Daily dispatches on the Washington, DC area's food, restaurant and dining scene.
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What's New
Farm food, Southern comfort, and more.
By
Kate Nerenberg
,
Rina Rapuano
Published Friday, November 14, 2008
The new Founding Farmers, three blocks from the White House, is owned by a cooperative of 40,000 farmers who are part of the growing farm-to-table movement. Photograph by Chris Leaman.
Founding Farmers (1924 Pennsylvania Ave., NW; 202-822-8783) is owned by a co-op of 40,000 domestic farmers, whose food translates into portions as big as the restaurant’s two-story concrete interior. Art Smith is an Oprah pal and a James Beard Award winner, and his Southern comfort menu at Art and Soul (415 New Jersey Ave., NW; 202-393-7777) on Capitol Hill is full of big, buttery dishes that stick to your ribs. Order a pork chop and you’ll get two. Washington has never been a town of big, fat, messy sandwiches. Jackson’s Roasting & Carving Co. (933 N. Quincy St., Arlington; 703-312-1073) is bidding to fill that void; the meatloaf is a step in the right direction.
Owner David Winer has reinvented the Latin-fusion Merkado Kitchen as the “honestly priced” Commissary (1443 P St., NW; 202-299-0018), whose name matches the plain-Jane menu if not the upmarket neighborhood. Build-your-own-burger chain the Counter (11922 Democracy Dr., Reston; 703-796-1008), opening this month, claims it offers more than 312,120 permutations of meat, cheese, toppings, sauces, and buns. When 1905 (1905 Ninth St., NW; 202-332-1905) opened in late September, it billed itself as a French-inspired bistro. Since when did crab cakes and biscuits become chic in Paris? The Great American Restaurants group named its 260-seat Jackson’s Mighty Fine Food & Lucky Lounge (11927 Democracy Dr., Reston; 703-437-0800) for Bill Jackson, its late corporate chef. The Coastal Flats–like menu dares to include sushi rolls in a 1940s setting. Al Yeganeh, the infamous “soup Nazi” from Seinfeld, applies his strict rules to every outpost of Original SoupMan (6504 America Blvd., Hyattsville; 301-699-7687), so move to the left after ordering or no soup for you! One of the area’s biggest and best restaurant chains, Lebanese Taverna, has added a sixth location; the 260-seater in Bethesda (7141 Arlington Rd.; 301-951-8681) has the same menu as its siblings. Abdelhak Abdelmoumen has chucked his Taste of Morocco locations in Arlington and Silver Spring and launched Pasha Lounge (644 Center Point Way, Gaithersburg; 301-216-2223), which sticks to a familiar formula: long-simmered cooking and nightly belly dancers. This appeared in the November, 2008 issue of The Washingtonian. Related: Read More First Looks at New Restaurants More>> Best Bites Blog | Food & Dining | Restaurant Finder
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Comments
I am very disappointed in the limitation of choices at Founding Farmers. I ate there before and had such a wonderful meal that I made a reservation for several friends during restaurant week.
Having no choice of appetizer or dessert and limited choice of entree is not a selling menu for restaurant week in my opinion. They usually have such an excellent and varied menu. I am really disappointed and considering canceling the reservation. Has anyone eaten there this week? Impressions?
Posted by: disappointed, Feb 17, 2009 06:06:08 PM
...i second that! i’ve had a breakfast meeting there and i was back last Sunday for brunch that they’ve added because of the demand. on sundays you can get breakfast and/or the full lunch/dinner menu from 10am until 2pm. and the breakfast drinks are amazing.
Posted by: Silvie, Nov 15, 2008 02:21:26 PM
Founding Farmers serves breakfast, and it is AWESOME!
Posted by: Sarah, Nov 14, 2008 12:13:41 PM
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