If youâre in Interbay on a Thursday or Friday evening, in the sidewalkless industrial district just southwest of the Ballard Bridge, you might spot a sandwich board that promises a tasting room serving locally made amaro. Itâs a little tricky to find, but let the sandwich boards guide you: toward some warehouses, through a parking lot down by the train tracks, and to a specific door. Look for the neon sign that depicts a bowtie made of recycle arrows. Okay, theyâre supposed to be hearts. Thatâs the SennzaFinne logo.
Does it feel weird to just walk into some warehouse with no concierge, like someone will yell at you and ask what youâre doing there? Yes. But listen, itâs cool. Enter the building beneath the recycle bowtie, and continue past the coffee roasters on the left and the motorcycle⊠welding⊠workshop⊠on the right. Proceed toward the Christmas lights at the end of the fluorescent corridor. Narrow your eyes. Oh my god, itâs true. Thereâs a little cocktail bar in the distance.Â

Owners Gillian (with a hard G) and Joey Diedrick are longtime Seattle bar industry folks whoâre ridiculously in love with each other and amaro. These two are caricatures of lovebirds, with the chatting and the smooching and the hand-holding, and itâs a joy to watch them work together. When the pair got engaged a decade ago, they took a tour of Italy and came home inspired to create their own amari, opening SennzaFinne in 2019. Senza fine means âendlessâ in Italian, and itâs echoed in the businessâs slogan: âFlavor without end, always made in love.âÂ
âPeople like to tell us our name is spelled wrong,â Joey said, âand weâre like âUh huh. We know.ââ
Gillian chimed in: âWe chose to misspell the name for three reasons: for branding purposes, because It looks nicer with extra Ns and as one long word, and to hopefully help non-native English speakers pronounce it correctly.â They clarified that the name also refers to a delicious thing that lingers on your palate, âand to tie in our love story,â she added, âwithout being too heavy-handed!â

Thereâs seating for maybe 10 people in this hidden room thatâs part cocktail lounge and part amaro laboratory, with tables strewn among the bins of angelica, orange peel, burdock, and calendula. Theyâre only open Thursday and Friday, from 4 pm to 6-ish. I like to sit at the cute wooden bar with the velveteen stools, next to the menu chalkboard that usually has three different drinks on itâall of which feature a different SennzaFinne amaroâand generally change every week. But if you donât like this weekâs features, these two veteran bartenders can freestyle something for you from their well-stocked booze library.
The first time I tasted SennzaFinneâs featured cocktail the Meadow on the Runway, I was with my pal and fellow food writer, Mark DeJoy, and when we simultaneously took our first sips, we yelled, âItâs the celery!â in unison. The Meadow on the Runway is a take on the iconic Paper Plane, which usually comprises bourbon, Aperol, Amaro Nonino or sometimes Montenegro, and fresh lemon juice. (Some say the Paper Plane itself is a great-grandchild of the Last Word, but IIII dunno about all that.) Along with the intense celery bitters and drop of cherry syrup, Gillian and Joeyâs version swaps in their bright, herbal Spring amaro as an understudy for the role of amaro, then uses Aperix instead of Aperolâtheyâre close cousins.Â

Can I start off by saying how much I love the name of this drink? It took me a minute, but once I got it⊠eeeeee, so cute. A tiny paper runway. Youâre probably smarter than me, though, and will get it right away.Â
Made in Italy by the Santoni family, Aperix is yet another classic red aperitivo with gentian root, rhubarb, cinchona, and strong citrus peel powers, and itâs designed to be added to prosecco or cava as a spritz. âSo, basically, this drink was gonna be a Paper Plane [with Spring in it], and we went to the store for a bottle of Aperol, and they were doing a tasting with this,â Joey explained, holding up the bottle of Aperix. âIt hits the same notes as Aperol, but I thought maybe the viscosity wasnât there. Maybe itâs a little less sweet and a little less bitter. So we made the cocktail, just straightforward, and it felt a little too dry, like it needed more sugar.â
âI tried making one with hibiscus syrup and one with cherry Luxardo syrup,â Gillian said, âbut it was a little too acidic with the hibiscus.â If youâre not familiar, hibiscus petals have a ton of vitamin C in them and can taste like a chewable Flintstones vitamin if the flavorâs not diluted. âBut the touch of Luxardo syrup rounded everything out.âÂ
That celery note, too, is such a knockout. When I asked if they make their celery bitters in-house, Gillians replied, âNo, actually, these are celery bitters made by Peter Patrician out of Connecticut. We met him through Instagram, and he has one of the largest amaro collections weâve ever seen, and he classifies us in at least his top five, he said.â He originally reached out to SennzaFinne to buy a bottle of Spring, then went back to order more, âand we realized he made bitters,â she said, âso we were like âWeâd love to try your bitters.â We had to wait months and months for the celery bitters until they were ready, but we finally got them, and they were wonderful. His home bar is just incredible too. If you follow him on Instagram, youâll see.âÂ

Brilliant and vegetal, SennzaFinneâs Spring amaro is the color of rainforest moss and tastes like lovage, lemon balm, fresh peas, and spring flowers, with some bitter hops looming in the background. I detected some citrus zest too. Itâs like drinking an entire Easter bouquet, leaves and all. Like all SennzaFinne products, itâs not loaded with sugar, as many amari are, just a whisper of herbal sweetness. I tend to gravitate toward flavors like citrus and cucumber and conifers, so Spring is the ideal playmate for my personal gin collection. I also plan to use it to enhance a can of ginger-lime Polar Seltzer or a juniper Dry Soda, maybe with a splash of sweet vermouth.Â
I definitely walked away with a bottle of Spring after my visit, as well as a bottle of earthy, gingery, mushroomy Autumn, which has a warm spice profile that makes me perversely wish it was cold again so I could have it in a hot toddy. (Weâre still in Foolâs Spring in the PNW right nowâIâm sure itâll happen.) Autumn would pair gorgeously with bourbon, maple, cider, black tea. Probably cola, if you can find a cola that isnât a total sugar bomb. Ugh, my lifeâs goal.
On our way out, Joey assured us that, regardless of whatâs on the chalkboard next weekend or the following one, âWe can always make you a Meadow on the Runway.â Its presence on the SennzaFinne menu is, as they say in Italy, âsenza fine.âÂ
