The Latest Dish November 18, 2015

November 19, 2015

The dining terrace at Westfield Montgomery Mall continues to diversify, with Asian cuisines for its next two restaurants.

B/BOP/Q Korean Fusion Eatery derives from the traditional Korean bibimbop, but with wraps, tacos and bowls (a la Chipotle and ShopHouse). This will be its first location in the U.S., with Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco and Honolulu also in the works. It will open across from Shanghai 66 Innovation Kitchen on the second level. Both are slated for late 2015 openings.

C-C-Changes: After completing its renovation, BlackSalt in Palisades reopened to a neighborhood eagerly awaiting its return. The bar area now has booths and art that pops … The Source recently reopened its door after extensive renovation that included both the main level lounge and upper level dining room, and a custom designed hot pot table for four … Ella’s Wood Fired Pizza, at 610 9th St. NW in Penn Quarter, has also recently renovated its look (by Green Owl Design) and its menu.

Chef and GM Update: Jason Richter has been named general manager of Restaurant Associates at the Kennedy Center, overseeing the Roof Terrace Restaurant and KC Café as well as the foodservice operation for banquets. This is the organization that serves dinner for 1,800 for the Kennedy Center Honors. Previously, he was director of hotel operations for the Ritz-Carlton, Washington, D.C. … Ryan Ratino is the new chef de cuisine at Masa 14, at 1825 14th St. NW. The Le Corden Bleu graduate served as executive chef at L’Auberge Provencale in White Post, Virginia.

Internationally recognized Japanese restaurant Nobu is slated to open just two blocks east of Georgetown on M Street in D.C.’s burgeoning West End, on the ground floor of the former American Association of Medical Colleges building, which will be converted to luxury condominiums. … Upstate Tavern is planning to open in 16th Street Heights at 4610-12 14th St. NW.

Openings Update: Union Social opened Oct. 23 in NoMa … American Tandoor at Tysons Corner Center opens Oct. 30 … Matchbox at One Loudoun opens Nov. 16 … Chuy’s Tex-Mex restaurant opens in mid-December, where Macaroni Grill on Prince William Parkway in Woodbridge (Potomac Mills) used to be. It will be their third location in the D.C. metro area … Dave & Buster’s eat/drink/play restaurant/bar/arcade opens Dec. 21 at Springfield Town Center … Milk Bar and Momofuku opened on Oct. 23 at CityCenter D.C. … Not Your Average Joe’s plans to open in Reston Town Center by the end of December and in Silver Spring by the end of the first quarter of 2016 … The Dabney is anticipating a late November opening. Ivy City Smokehouse, from Greg Casten and Ronnie Goodman, is aiming to open by December.

Restaurant News: November 4, 2015

November 5, 2015

Tadich Grill Family Drama Comes to Light

The daughter of one of the owners of San Francisco’s famed Tadich Grill, as well as its newly opened D.C. location, opened up to Washington Post columnist Lonnae O’Neal about being disowned by her family when they found out she was dating a black man.

Terri Upshaw, née Buich, says she met Gene Upshaw, former Oakland Raiders guard and future Hall of Famer and executive director of the National Football League Players’ Association, in 1983 when she was 23. They dated for eight months before he asked her to move with him to Washington, D.C.

She says that when her father found out that she planned to marry Upshaw, “He told me that’s it — you’re out of the family. Change your last name, and don’t ever call us again.” Gene Upshaw died of pancreatic cancer in 2008, but she has not heard from her parents or siblings since 1983 and they have not met her children.

According to O’Neal: “Upshaw, who had never spoken publicly about the rift, says she is telling this story now, in response to a reporter’s query, because with the new restaurant, she is talking more to friends and ‘it sounds archaic,’ she says.”

Following the story, Tadich Grill’s D.C. location was hit with numerous negative reviews on Yelp, many of which have been removed by Yelp as “motivated more by the news coverage itself than by the reviewer’s own customer experience,” according to the site.

Penthouse Restaurant Proposed at 5th and I

Developers of the hotel/apartment hybrid project on the city-owned site at 901 5th St. NW have submitted revised plans. They now propose 175 hotel rooms and 48 apartments, instead of the original 153 rooms and 52 apartments. They are also proposing a bar, cocktail lounge or restaurant in the penthouse area, requiring an exception to the District’s new zoning regulations, which are intended to allow only residential uses in penthouses. The Board of Zoning Adjustment will look at the proposals on Nov. 10. The development group, led by the Peebles Corporation, includes the Walker Group, MacFarlane Partners and Standard Group, with designs by WDG Architecture.

IN: Tail Up Goat

Tail Up Goat, a new Mediterranean restaurant, will open early next year at 1827 Adams Mill Road NW. The venue is the product of Jon Sybert and Bill Jensen, Komi’s former sous chef and wine and beverage director, respectively; Jill Tyler, service director from Little Serow (and Sybert’s spouse); and investor Kevin Doyle. The menu is inspired by southern Italian- and Sicilian-style cooking without being bound to a particular region or tradition. The name of the restaurant comes from a phrase that Sybert and Tyler heard in the Virgin Islands, used to distinguish between herds of grazing animals: Tail up, goat; tail down, sheep.

IN: Korean Spot Coming to 9th Street

A new Korean restaurant is set to open on 9th Street NW. Thievery Corporation’s Eric Hilton and Toki Underground’s Erik Bruner-Yang are the owners.

OUT: DC Coast, Stetson’s — Both Gone After New Year’s

DC Coast Restaurant, a trailblazer in terms of the culinary arts as well as urban renewal, so to speak, will serve its last meal on New Year’s Eve. The restaurant at 1401 K St. NW opened in 1998 as Passion Food Hospitality’s top performer under co-owners Gus DiMillo, Jeff Tunks and David Wizenberg, who decided during lease talks with the building’s owner to shut the place and move on. At the same time, the group said that it plans to revive its Ten Penh Restaurant, which closed at 10th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in 2011, at Tysons Corner in 2016.

Another trailblazing restaurant, Stetson’s at 1610 U St. NW, will close by the end of 2015, according to the Washington, D.C., Eater blog, which added: “The building and the liquor license for the U Street bar has been sold to Douglas Development. Stetson’s team did not have any information about what might replace it (Eater had reached out to Douglas Development when rumors of closing surfaced).” Stetson’s was opened in 1980 by a retired police officer. It was the first Tex-Mex saloon in the nation’s capital and is considered U Street’s oldest neighborhood bar and grill.

Fall Is in the Air at Jardenea

October 26, 2015

true fall menu is a reflection of summer toils, of basking in a fruitful harvest. After speaking to Nate Lindsay, executive chef of Jardenea Restaurant, one has no doubt that he takes the seasonal approach very seriously.

Located in the Melrose Georgetown Hotel, Jardenea is a chic, art-deco-inspired restaurant with a strong focus on local and sustainable dining. Hailing from Florida, Lindsay states that this region is one of the best for showing off a fall menu. With the definitive changing seasons and a “good mix of weather,” the D.C. region calls for a farm-to-fork menu that varies both with the temperature and with the locally available ingredients, from the fresh shoots of spring to bone braises in autumn.

The current fall menu embodies the restaurant’s motto (“The farm is the beginning of the food chain…”), starting with a curried, table-poured pumpkin bisque and a hearty kale salad that features McCutcheon’s mulled-cider vinaigrette. The chef goes on to show off one of his favorites: the seared Hudson Valley foie gras, a dish he admits to always ordering when he finds it on other menus.

Interested in trying out Jardenea’s new fall menu? On Oct. 29, the restaurant is offering a four-course “Autumn Harvest Supper.”

Throughout the evening, each course will feature a dish paired with a wine selection from a Northern Virginia vineyard. Featured dishes include Maple Leaf Farms duck breast with double-smoked bacon and exotic mushroom bread pudding and leek-wrapped beef short rib roulade with sweet potato mousseline, rainbow Swiss chard and Malbec demi-glace.

Jardenea

Melrose Georgetown

2430 Pennsylvania Ave. NW

202-955-6400

melrosehoteldc.com/dining [gallery ids="102332,125779,125774" nav="thumbs"]

Wine: The Form Beyond the Form


“I’m nobody! Who are you?” From poetry’s edge, our senses honed to wine, we move on to the spiritual element of life. We move on to the realm of faith, toward deeper meaning, toward the simple parable, the reduction of vanity.

What do the parables, based on the things we see, mean? How should we interpret and act upon them, to what extent? What questions do they call forth for us, and how could we take these questions seriously?

I think of the form beyond the form of the glass of wine. In a longer lens, the vines grow on a particular place on the spinning globe, receiving life from the rays of the sun that shines upon the earth — the source of the sun itself an important aspect of “that which is.” Call it the divine.

This is what the guy is talking about in Corinthians, that beyond the form of the particular individual, there is that divine reality within ourselves — charitable, long-suffering — that is the form of our own form.

There is “The Grand Inquisitor” scene in Dostoevsky’s “The Brothers Karamazov.” Beyond a sly self-reflective tone that any writer might find familiar, the skeptical interrogator mind is telling the spiritual mind how we’d all be better off with it. This is Ivan, the skeptic brother, talking, feverishly imagining the scene to make his point.

Fortunately for us — else such tomes might never be written — this is followed by another theme. When the youngest brother, Aloysha, views the body of his spiritual elder, Father Zosima, he, too, falls into a dream. Within it, he imagines the Wedding at Cana, the first miracle, of wine, of God’s love (Dostoevsky is careful to point this out) for human joy. Awakening from this dream, Aloysha rises as a fighter. And this is significant.

The passage speaks of the spiritual truth carried within wine, knowledge of a divine love for us, if you will, even such as we are. Wine civilizes the barbarian; it takes the civilized to the next level.

The enjoyment of wine is never far from that basic spiritual context. Wine, whatever the bottle costs, has the same effect. In France, the term for winemaker is vigneron, tender of the vines. The rest happens more or less naturally. I think of humble Eric Bonnet of La Bastide Saint-Dominique in the southern Rhône, growing up around vines, whose wines show that basic good relationship, no egos involved.

Francis came to town, they drove him around in his little Fiat. He met with the poor and children, he visited the White House, he went up to Capitol Hill, he stopped and prayed in venerable churches, he waved to us. The conversational tone of the town changed. The pundits quieted down. He reminded us of the splendor of real humility. Things got real again for a while, and it again became evident: better to serve than be served, and what wine really is all about.

In: Dancing Goats Coffee at Mashburn

October 19, 2015

Dancing Goats Coffee Bar will move into 3206 N St. NW in partnership with Mashburn. The Washington State-based Batdorf & Bronson Coffee Roasters plans to set up shop in November. Mashburn, a clothing store out of Atlanta with a Sid (men’s) and an Ann (women’s) section, will come to 3206 N St. NW, which is part of the Georgetown Court complex and in the former space of Neyla Restaurant and a long-closed Chinese restaurant. The store will stretch from Prospect to N Street. The coffee shop will be on the west side of the store, facing the courtyard. “Think L.L. Bean meets Starbucks,” said a Mashburn architect of its plans last year at a Georgetown-Burleith advisory neighborhood commission meeting.

22rd Annual Taste of Georgetown Wins the Day

October 13, 2015

There was a hurricane coming up the coast, but it moved east. The day was wet and overcast but not really raining —and the wind was coming from the north, not the south. With weather easing up, the 22rd Annual Taste of Georgetown went on as planned, thanks to the Georgetown Business Improvement District, which runs the event. It displayed the chutzpah to go ahead with the popular foodie fest—and got more publicity and perhaps more attendees, as the Taste of Georgetown seemed like the only big outdoor thing going on Saturday, Oct. 3.

Under the Whitehurst Freeway, the gourmet day offered more than 60 tastes from more than 30 Georgetown restaurants as well as a Craft Beer & Wine Garden. The foodie scene was set along K Street, right next to the Georgetown waterfront, between Wisconsin Avenue and Thomas Jefferson Street. And, yes, there was the weather bonus, a “Joaquin” ticket special: six food tickets instead of the usual five for $25.
 
According to the Georgetown BID, the following are the Taste of Georgetown winners—oh, wait, everyone was a winner—as selected by a panel of judges:

Best in Show, 1789 Restaurant;

The Sweetest Sweet, Baked & Wired;

Herbivore’s Dream Dish:  Chaia Tacos;

Carnivore’s Champion Dish:  Clyde’s of Georgetown;

Best Catch from the Sea:  Luke’s Lobster. [gallery ids="102321,126334,126315,126338,126299,126307,126322,126328" nav="thumbs"]

Take a Bite of the 22nd Annual Taste of Georgetown

October 5, 2015

One of Georgetown’s most enduring and popular events is upon us and helps to kick the fall season into gear. The 22nd Annual Taste of Georgetown will be ready for sampling this Saturday, Oct. 3, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The gourmet day offers more than 60 tastes from more than 30 Georgetown restaurants as well as a Craft Beer & Wine Garden. The foodie scene will be set along K Street, right next to the Georgetown waterfront, between Wisconsin Avenue and Thomas Jefferson Street.

Presented and sponsored by the Georgetown Business Improvement District, the Taste of Georgetown was started by Grace Episcopal Church and its rector David Bird, more than 20 years ago, and one of its congregant Robert Egger, who later founded D.C. Central Kitchen. The event benefits the services for the homeless of the Georgetown Ministry Center, which is headquartered at the church.

There was a media tour last week to set the scene with visits to five Georgetown eateries. Food writers sampled the perfectly sweet Olivia Macaron (next to Dean & Deluca on M Street), the about-to-arrive Chaia on Grace Street with locally sourced food for its tacos and juices from Misfit Juicery, the classic Tony and Joe’s Seafood Place (oysters and lobsters, baby, from chef David Stein; fish tacos for the Taste) at Washington Harbour, the almost year-old Chez Billy Sud, with its delicious pastries, sausages or sauteed trout, on 31st Street and the bright Eno Wine Bar, next to the Four Seasons Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue, with easy flights of wine and charcuterie from Stachowski’s and other spots nearby.

With kid attractions and other tables to check out as well, Saturday’s event is free to attend with tickets at $5 for one tasting or $20 for five tastings (online presale only), according to the Georgetown BID. Craft Beer and Wine Garden tickets are $4 for one tasting or $10 for three (also available day-of). Tickets are available onsite at the event for $5 per tasting and $4 per Craft Beer & Wine Garden tasting and will be cash only.

Presale early bird ticket deals are available at www.tasteofgeorgetown.com. Check out the Taste of Georgetown on Facebook as well as using #TasteofGeorgetown across social media. Also, visiting Parking Panda for parking reservations for a discount. For general information on getting to Georgetown, D.C., visit www.georgetowndc.com/gettinghere.

With the Taste of Georgetown, gourmands can get a great sense of each place in a matter of hours. Think of it as an early and long lunch or a very early dinner.
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The Poetry of the Vineyard

September 17, 2015

When I think of wine and what I know about it, I think of the whale. That the whale, the largest of creatures, travels the vastness of the oceans to find sustenance in the smallest is interesting. Her journey through the seas is a continuum of experience. Time passes in the deep.

So is the world of wine to us, vast as an ocean.

My earliest encounter with French culture was the poetic voice of “The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau.” I studied the Celts in history class. I took five years of French in high school, cultural background for an appreciation of French wine. In France, vineyards are sacred groves, protected, tended by man but largely left to nature.
Irrigation here is rare. Vines grow where they belong. France’s ban on fracking leaves the geology of the vineyard undisturbed, preserving the water, the rocks and the hills that make a beautiful wine region like Burgundy what it is. Wine experts pore over contour maps detailing appellations and cross-sections of geology in vibrant colors. Wine nomenclature is all about where the vines grow.

Each taste offers direct enjoyment of all the elements that happen in that particular place in the world where vines grow, the fruit of an entire season. A sip of Champagne excites the sense of taste. Wine stimulates us to experience the plate and the evening before us. This is how wine works, like a walk in the woods, away from secondary experiences, putting us back into nature, transporting us to the vineyard. The reality of wine is its poetry; its poetry is its reality.

Wine presents the opportunity of a gathering. The experience of a glass over dinner opens us up, bringing us together. Customs stand the test of time. Traditions are kept. There is participation, the human element. A longtime customer shows me a menu of his dinner with the Chevaliers du Tastevin preserved from 1964 as we sip from a Clos Vougeot. A hard-working economist arrives at the bar after a long day and I know what to pour him as he raises the menu. From observing such traditions, as a Melvillian anthropologist, I have learned as much about wine as anywhere else.

Summer wanes. The season of true unrushed Provence rosés with light fare, fresh produce, soft-shell crab and salads slows as we enjoy the last of the 2014 vintage at the restaurant. And across the Northern Hemisphere, harvest time of the 2015 vintage approaches, the tannins rising to protect the fruit as it ripens, a new yield of nature’s balance. The pains of summer sunburns pass, into a gentle itch.

But what do I know about wine? I know roughly what I like. That’s why I keep tasting, like the whale, as I weather and pass the seas of life. With that I’ll leave you to it, and bow to the wine expert you have within, fully equipped, ready for your own experiences, in whichever direction you go.

Ted Putala is the author of the novel “A Hero For Our Time.” He writes a blog, D.C. Literary Outsider.

The Latest Dish: September 2, 2015

September 2, 2015

ProFish partners Greg Casten and Tom Lydon plan to open Ivy City Smokehouse across the street from their wholesale seafood business in the emerging Ivy City neighborhood. Ronnie Goodman, the chef who once owned My Brother & Me with his brother Craig in downtown D.C., is smoke-master.

Blueridge Restaurant Groupis opening a second Stanford Grill mid-month in Rockville featuring an on-site bakery and a sushi bar. The restaurant is big, seating 304, which includes 30 at the bar and 34 in the private dining room. The expansive outdoor patio seats 94. It will be open daily for lunch, dinner and Sunday brunch.

Chef/owner Jamie Leeds’ fourth Hank’s Oyster Bar restaurant, Hank’s on the Water, is set to open near the end of 2017 in the huge Southwest development — The Wharf. Her biggest go yet, it will seat 120 seats inside and 60 outside. Her empire continues to expand, as Twisted Horn cocktail bar in Petworth and Hank’s Pasta Bar in Alexandria are also slated for fall openings.

Opening updates: Tadich Grill at 10th and Pennsylvania Avenue NW will open at the end of the month … Succotash at National Harbor will as well … L’Hommage Bistro Francais, from Hakan Ilhan (Pizza Autentica, Al Dente, Alba Osteria), is slated for the beginning of the month at 450 K St NW at Mount Vernon Triangle. It will also include L’Hommage Bakery, which will serve both grab-and-go and made-to-order sandwiches. He’s also working on the Turkish Ottoman Taverna for March 2016.

Quick Hits: Shake Shack is slated to join Matchbox and Sugar Factory at Pentagon Row in Arlington … More SW Wharf news: Mike Isabella and fellow Top Chef alum Jennifer Carroll plan to open a French-Mediterranean seafood restaurant there … Dave & Buster’s plans to open restaurants in Capital Heights and Springfield by year’s end.

The Sovereign, a Belgian beer bar and restaurant will open in Georgetown in the alley where Blue Gin used to be. The 131-seat, two-level bistro is owned and operated by Neighborhood Restaurant Group. NRG beer expert Greg Engert will handle the list and feature 50 drafts and more than 200 bottles from smaller Belgian producers. Executive chef is Peter Smith, formerly of PS 7’s. Opening by end of year.

Just Opened: Mad Fox Tap Room opened in Glover Park where Town Hall was … Alfa Piehouse, serving breakfast and lunch, opened at 1750 H St. NW, in conjunction with high-profile celebrity Greek chef Argiro Barbarigou, author of nine cookbooks and a frequent chef on Greek television. The focus is on savory vegetarian hand pies and a big breakfast menu, including coffee and desserts, and — what else — a classic baklava.

The small San Francisco-based Philz Coffee plans to open some of it’s first shops on the East Coast with one in Adams Morgan and another in the Capitol Riverfront neighborhood, at the corner of 4th and Tingey Streets SE, in early 2016.

Chef & GM Update: Lisa Marie Frantz is the new executive chef of The Majestic Café, at 911 King St. in Old Town Alexandria, appointed by David Clapp and Dave Nichols of Alexandria Restaurant Partners. ARP’s corporate executive chef, Graham Duncan will oversee … Blueridge Restaurant Group picked Chef Sean Kinoshita to head the kitchen at Stanford Grill in Rockville. He used to be executive chef at Tao Asian Bistro in Las Vegas. Swiss pastry and culinary arts chef Christian Haug will be head baker and Patrick Desotelle general manager. He previously worked for Le Diplomate and Jose Andres’ ThinkFoodGroup.

Doron Petersan, will open the vegan Fare Well bakery in the Atlas District at 406 H St. NE in the fall. The two-time Cupcake Wars winner on Food Network also owns Sticky Fingers in Columbia Heights. Fare Well will serve breakfast, lunch and dinner, and have a full liquor license.

Tony Conte plans to open Inferno Pizzeria Napoletana near his home in Gaithersburg, making pizza the same way they do in his ancestral homeland, Naples, Italy. Conte, formerly chef at The Oval Room, has already earned the Vera Pizza Napoletana certification for authentic pizza cooking in a wood-burning oven. The 40-seater is expected to open around Labor Day.

Bar A Vin on 31st


Bar A Vin is scheduled to open in November on 31st Street NW, south of the C&O Canal. The wine bar comes from Ian and Eric Hilton, the duo behind Chez Billy Sud and a number of other successful bars and restaurants in the area. The bar, to be located next door to Chez Billy Sud, will offer a range of French wines and cheeses in addition to beers and cocktails. The space accommodates up to 50 patrons and includes a wraparound bar and a wood-burning fireplace.