Twin Peaks Drive In in Hood River, Oregon
Article excerpt
Twin Peaks Drive-In, a modest wood-frame burger stand at the edge of Hood River Airport in Oregon, offers diners an improbable natural theater: views of two volcanic peaks framed by the constant spectacle of small aircraft taking off and landing just beyond the patio railing. The restaurant's name captures its geography, Mount Hood and Mount Adams dominate the horizon, while planes from the nearby runway provide an ever-changing aerial backdrop. It's the kind of place where a simple burger becomes an event, less because of what's on the plate than because of what's happening in the sky and on the landscape around you.
Most burger spots settle for a nice view. Twin Peaks Drive-In has two volcanos and an air show.This gloriously unassuming wood shack sits at the end of the Hood River Airport runway, close enough that diners on the outdoor patio regularly pause mid-bite to watch gliders, biplanes, and small aircraft clear the treeline just overhead. Mount Hood looms to the south. Mount Adams holds down the north. Somewhere in between, a fresh-pressed beef patty is sizzling on the grill.
Nobody seems to agree on exactly when Twin Peaks opened, sometime in the 1950s is about as precise as the history gets, but the hand-forming of never-frozen patties every single morning has apparently never stopped. In an era when most American drive-ins quietly switched to frozen pre-formed beef and nobody said anything, Twin Peaks just kept doing it the old way.
It sits along the Hood River Fruit Loop, surrounded by orchards, an easy and scenic drive from Portland. The parking lot is dirt. The shack is rustic. The planes are real. Stumbling onto this place feels less like finding a burger joint and more like finding a secret, the kind you immediately want to tell everyone about.