I leave Washington, D.C., for good in one week and I wanted to give my dedicated readers something to remember me by. This list in no way seeks to present a comprehensive view of the dining scene in the nation's capital but rather simply my thoughts on some the highs and lows of D.C. restaurants.


- These restaurants always serve exceptional food and are worth a special journey. These restaurants are the equivalent of Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods, watching Star Wars or attending UVA.
There currently are no 4 cutting board restaurants in Washington, D.C. Komi, CityZen and Restaurant Eve are close. CityZen lacks consistency, Restaurant Eve lacks enough creativity (at least in the Bistro, the Tasting Room probably is 4 cutting boards) and Komi is just missing a little something. 4 cutting board status is hard to attain. I personally have eaten at only three such restaurants. 3 1/2 still means it's a great restaurant and is not to be missed.


- These restaurants always serve really good and sometimes exceptional cuisine and are the equivalent of Larry Bird or watching Bill Murray movies. And if you think this is too high for Bill Murray, 3 words: What about Bob.
Komi – Greek influenced, progressive-technique enhanced cuisine. Some of the creations are as good as anything I have ever tasted: goat gyro and “Caesar salad.” It is very close to 4 cutting board status.
CityZen - The cuisine is creative, refined and very tasty. I've had two extraordinary meals there and one good meal. At it's best, it is D.C.'s best restaurant, but it struggles with consistency.
Minibar – D.C.’s temple of molecular gastronomy and the city’s hardest reservation. No other meal in the city is as fun.


- These restaurants consistently serve really good food and are much like Tom Brady or Britney Spears gossip.Zaytinya – Jose Andres’ Penn-Quarter mezze restaurant.
Bar Pilar – Great beer and creative cuisine in the U-Street area
Makoto – The absolute best sushi in city offering a $60 10-course omakase that occasionally can approach the city’s best meals.
Kotobuki – Great sushi at an amazing value in the building above Makoto
Ray’s Hell Burgers – The owner of the area’s best steakhouse also owns the restaurant serving the area’s best hamburgers (Sorry Spike). Prime, dry-aged beef ground daily and cooked perfectly. It doesn’t get much better than that.
Pizzeria Paradiso – D.C.'s best pizza and home of the revelatory Birreria Paradiso.
Moby Dick House of Kabob – Delicious Kabobs and Hummus. One of the city’s best take-out restaurants.
The Liberty Tavern - Clarendon neighborhood restaurant that gets better with every visit.


- These restaurants consistently serve good food but food that rarely approaches exceptionality. Will Smith's movies and basketball career (He played under the pseudonym Big Shot Rob: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Horry) define this category.Bistro Du Coin – Dupont French bistro serving excellent mussels and a delicious hanger steak and fries.
Café St. Ex. – A very good Barish U-Street restaurant focusing on healthy and environmentally friendly ingredients. Excellent grass-fed Hamburger with sweet-potato fries.
Central Michel Richard – Michel Richard’s overrated, but still very good, downtown bistro. The fried chicken and pig’s feet are always satisfying.
Thaiphoon – D.C.’s best Thai restaurant, located in Dupont Circle
Sushi-Ko – A very good sushi restaurant, but more upscale and expensive than Kotobuki.
Acadiana – Upscale Southern cooking done right.
Bistro Bis – High quality French bistro on Capitol Hill.
Café Atlantico – Inventive Latino cuisine which offers near mind-blowing guacamole.
BlackSalt – Palisades seafood emporium and fish market.
Bistro Lepic & Wine Bar – Extremely satisfying classic French restaurant in upper-Georgetown. The cassoulet is an excellent winter dish.
Cashion’s Eat Place – Very good, playful food in Adams Morgan.
- These restaurants often serve food that tastes good, nothing more, nothing less. They could easily be compared to movies (especially recent movies) starring Will Ferrell.Hook – Popular Georgetown fish house. The food is hit and miss.
Chef Geoff’s – Popular D.C. neighborhood restaurant attempting creative cooking.
Palena Café – Great Burger, long waits.
Bangkok Bistro – Very good Thai in Georgetown.
BLT Steak – The steaks are good (not great) and way over-priced. The atmosphere is fun though.
Basil Thai – Easy and good take-out Thai in Georgetown
Bambu – See above but in Palisades
Listrani’s – A great place for take out pizza in Palisades

- These restaurants serve food that is sometimes tasty but usually is merely passable. One could say they are the Kim Kardashian of eateries.Michel Richard Citronelle – Washington, D.C.’s most overrated restaurant, but with the city’s single best dish: the Lobster Burger
Corduroy – The fact that this restaurant has a devoted “foodie” following is simply a sad commentary on that state of D.C. foodie culture.
- These restaurants serve food that is edible only if you are in dire need of sustenance. They are like listening to celebrities who act important and discuss political issues that they know nothing about. I.E. The cheerleader from Heroes putting Hillary Clinton on notice that she was waiting to talk to her before endorsing anyone. I'm sure Hillary was all over that one.Blue Duck Tavern – Poorly prepared cuisine in an atmosphere that tries way too hard to be hip and trendy.
- These restaurants serve food that is inedible. Essentially, they are the restaurant world version of the NBA J.J. Reddick, the education at the University of Maryland or Sinbad (why the hell did people decide he was funny?).Brasserie Beck – An absolute shit-hole of a restaurant. It is very hard for me to find rabbit inedible but somehow this kitchen managed to do it. Plus, all the beer is Belgian: disgusting.
0 Cutting Boards - These restaurants serve shit and are the equivalent of watching movies starring Lindsay Lohan (Freaky Friday notwithstanding) or listening to music by Heidi Montag.
1 comments:
Thank you for reminding us all how pretentious you are one last time before you leave.
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