Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Cuisine "Native" to the District


Kanishka

Recommended Posts

I've never seen Sabrett's for sale in the grocery stores in DC, but there were other brands like Briggs that are widely available. I don't know anything about the carts downtown... don't they boil their dogs? Halfsmokes are meant to be grilled.

Dunno. Until recently I thought they smoked them, but only partially. :raz:

Matt Robinson

Prep for dinner service, prep for life! A Blog

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've never seen Sabrett's for sale in the grocery stores in DC, but there were other brands like Briggs that are widely available. I don't know anything about the carts downtown... don't they boil their dogs? Halfsmokes are meant to be grilled.

Last night I received a care package of Sabrett's purchased at Pentagon City's CostCo/Price Club, however, they're skinless - still yummy!

Yetty CintaS

I am spaghetttti

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I remember half smokes from back in the day. Juicy, flavorful embedded with whole mustard seeds that explode against the tongue like...errr... caviar. :cool:

Are half smokes not found in other cities?

Yetty CintaS

I am spaghetttti

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I remember half smokes from back in the day.  Juicy, flavorful embedded with whole mustard seeds that explode against the tongue like...errr... caviar. :cool:

Are half smokes not found in other cities?

As far as I can tell, where there are dirty-water hotdog carts, there are half smokes.

Matt Robinson

Prep for dinner service, prep for life! A Blog

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The true "Native" cuisine, found here and only here--where it was born and the only locale that supports its woeful existence--is the $25 plate of bad, bad, insultingly inadequate pasta. The argument gains irrefutable support by the fact that so many here claim this as the source of our culinary patrimony and pride.

Like any indigenous species, its nativity is evidenced by its genetic dominance and variance close the source--the horrible $20 plate of pasta, the shockingly bad $35 risotto, the merely miserable $22 gnocchi and the sad, defeated $18 gummy starch of no particular distinction but called "house-made"--and its extended range close to home.

No other foodstuff is the source of such affected local pride, and this particular food item cannot be found elsewhere. The $25 plate of inadequate pasta does not survive elsewhere due to the ease with which it is defeated by its nemesis, the honest, soulfull $15 plate of good, solid pasta, salad included, which sadly is evinced here nowhere since it cannot survive the noxious fumes of pretense and, yes, arrogance, that pervade throughout.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The single greatest pasta dish I ever had in my life was recently served to me at the bar at Galileo. Rocks was a witness. It was a spaghetti Putanesca. It could not have been more perfectly cooked.

The pyramids are beautiful too, and to this day continue to amaze, inspire and delight.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

...and if we cannot agree on a native plate of gummy, then we must agree on a native plate size. Washington has a lot of small plates, it's a little tapastry of everything. Small plates and mini-me versions are ubiquitous. In places you never even expected....

Everywhere, Everywhere, Everywhere...

But we can't stop getting bigger.

Washington, little plates, big people (powerful, politics, public relations)

Edited by morela (log)

...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've never posted, but as a native Washingtonian I've got to weigh in on this one. If you are looking for the local speciality eaten by the most locals (as opposed to the many folks who are just here for a few years), then I have to agree with the City Paper article of a few years ago that narrowed it down to the half smoke and "mambo" sauce. Both are staples in the parts of the city without "gourmet" restaurants and don't seem to exist anywhere else. When my seventh grade students went to NYC last year they were dumfounded when they couldn't get mambo sauce for their wings.

You can't write them off just cause you only get them at carry-outs and hot-dog stands... Philly cheese-steaks and Providence, RI hot wieners aren't exactly down-home family recipes either. As for where to buy half smokes - Eastern market has a wide selection, and you can even get them hot off one of those 7-11 style hot dog rollers.

e.d.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What do people eat at places where go-go dancing happens (one of the only truly native contributions to the, uh, arts to come out of Washington, right?)?

This brings to mind something here in Baltimore that I call the pit beef - porno connection. Where you find one, you will find the other. (With the notable exception of the Block, downtown, it is an outlying area rule.) For a reason that I don't understand, I like thinking about a big construction worker type all hopped up on the sight of nekkid ladies chowing down on a beef sandwich the size of his head. Disturbing yet perfect imagery.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What do people eat at places where go-go dancing happens (one of the only truly native contributions to the, uh, arts to come out of Washington, right?)?

This brings to mind something here in Baltimore that I call the pit beef - porno connection. Where you find one, you will find the other. (With the notable exception of the Block, downtown, it is an outlying area rule.) For a reason that I don't understand, I like thinking about a big construction worker type all hopped up on the sight of nekkid ladies chowing down on a beef sandwich the size of his head. Disturbing yet perfect imagery.

This makes the name of "Club Bunns" on Lexington Street even more frightening.

Edited to say: remove a few words of your choice from the following statement, rearrange them if you like to cheat, and it can be hysterically obscene

a big construction worker type all hopped up on the sight of nekkid ladies chowing down on a beef sandwich the size of his head

Whistling as I work,

Eunny

Edited by eunny jang (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 years later...

OK, here's a challenge.

Every year I take my French colleagues out to lunch during our professional meeting and then they treat me in France the whole rest of the year (not a bad deal, eh?) I try to show them food they cannot get in the hexagon and that is typical of the region - Cajun in New Orleans, Crabs in Baltimore, Mexican in San Diego, Soul in Atlanta, hot dogs in Chicago, etc.

However, I'm stumped when it comes to thinking about a cuisine that is DC's own; reading several topics and my own preferences (Cafe Atlantico, Les Halles, Red Sage, Lebanese Taverna, etc., reveals that DC is really international, but they can get all that back home, except maybe great Mexican and Peruvian chicken.

So what is DC cuisine and where do we get it (reasonably)?

Thanks.

John Talbott

blog John Talbott's Paris

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is a question that has often been asked and debated and I think it's essentially the wrong question.

DC was -- until earlier this century -- was a modest-sized city (half the size of Baltimore) in the middle of a sleepy little region. Rather than drawing unskilled workers drawn to the employment possibilities of local industry and supported by welcoming immigrant communities, we drew random clerks, scientists, curators and soldiers who intermingled and intermarried, leaving us with a kind of a homogenized bourgeois mix that didn't have the clout to put any particular ethnic stamp on the culinary scene or any single tradition to define it. And it was hardly the kind of city -- like Paris or New York -- to draw famed chefs who might perfect some variation of haute cuisine.

DC shouldn't really be thought of as a distinct spot. Culinarily-speaking, it's where the Chesapeake Bay meets the Shenadoah Vally and the Great Migration, which makes it mostly the south, with a side of fish. Ham, soul food, oysters and crabs, anything with the extraordinary fruit that Virginia and Pennsylvania produce....it's a great mix. Unfortunately, it's a mix more easily enjoyed by farmers market shoppers and fish-market customers than expense account diners in fancy restaurants.

I think Vidalia has been doing a good job capturing that mix, in an upscale sort of way (I had truffle on macaroni and cheese last time I was there). The Hitching Post serves up fired chicken, greens and the like and has a great soul/jazz jukebox, but service can be trying -- it's run by an older woman who does all the cooking herself. Georgia Brown's has a decidedly mixed reputation. The Florida Avenue Grill is essentially a diner; some say it's lost a step.

And, of course, if we mostly missed out on the "old wave" immigrants -- and what was left of Chinatown -- we have some excellent Ethiopian food and a number of small Salvadoran places.. Not fine dining, but often quite tasty.

I'm on the pavement

Thinking about the government.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is a question that has often been asked and debated and I think it's essentially the wrong question.
For which I apologize.
...DC shouldn't really be thought of as a distinct spot.  Culinarily-speaking, it's where the Chesapeake Bay meets the Shenadoah Vally and the Great Migration, which makes it mostly the south, with a side of fish.  Ham, soul food, oysters and crabs, anything with the extraordinary fruit that Virginia and Pennsylvania produce....it's a great mix.
So how about a place that say, specializes in Virginia ham, like we have in Pomze, Rouge Tomate, Coco & Co, JGo + Meating which respectively focus on Apples, Tomatoes, Eggs, Lamb and Beef? Not all great but not bad either.

John Talbott

blog John Talbott's Paris

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is a question that has often been asked and debated and I think it's essentially the wrong question.
For which I apologize.
...DC shouldn't really be thought of as a distinct spot.  Culinarily-speaking, it's where the Chesapeake Bay meets the Shenadoah Vally and the Great Migration, which makes it mostly the south, with a side of fish.  Ham, soul food, oysters and crabs, anything with the extraordinary fruit that Virginia and Pennsylvania produce....it's a great mix.
So how about a place that say, specializes in Virginia ham, like we have in Pomze, Rouge Tomate, Coco & Co, JGo + Meating which respectively focus on Apples, Tomatoes, Eggs, Lamb and Beef? Not all great but not bad either.

A local specialty is shad roe, which is in season now. Oceanaire Seafood Restaurant is serving it up now:

Shad at The Oceanaire Seafood Room

Shad began to make its first appearance in early February and diners can enjoy this classic East Coast favorite at The Oceanaire Seafood Room from now until the end of the season, which will probably run until May. Executive chef Rob Klink has created pan-fried shad and shad roe with crisped bacon, asparagus and citrus beurre blanc, for $29. Guests can also order just the roe for $28 or just the fish for $25. The Oceanaire Seafood Room, 1201 F St. NW, Washington, DC, 202-347-BASS.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Busboy is right that there is no local cuisine to speak of. But shad roe is a local seasonal speciality that is just coming into season; when the shad start to spawn. In additioin to Oceanaire (which is a chain), I would check the menus at Vidalia and Bistro Bis to see if it is available.

Edited by mnebergall (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

There is nothing more uniquely DC than a half-smoke from Ben's Chili Bowl. For sure, a different level of sophistication than some of the other recommendations. Guess it depends on what you can get away with, colleague wise. It could be a lot of fun. And definitely, reasonable in price.

Edited by Holly Moore (log)

Holly Moore

"I eat, therefore I am."

HollyEats.Com

Twitter

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK, here's a challenge.

Every year I take my French colleagues out to lunch during our professional meeting and then they treat me in France the whole rest of the year (not a bad deal, eh?)  I try to show them food they cannot get in the hexagon and that is typical of the region - Cajun in New Orleans, Crabs in Baltimore, Mexican in San Diego, Soul in Atlanta, hot dogs in Chicago, etc.

However, I'm stumped when it comes to thinking about a cuisine that is DC's own; reading several topics and my own preferences (Cafe Atlantico, Les Halles, Red Sage, Lebanese Taverna, etc., reveals that DC is really international, but they can get all that back home, except maybe great Mexican and Peruvian chicken.

So what is DC cuisine and where do we get it (reasonably)?

Thanks.

John,

I have lived here and worked in the fine dining business for 30 years. I read all the responses after yours yesterday and confidently say that they are all wrong. There is no indiginous cuisine here that is unique to DC. Crappy, greasy half-smokes are available in every direction for hundred of miles. Shad and shad roe are a greater Chesapeake-James River specialty and are enjoyed in Richmond and Baltimore, too. Washington has changed so much and so often in the past 50 years that it's impossible to say what local cooking is about. The only consideration anymore when dining out in DC is : is the food edible and the service half good? Sorry to sound so negative. The local eatery that satisfies your criteria: Old Glory in Georgetown. Chinatown has some good places but is scary at the same time. Go to Peru for Peruvian chicken, please.

Mark

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...