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Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 24, 2011 • 9
VALLEY PROFILE
Can’t beat a classic Seth Truscott/Staff Photo
Left, owner Ken Hearing and staff await customers at Scott’s Dairy Freeze, which marked its 60th anniversary this year. Below, a classic logo from years past.
A tasty institution Change comes slowly and burgers still rule at 60-year-old Scott’s Dairy Freeze When Tricia Simpson and Melody Ramsey meet for their regular lunch get-together at Scott’s Dairy Freeze, they always order the same thing. “I’m burger and jo-jos, she’s plain cheeseburger and fries,” Ramsey said, laughing. The North Bend restaurant has been a backdrop for these two women, now in their 30s, ever since they were teens. Both worked at Scott’s when they were 16. So did all of their friends. “It’s got a lot of history,” Simpson said of the place. “A lot of generations go through here.”
“I love it. It works,” Ramsey said. “There’s no need to change it.” “Exactly,” Simpson adds. Change is something that, indeed, comes very slowly to Scott’s Dairy Freeze, which marked its 60th year in business earlier this month. Owned by three different families over that period, it’s the oldest continually operated hamburger restaurant in King County. Scott’s opened Aug. 1, 1951. Truman was president, a new home was $9,000 and burgers cost just a few cents. Today’s world has changed by leaps and bounds, but the burgers, shakes and fries are still the main attraction at Scott’s, handed out through the same windows, which themselves have changed little beyond the occasional coat of paint. The menu, too, is timeless.
“Nothing is going to replace the cheeseburger,” said current owner Ken Hearing. Scott’s Dairy Freeze was opened by Al and Dorothy Scott. They ran the stand—there were no tables—until 1969, when they sold it to their daughter and son-in-law, Pat and Rob Baker. The Bakers ran it for another two decades, until, ready to retire, they sold to Hearing, a former sheet metal worker who believed he could make a living in the business. The Dairy Freeze tradition is good fast food. But those crowd-drawing burgers and fries don’t always come easy. SEE CLASSIC, 10