• 15Apr

    ALB_lambjam_NYCOn Monday, May 20th at the Eastern Market from 6-9pm, 19 of DC’s top restaurants and chefs will come together to celebrate American Lamb by creating succulent and savory selections for the lamb loving public. It is a friendly chef/dish competition to garner awards and prizes in categories including “Best in Show,” “People’s Choice” and “Best Leg, Breast, Shank and Shoulder” with voting by a panel of key media representatives and event attendees. Tickets include gourmet lamb tastings, local wines and beers, hands-on American lamb butcher demos, lamb swag, sweets, caricature artist & much more! New this year, a VIP Pre-Party from 5-6pm, includes specialty cocktails with a variety of American Lamb charcuterie & sheep’s milk cheeses. Beat the lines with the VIP Pass, only a limited supply available! To view participating chefs, sponsors and to purchase tickets visit: http://dc.fansoflamb.com/lamb-jam.dc/.

    We attended last year and posted pictures of the event here. And, JAY of DCFüd (that is me) is one of this year’s judges!

    -JAY

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  • 04Apr

    For the third straight year, DCFüd is giving away tickets to Sound Bites at the 9:30 Club. One winner will win a pair of tickets. This is a great event that I have attended in the past.

    So, who wants to win a pair of tickets to this May 19th event?  One lucky DCFüd reader will randomly win a pair of tickets.  All you have to do is email contest@dcfud.com with the subject “Sound Bites Entry” and include your first and last name and cell number in the body of the email before 11:59 pm on Sunday 5/12.  Only one entry per person (regardless of how many email addresses you have).  You will need to show ID to the venue to pick the ticket up.  The above email address is only for contest entry and is not for questions or comments.  When the winner is chosen (give me a few days from when the contest closes), I’ll contact the winner and comment on this post.  If you have questions, email me at jay@dcfud.com. Good luck!

    -JAY

     

    soundbites 2013 email flyer

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  • 30Mar

    Best Restroom“Do you own your own establishment? Are you the creative mind or part of a team behind the restroom design inside of one? Or have you patronized a particularly memorable facility?
     
    Nominate a deserving bathroom online today at www.bestrestroom.com.
          
    The contest is open to any non-residential restroom in the U.S. that is accessible to the general public. Entries will be judged on cleanliness, visual appeal, innovation, functionality and unique design elements. Nominees and finalists run the gamut, from historical buildings or five star luxury hotels and restaurants in big cities, to gas stations along remote highways and mom & pop style diners in the rural Midwest.

    Too bad Mie N Yu closed or I’d vote for their restroom.

    -JAY

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  • 28Mar
    Caption: Mike Isabella in TC All-Stars.

    Caption: Mike Isabella in TC All-Stars.

    Top Chef (Season 6) and Top Chef All-Stars runner-up, Chef Mike Isabella was previously known for being the executive chef at D.C.’s Zaytinya, and then opened up his own restaurant in Chinatown, Graffiato. In 2012, he opened Georgetown’s Bandolero as a partnering chef. What a busy man! But wait–he’s just getting started! Chef Isabella has not one but two new restaurant openings this spring in the brand new 14W residency building (scheduled to open mid-April).

    Kapnos– Greek for ‘smoke’, will feature Greek cuisine inspired from Chef Isabella’s trips to Greece and Macedonia. The savory meat selection (duck, chicken, pig, lamb, and goat) will be spit-roasted in 2 wood-fire grills to give maximum juice and flavor in each bite. Kapnos’ menu will be split into 6 categories: Spreads, Raw, Cold, Garden, Ocean, and Spit. One interesting distinction in this menu line-up is the “Ocean”; you don’t see seafood being served in Greek restaurants often (or at all), so this will be interesting to see how it will pan out. Kapnos will seat 150-people, and yes, there is a bar. As for the serving schedule, lunch will not be served at Kapnos, just dinner. Fret not! All you have to do is walk next-door to Chef Isabella’s second restaurant, G, for lunch.

    G– the “little sister” of Graffiato, is an Italian sandwich shop that will use the meat selection from Kapnos in their menu. Sandwiches, soups, and salads will be served for lunch everyday and it will also be available on Tuesday nights. For dinner, a 4-course tasting menu at a cost of $40  will be available reservation –only, which will feature an antipasti (appetizer) of meats, cheese, foie gras, liver, and olives, followed by a pasta dish, meat or fish entrée (possibly a rack of lamb or pork shoulder; check the menu beforehand), then dessert. G will seat 45-people and while there is no bar, you know where you can find one close by that is just a few footsteps away.

    The opening of Kapnos and G is highly anticipated and fellow foodies and food critics cannot wait to try out the 2 newest Isabella additions on the 14th St Corridor of D.C.

    -EHY

    Editor’s Note:

    Graffiato (another Isabella restaurant) is having its next Industry Takeover Night on April 1st. We attended the last one, and had a good time.

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  • 22Mar

    Two evenings this week, Cy and I attended restaurant events where some very tasty small dishes were served to us. The first of these events was at Gryphon‘s opening. The food was much better than most of the bars I have been to. While we were not fans of the fried cheese balls, there were some standout dishes including:

    The following evening, we attended the preview night for Zaytinya’s annual Greek Easter Celebration. This special menu runs from March 31st through May 5th. I always enjoy showing up at this event and finding several huge hunks of lamb turning on a spit. I loved the Apokreas cocktail, which is made from a combination of Metaxa, Verjus, and maple syrup and is garnished with red pickled quail egg and baby carrots. Some of the standout dishes were:

    -JAY

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  • 14Mar

    Josu Zubikarai has joined La Tasca as Executive Chef. Last night at the Washington, DC location, Josu prepared some (20 or so) possible new menu items for a crowd of La Tasca’s friends. These are items he is considering for La Tasca’s new menu. Below are some of the dishes we sampled last night:

    Salmorejo Cordobés, Tortilla Torera, and Vieiras y Txangurro are notable because they are dishes or include ingredients that I do not normally enjoy, but I very much enjoyed these versions. The first of these three is a chilled tomato soup, and while I am not a fan of tomato soup or even gazpacho, this soup was flavorful, acidic, and included jamon Serrano. I am usually relatively neutral on Spanish tortillas (thick omelets), but this triple decker omelet was layered with tomato, lettuce, and aioli (fresh garlic mayo), and was very flavorful; I might exchange spinach for the lettuce, but regardless, it is a good dish.  The third dish was a pan seared scallop, and while I am not a fan of scallops, this one was placed over a Basque-style Maryland blue crab casserole; The scallop and blue crab combination was delicious.

    The Manchego Frito (fried cheese served with an orange marmalade sauce), Tosta de Sardinas (sardines on toast with a piquillo sauce), and Lubina Aceitunera (rockfish with white wine and black olives) were dishes I expected to enjoy (and did enjoy). Manchego is my favorite cheese, but I will say that the cheese dish was better when just out of the kitchen.

    Some of The meat dishes were among the best I tried that evening, including the Cerdo a la Mozarabe (pork tenderloin wrapped in bacon with pine nuts and raisins), Albóndigas a la Mostaza (beef and pork meatballs with a spicy mustard sauce), and Crudo de Buey (beef tenderloin served medium over mixed greens).

    I tried a white sangria with watermelon and kiwi while I was there, and it was a wonderful drink.

    What was really nice about this event was that we had scorecards for rating the dishes. I do not feel a need to mention the dish or two I was not a fan of since they will probably not make it on to the restaurant’s menu.

    -JAY

    Click to add a blog post for La Tasca on Zomato

  • 12Mar

    Lisa Shapiro has written a great article on this year’s Passover options. I’m considering another trip to DGS now. She also talks about Todd and Ellen KassofF Gray’s new cookbook, The New Jewish Table. Thanks Lisa!

    -JAY

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  • 01Mar

    Grills-Gone-Wild2011foreblastRocklands‘ “Grills Gone Wild” is next week, March 4-9.  You’ll want to have the Alligator Brunswick Stew, and the Grilled Wild Halibut on Friday.  So then when will you try the Wild Beaver Sausage, and — most importantly — the Blackened Snakehead Soft Tacos?  This menu is for one week only, and in addition to their regular menu.

    Our coverage of this event from previous years is here. At least they don’t have muskrat this year. It was not my favorite–it tasted like liver, and I’m not a big liver fan. Snakehead certainly sounds interesting–I’ve seen it on a menu here and there but never tried it.

    -JAY

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  • 28Feb

    Doner2ADAMS MORGAN, D.C. — Within months of moving into the heart of the bustling entertainment district of Adams Morgan two years ago, I noticed myself spending considerably less leisure time here than I had before. Although new local-friendly parking restrictions and more mature, Obama-approved eateries suggest this could soon change, the neighborhood has long had a well-earned reputation for catering first and foremost to those who live elsewhere. As the proprietor of one 18th Street watering hole that does not offer an all-you-can-drink power hour tells me, “It’s always been known as a party area.” For better or worse, it still is.

    As anyone who has attended a NASCAR race or a jam band concert can attest, where intoxicated crowds are present, there too shall be cheap, fast, greasy food. One happy consequence of Adams Morgan’s nightlife scene enjoyed by visitors and residents alike is the neighborhood’s abundance of latenight snacking options. Better still, thanks to its famously diverse ethnic makeup, the area boasts a range of cuisines broader and more exciting than anywhere else in the District.

    When it comes to drunk food, I have a simple rule of thumb: If you wouldn’t eat it sober, don’t eat it wasted. My current go-to spot for dining in the wee hours, whether I’ve stayed local for the evening or I’m returning from abroad, is Döner Bistro, a cozy Turkish-German-style café that opened last year in a shopfront on the relatively sleepy east end of the Columbia Road strip. The joint has a homey, distinctly Iron Curtain-era vibe about it. The walls of the narrow, vibrantly-hued space are lined with long, biergarten-style wooden tables. As last call approaches, the din of the day’s Premier League highlights is interrupted with increasing frequency by the good-hearted shouts of revelers and the rhythmic thud of the foosball table that stands in the front window. (Failing to mention the foosball table until the end of the third paragraph is the definition of what journalists call “burying the lede.” That more bars don’t have a foosball table is tragic mystery.)

    Döner Bistro 1As importantly, the menu at Döner Bistro is chock full of drunk food par excellence. Being particularly inclined to the miraculous achievement of food consumption that is the sandwich, I gravitate naturally to the outstanding schnitzel sandwich, which features a flattened and breaded veal cutlet stacked inside a German brötchen roll and slathered with a tangy, tangerine-colored “spezial” sauce. It recalls a lighter, less gut-busting take on the fried pork tenderloin sandwiches popular in Indiana and elsewhere in the American heartland, and it is an ideal nightcap after a night of vigorous imbibing.

    Elsewhere, the eponymous döner dish is a merely passable example of the popular spit-roasted sliced meat (chicken or beef), served here on a sort of flatbread rather than the more traditional pita. Faring better is the borderline addictive currywurst, which comprises fried pork sausage sliced into bite-sized pieces, slathered in a spicy, curry-laced ketchup sauce and paired with a mountain of truly top-notch pommes. Washed down with any of the surprisingly generous selection of pilseners, kölsch, dopplebocks and heffeweizens, this meal is quite possibly the greatest midnight snack in the history of over-indulgence.

    If the grease-soaked paper plates lining Adams Morgan’s gutters on weekend mornings are any evidence, jumbo slice, the neighborhood’s most notorious culinary achievement, is as popular as ever. But for those willing to look a little harder (or for those whose health-consciousness renders them disinclined to eat a piece of pizza bigger this his own head), there is no shortage of diamonds in the rough waiting to be discovered. I can’t promise that a visit to Döner Bistro will lower your cholesterol, but I can promise that even in this marketplace of exceptional culinary variety, it will offer an experience, and a meal, that is unlike any other.

    -Sandwich Jack

    Jack Nank is the creator of the D.C.-based sandwich blog Eat a Sandiwch. You can follow him on Twitter at @SandwichJack.

    Doner Bistro on Urbanspoon

  • 27Feb
    graffiato-buildingThis looks interesting, and they have another one (with different chefs and mixologists) on 4/1.
    -JAY
    ————————

    On Monday, March 4 Philadelphia Top Chef alum will take over the kitchen at Graffiato. Top Chef Season 7 winner, Kevin Sbraga and his head mixologist, Anwar Morgan, will serve food and a cocktail from the Sbraga menu. Top Chef Season 6 and All-Stars alum, Jennifer Carroll, will preview bites from her forthcoming NY restaurant, Concrete Blonde. Derek Brown, bartender and co-owner of The Passenger and The Columbia Room, will also serve up a libation.

    Like all Graffiato Industry Takeover Nights, guest chefs will offer complimentary snacks from the pizza bar, as well as drink specials from 10:00pm to 1:00am.

    The current line-up of Industry Takeover guests is available online, including more Pennsylvania guest chefs in April.

    • Brad Spence, chef/partner, Amis in Philadelphia
    • Justin Severino, chef/owner, Cure in Pittsburgh

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