成人X站

MYNORTHWEST HISTORY

All Over The Map: Sink your teeth into history at Market House Corned Beef

Jul 15, 2022, 11:40 AM | Updated: Oct 25, 2022, 4:20 pm

A downtown Seattle business has been selling corned beef and other cured meats from the same location for nearly 75 years, first offering their wares when President Harry Truman was in the White House.

is on Howell Street near Interstate 5, a block over from Stewart Street, and not far from that oddball 鈥渟hort runway鈥 southbound on-ramp to the freeway, at the corner of Howell and Minor.


For at least the last 40 years or so, the exterior of the business has looked like something from a different era, and the out-of-step look has become even more pronounced as that part of Seattle saw more and more demolition and redevelopment. Some people 鈥 including a certain radio historian 鈥 who recall driving by Market House in the 1980s were certain it had gone away 20 years ago. Those same people were pleasantly surprised when some photos 鈥 current photos of the place, open for business 鈥 were recently posted on social media.

When it was founded by brothers Mike and Sam Akrish not long after World War II, the business was originally called Market House Meats and it was operated as a supplier of kosher-style, cured meats 鈥 corned beef and pastrami 鈥 to all kinds of restaurants and hotels, as well as to individual customers. They still sell to local places like Daniel鈥檚 Broiler, Tom Douglas, Canlis, and have expanded to grocery chains. They also regularly ship orders to various customers in other parts of the U.S. It was about 20 years ago when Market House also started selling sandwiches.

That move came after the next generation of the Akrish family sold the business in 2005 to a man named Vic Embry, who the Seattle Post-Intelligencer credits with introducing the sandwich business into what had been, essentially, a retail and wholesale specialty meat shop. That sandwich business caught on.

So, in 2015, Embry sold Market House to Mazen Mahmoud.

Mahmoud is in his sixties and is originally from Jordan. He came to Seattle to attend the University of Washington in 1980 where he earned a degree in engineering. He worked for many years in the food service industry and operated multiple restaurants. Mahmoud says he had big plans to make some serious changes to Market House Corned Beef when he bought the business seven years ago.

鈥淲hen I first bought the store here, the idea was maybe, 鈥極kay, let’s spiff it up, let’s see, you know,鈥 because I had some restaurant experience,鈥 Mahmoud told 成人X站 Newsradio, as he sat for a moment in Market House Corned Beef鈥檚 dining area, having just finished a stint at the busy cash register. 鈥淎nd I told my wife, we鈥檒l buy it and change it. It’s a nice location.鈥

But then, Mahmoud went to work and had a chance to see first-hand how Market Place Corned Beef really operated, and to better appreciate its true value as a business and a local institution.

鈥淎fter two months I said, 鈥榊ou know, why [change anything]? This is history here, and ‘if it ain鈥檛 broke then don鈥檛 fix it,’鈥 Mahmoud said.

Seven years later, Mahmoud has no regrets about ditching those plans to make big changes.

鈥淚t’s just going strong and I’m glad,鈥 Mahmoud said. 鈥淭hat was one of the best decisions I have made was to buy this location and to keep it as is.鈥

Another thing that Mazen Mahmoud didn鈥檛 change was the secret Market House recipe 鈥 or procedures, really 鈥 for making corned beef. And just what is it that distinguishes corned beef from other meats or other ways to prepare beef?

鈥淚t’s the way you brine it and the way you cure it, and the spices you add to it,鈥 Mahmoud told 成人X站 Newsradio. 鈥淵ou start with the brisket and then you make the brine. There is about seven ingredients that go into it. So you inject it, and let it cure in the cooler for about three [to] four days.鈥

鈥淎nd then after that,鈥 Mahmoud continued, 鈥測ou take it out and you cook it, and then you trim the fat. And we let it cool overnight in the cooler. And then the next day, you slice it when it’s cold, and then it goes on the grill whenever somebody orders.鈥

The secret recipes and techniques, Mahmoud says, live in a locked file cabinet in a place at Market House called the 鈥淪pice Room.鈥 And sure enough, he walked across the restaurant, unlocked a door and then showed off the Spice Room and its file cabinet, which looks like something out of the Cold War-era Pentagon.

Not changing anything was a wise and (in 21st century Seattle) a highly unusual move by Mazen Mahmoud, mainly because the charm of Market House 鈥 along with the tasty food 鈥 comes from the fact the interior is like a museum: simple, unadorned, non-ironic, authentic. Like an eating establishment you might see in a much older American city like Boston or Baltimore.

Other longtime business owners or recent purchasers of Seattle-area institutions would do well to also consider this 鈥渨hy change anything?鈥 option before automatically calling in the remodelers and/or brand consultants.

In the meantime, for those with a taste for cured meats and love for a Seattle from an earlier era, Market House Corned Beef is truly a place where you can sink your teeth into local history.

IF YOU GO
is located at 1124 Howell Street in downtown Seattle and is open Monday through Saturday for breakfast and lunch.

You can hear Feliks every Wednesday and Friday morning on Seattle鈥檚 Morning News with Dave Ross and Colleen O鈥橞rien, read more from him鈥here, and subscribe to The Resident Historian Podcast聽here. If you have a story idea or questions, please email Feliks鈥here.

MyNorthwest History

Mount St.聽Helens...

成人X站 Newsradio staff

Landscape still bears the scars of Mount St. Helens eruption 45 years later

Sunday marks 45 years since Mount St. Helens erupted, killing 57 people and reshaping the landscape of southwest Washington, which still bears the scars of that devastating event.

12 hours ago

The 鈥淥ld Faithful Avalanche Zone鈥 on Highway 2 over Stevens Pass, circa 1978. (Courtesy Rich Ma...

Ted Buehner

How 11 feet of snow led to America鈥檚 deadliest avalanche near Stevens Pass in 1910

Discover how 11 feet of snow caused America's deadliest avalanche near Stevens Pass.

3 months ago

Image: This is a photo of the DC-7C airliner that took off from McChord Air Force Base on June 3, 1...

MyNorthwest Staff

Feliks Banel’s Flight 293 podcast ‘Unsolved Histories’ inspires Congress to take action

Feliks Banel's "What Happened to Flight 293" podcast has inspired the creation of bipartisan bills in the U.S. House and Senate.

3 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. Day...

Terry Tang, The Associated Press

The long struggle to establish Martin Luther King Jr. Day

On the third Monday of January, federal, state and local governments recognize Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

4 months ago

Image: Customers lined up outside the Skakey's in Renton on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. They were lookin...

Steve Coogan

Lines bust out the door as last Western Washington Shakey’s is set to close

The last Shakey's Pizza Parlor in Western Washington announced this week it will permanently close Monday.

4 months ago

Image: The exterior of the original Burgermaster in Seattle can be seen from the parking lot on Tue...

Steve Coogan

Burgermaster to close its original location in Seattle after 73 years

Burgermaster announced Wednesday it will close its original location in Seattle's University District at the end of February.

4 months ago

All Over The Map: Sink your teeth into history at Market House Corned Beef