from home.
At Las Delicias Bakery, that invitation comes through the smell of fresh Mexican sweet bread. Daniel Nieto runs the bakery with his parents, Oscar and Maria. He is a third-generation baker, and his father has been baking for decades. Nieto used to work in construction before joining the family business, and now he’s trying to keep the old recipes going while adding a few new ideas, including coffee and, eventually, fruit-based cold drinks for the warmer weather.
“My dad, he’s like, ‘No, we gotta do the old school,’” Nieto says. “So we do a little bit of both.”
Owner Oscar Nieto at Las Delicias Bakery
Courtesy of Explore Seattle Southside
The cases are filled with Mexican sweet bread, tres leches, mocha cake, flan, cookies, muffins, and butter cookies Nieto says nobody else nearby makes quite the same way. It’s definitely one of those places where you go in for one treat and leave with a box full of the prettiest pastries.
That’s the fun of eating in Seattle Southside. It’s not just one kind of food. These places have been feeding regulars, families, workers, travelers, and neighbors for years. During a very global month for the city, Seattle Southside’s food scene offers a fitting reminder that sometimes the most interesting part of a city is not where visitors expect to find it.
For the full World Table District guide, which is searchable by cuisine, keyword, and map, visit seattlesouthside.com/world-table/dining




