Get a Taste of Culture, March 8

June 18, 2013

The Embassy Chef Challenge, held each spring, spotlights D.C.’s international community in one unforgettable evening. The night is Cultural Tourism DC’s annual fundraising benefit, featuring an international tastings, awards, entertainment and a world-class silent auction. Fifteen chefs from Washington, D.C. embassies, representing countries from around the world, compete. A panel of celebrity chefs and food critics serve as judges throughout the competition. The two-part competition begins with a preliminary Top-Chef style challenge. Competitors will receive a basket of surprise ingredients drawn from Danish cuisine and tasked to create a dish on the spot using the ingredients. The second part of the competition is the open tasting where DC’s cultural and diplomatic communities come together to experience the talents of the competitors. The scores from this event are combined with the scores from Challenge Denmark to pick the Judges Choice award winner. Join them on March 8 at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Tickets are $250, but $170 of that is tax deductible.

Time for the Circulator


The District Department of Transportation has scheduled the second semi-annual public forum for the D.C. Circulator to occur on Wednesday, Feb. 29, starting at 7 p.m. at Union Station.

At the forum, DDOT will solicit feedback from passengers on the strengths and weaknesses of the bus system, to ensure the D.C. Circulator continues to meet the needs of current and future riders. Known for its convenient 10-minute headways, the Circulator costs one dollar per ride, with additional discounts for seniors and District students. More information about the routes and schedules is available at DCCirculator.com

District Ranks Highest in Nation for Investments in Biking and Walking


A report issued this month by the Alliance for Biking & Walking gives the District high marks for its commitment to bicycle and pedestrian programs. The report ranks all 50 states and the 51 largest U.S. cities on bicycling and walking levels, safety, funding and other factors. The District topped the list of cities with the highest per-capita funding for cycle and pedestrian facilities and education and spends $9.82 per resident to promote biking and walking.

The Alliance also found that the District has the second-highest share of commuters who walk to work, trailing only Boston, and the seventh-highest share of commuters who bike to work. In addition, only New York City can boast a lower rate of car ownership. More than 35 percent of District households do not own a vehicle.

D.C. also scored well on safety. Among the major cities surveyed, the District has the sixth-lowest fatality rate for cyclists and pedestrians. The nation’s capital is considered the fourth-safest city to bike in and the seventh-safest for walking.

Pay Tribute to Our Past Presidents


The national holiday, Presidents’ Day, was originally a commemoration of George Washington’s birthday. America’s first president was born on Feb. 22, 1732. After George Washington’s death, America began celebrating his birthday as a way to remember his life and how he contributed to establishing America’s independence.

In 1971, President Richard Nixon combined Lincoln’s birthday with Washington’s and ever since we have honored all past presidents on the third Monday of February. On Feb. 20, there will be the grand opening Ford’s Theatre Center for Education and Leadership from 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. This free full day of programming begins with a National Park Service wreath laying at 8:45 a.m. in honor of Lincoln’s birthday. The open house features an author discussion with John Stauffer, ranger talks, performances of Papa Day, Tales of the Lincoln with storyteller Jon Spelman and One Destiny and special Civil War-era music performed by the Washington Revels. Visitors are welcome to see the center’s new exhibits and participate in workshops. Tickets will be available beginning at 8:30 a.m.

Over at the Newseum, “Every Four Years: Presidential Campaigns and the Press” will open just in time for Presidents Day. The exhibit explores how media coverage of presidential campaigns has evolved from William McKinley’s 1896 front-porch campaign to Barack Obama’s 2008 Internet campaign, as candidates and reporters tangle over issues, images and control of the story. The exhibit also features interactive activities and an original video production on televised campaign ads, shown on a 100-foot-wide video screen in the Newseum’s big-screen theater.

Home & Garden, in the Winter


Looking to spruce up your home or complete some last-minute lingering projects? Attend one of the upcoming Spring Washington Home & Garden Shows and meet area experts in home design and renovation, discover the latest developments in green home products and snag cutting-edge creative ideas. The shows showcase hundreds of products and services for your home and garden and include celebrity appearances, entertaining workshops and much more. From March 9 to 11 at the Washington Convention Center, there will be hundreds of displays of products and flowers all in one convenient location. Visit the Garden Marketplace with everything from water lilies to bamboo table fountains to exotic bulbs, orchids, bonsai to cut flowers and garden gizmos. Find everything for kitchens, baths, remodeling, flooring, granite & marble, professional grade appliances and architectural antiques. Hours are Friday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

DC Independent Film Festival coming soon


The Washington, D.C., Independent Film Festival is an award-winning event that showcases more than 100 feature, short, animation and documentary films by local, national and international filmmakers. After each session there is a question-and-answer discussion where top executives from AOL, Discovery Communications, National Geographic and PBS talk answer questions. It also runs in tandem with the entertainment each night. From hip-hop, to an open mike night, to gospel, to the closing night performance by Gibraltar, a North African Band from Algeria and Morocco, performances vary. The festival starts on Feb. 29 and runs until March 4 at the Navy Memorial Heritage Center at 701 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Tickets to film sessions are $10, and seminars are $25 per seminar.

The Eastern Market Experience


You know what this place reminds me of?” spoke a passerby inside Eastern Market’s 19th-century brick building last Saturday, surrounded by specialty food vendors offering everything from meat and poultry, to cheese, baked goods, pastries and flowers. “Florence.”

Outside, amid the produce stalls surrounding the main building, where local farmers come every weekend to sell their seasonal bounty, a woman burst out upon sampling a fresh tomato: “It’s as good as they are in California!”

Behind the North Hall entrance, breakfast and lunch stands sell loaded crepes, fresh mini-donuts and lemonade, gumbo, a variety of flavored pickles and much more. It’s like walking into a food cart consortium in New Orleans. Lines snake about in makeshift fashion, an eclectic maze of all the Federal city’s inhabitants. Families and three-piece suits intermingle with hipsters and seniors, dog-walkers and local teenagers, all generously interspersed with young thirty-something couples.

Eastern Market, among many other apt definitions and descriptions, is a cultural hub for the city and surrounding area. People talk here. A lot. People stroll without agenda through the pleasant but crowded vendor aisles. They laugh easily. They actually sit on public benches and drink coffee. They get caught up in the sensations and hum of this open-air market that is utterly unique to the nation’s capital. Just the scents you experience are enough to tell the story: lavender soaps and handmade candles, lacquered wood and grilled tortillas, peaches, cucumbers, honeycomb, watermelon, roses, lilies, lemons, fried fish.

In this sense, Eastern Market is also as close as modern-day Washington gets to Southern culture, in pace and in attitude. Frequent the market enough, and you will be on a first-name basis with the farmers and food vendors. You will begin to run into other neighborhood regulars, who come to do most of their shopping here—the indoor vendors, who are open every day of the week, together function in the style of a European market, with each independent merchant specializing in a particular good (seafood, meat, cheese, baked goods, etc…).

However you decide to culturally classify Eastern Market, it is a buzz of excitement, community, food, music, art and local flavor. Summer is in full swing, but it will be over before you know it. If you don’t live on Capitol Hill already, pick a weekend morning and discover it again or for the first time. Here are some longtime Market staples and a few great new additions to the Eastern Market family to guide your explorations.

Weekend Farmers’ Line
Surrounding the market in the shade of a covered sidewalk, area farmers empty their trucks of recently harvested produce each weekend. They haul in from Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia with a smorgasbord of fruits, vegetables, homemade jams, local honey, fresh flowers, pies, homemade breads and even specialty spreads (stop by Wisteria Gardens’ stand for a sample of the basil and ginger hummus—made seasonally).

Tony, of Dunham’s Produce stand, holds a plate piled high with chunks of fresh peaches, which passersby pick at joyfully and without much constraint. Every tenth customer or so is so overwhelmed by their flavor that they buy a few—and ten customers come around in no time in an Eastern Market weekend. His farm, based in Berkeley County, W. Va., has come to sell their produce at Eastern Market every weekend for more than 30 years.

“Right now we’re selling peaches, heirloom tomatoes, strawberries, nectarines, watermelon—summer produce,” he says. “When fall comes around, we start selling honey crisp apples and your fall produce. And two days after Thanksgiving, we’re back here selling Christmas trees.”

Tony also let on that West Virginia is a major peach-producing state, with great quality fruit and high yield. We got to stop giving Georgia all the credit.

Just down from Tony, Ma Brown has manned her booth for 33 years and hasn’t forgotten a moment of it. A Brooklyn native, she moved to the District in 1968 and opened her Eastern Market stand in 1979. “I sold ginger beer—and regular beer back then,” she says. “There used to be auctions in the market on weekends, selling antiques and whatever else. And they would send the bidders out to get a drink from me, so they would loosen up and bid higher.”

She now sells a variety of tonics and baked goods—she calls them her “sweet sins.” Her homemade strawberry-ginger lemonade is something everyone should try, and her pecan and pumpkin pies are impossible to beat.

Many of these farmers and vendors have been around just as long as Tony and Ma Brown, and there is a warmth and familiarity about the community that you don’t find very often.

South Hall Market
Much like the Farmers Line outside, it is a combustible drum of activity each weekend—and most weekdays—inside the market. Thirteen vendors hold shop, among them Southern Maryland Seafood, Canales Delicatessen, Market Poultry, Bowers Fancy Dairy Products, and Blue Iris Flowers. A throwback to a different era, within these walls a way of life is preserved that has all but vanished from American cities: the local markets.

If you want meat, go talk to the butcher. Pastries and fresh bread is over at the Fine Sweet Shop. In the South Hall Market, the grocers and shopkeepers are part of the shopping experience.

Blue Iris Flowers is another member of the old guard, an Eastern Market stand that has been in operation for well over 30 years. Angie Brunson, who opened and runs the shop, has a reputation for putting together some of the finest floral arrangements in the area.

Market Lunch, the indoor market’s only restaurant, is another local staple. A favorite breakfast and lunch spot among neighborhood residents, Market Lunch is always bustling at mealtime—the line often wraps around itself (though it moves quickly) and on weekends it can be hard to find a seat at the 20-foot long bar-top table, where patrons sit elbow to elbow to chow down on their tasty American fare. Breakfast favorites include blueberry buckwheat pancakes, and the lunch menu teems with classic East Coast staples, such as fresh fish and oyster sandwiches, soft shell crabs and charbroiled burgers.

Outdoor Eating
On weekends, Market Lunch gets a little friendly competition. The outdoor food stands at the market’s north end are all pretty spectacular. Sweet Nuthouse is a family-owned specialty nut business that has been selling in Eastern Market for several years. Perfect for snacking or gifting, its offerings include Praline Glazed Pecans, Cinnamon Almond Crunch and, during the cooler months, Sweet & Spicy Almonds, all made without preservatives, artificial ingredients, dairy, butter or gluten. At the heart of Sweet Nuthouse’s business is its insistence on freshness. It is quite likely that the nuts you buy at the Market are just a day—or even hours—away from the time that they were made.

For a serious meal, this author’s favorite stop is Puddin’, a stand that cooks up divine comfort food—and regardless of your definition of “comfort food,” it’s hard to argue with how good this food is. Puddin’s chicken and sausage gumbo is the real thing, and its shrimp and grits hit the spot any time of year. But it’s the brown butter bourbon bread pudding that will keep you coming back. Owner Toyin operates Puddin’s food stand on weekends as a branch of her catering business, which sources from local vendors.
Other vendors sell wood-fired pizza, made-to-order fresh donuts, crepes, and an array of delicious and funky pickled pleasures.

There are also a few regular “dine-in” restaurants lining the adjacent street. The Mexican-Salvadoran cuisine at Tortilla Café has a huge cult following—café manager Catalina Canales knows what she is doing. Her pork and cheese pupusas are famously tasty, and her tamales, empanadas and Salvadoran chicken sandwiches are all great bets. The eatery was featured on Food Network’s Diners, Drive-ins and Dives in 2010, where host Guy Fieri said, “You gotta come try this. I’m not kidding you.”

Where All the Books Go
“This is a book store and not a phone booth,” says Jim Toole, owner of Capitol Hill Books, just across the street from the south end of the market. What he means is that he doesn’t allow cell phone conversations in his store. “There are [also] words and phrases that you can’t use in my store: like, oh my God, neat, sweet, have a good one, that’s a good question, totally, whatever, perfect, Kindle or Amazon. These words give me brain damage. I’m serious,” he adds.

If these words resonate with you, for reasons on which I won’t elaborate, Capitol Hill Books is the place for you. A small, unadorned townhouse (save an awning with the shop’s name) sandwiched on a block of converted residential spaces, Capitol Hill Books is crammed from floor to ceiling with more than 20,000 used books from every genre imaginable. Fiction, poetry and the mystery room are upstairs. Art and cooking is in the back. Russian literature is in the bathroom. And so on, in that order.

This cavernous old townhouse is a reader’s quirky paradise. It’s the kind of place where you stumble across an unknown book by an unknown author, sit down to glance at the first couple of pages, and then realize three hours later that you’re late for your lunch appointment. Capitol Hill Books is the best used book store in the city—go there and see for yourself.

There is so much more to Eastern Market than can be understood without being experienced. It is a slobbery dog bumping your leg as you step back to admire a piece of jewelry. It is antiquing, discovering quirky, beautifully handmade and historic furniture, tiles, clothing, sculptures and paintings. It is a scene, a feeling, a spectacle. It is taste, sight, smell and sound. It is conversation, community and friendship. This is where you go on the weekend to take your time, to break distinctly from your work-a-day weekday pace. Eastern Market is just a good place to exist, and there’s nothing else quite like it in Washington, D.C. [gallery ids="100938,129961,129969,129977,129984,129991,129998,130005,130013,129956,129948,129941,130044,130037,129912,130032,130027,129921,129927,129934,130020" nav="thumbs"]

Anacostia Riverwalk Trail Finalized


Four months ago, a $10-million federal grant was issued to build a missing segment of the Anacostia Riverwalk Trail, connecting two jurisdictions. About two weeks ago, the design for the four-mile trail project—called the Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens segment—was unveiled. It includes a paved 10- to 12-foot- wide asphalt and concrete boardwalk sections that meander around trees and wetlands in the Aquatic Gardens and other National Park Service lands, sidewalks through the Mayfair and Parkside communities and raised walkways and five bridges over Anacostia River tributaries as it passes between D.C. and Maryland near U.S. Route 50. The final link will run between Benning Road and Bladensburg Waterfront Park in Maryland, linking the state’s nearly 40-mile trail network throughout the Anacostia River Tributary System to the planned 20-mile Anacostia Riverwalk Trail in D.C.—12 miles of which are already open and heavily used.

Craft Away the Holidays


The Washington Craft Show opens Nov. 16 for all holiday needs. The annual show at the Washington Convention Center runs through Nov. 18 and features a wide variety of contem- porary crafts including metal, leather, basketry, jewelry, ceramics and glass. It is one of the nation’s leading events of contemporary craft, bringing together more than 190 accomplished craft artists, who create timeless works to use, wear and display all year. The show celebrates its 25th anniversary this year, which also hap- pens to be the 50th anniversary of studio art glass in the USA. It’s a juried show, drawing the best work from across the nation. Times go from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and will feature a special exhibit by the Maurine Littleton Gallery of Washington, D.C., to celebrate the 50th anni- versary of Studio Art Glass in America, book signings by professor and author Joan Falconer Byrd, the author of “Harvey K. Littleton: A Life in Glass,” lectures on art, and a fashion show on Nov. 17 at 3 p.m. the work of three dozen designers and jewelry makers.

Nov. 24, Small Biz Saturday


Nov. 24 is Small Business Saturday, a day to pump revenue into local businesses in the D.C area. Partnering organizations include Adams Morgan Partnership BID, Barracks Row Main Street, DC Chamber of Commerce , DC Department of Small and Local Business Development, Georgetown Business Improvement District and H Street Main Street, Inc. Some special events will be taking place in Adams Morgan. At Tryst in Adams Morgan, the restaurant will offer free coffee starting at 10 a.m., a winter fashion show from 11 a.m. to noon on 18th St. NW, wine tasting with the AM Wine Shoppe, live music from noon to 2 p.m. and raffles and giveaways, all in the Adams Morgan neighborhood.