Food

Dukem’s 24-Hour Breakfast Service Coming Soon?

When a Prince of Petworth reader asked why the Ethiopian restaurant needed 24-hour service, we asked the manager

Dukem’s upstairs lounge, which is for private events. The restaurant hopes to serve breakfast 24 hours. Photo by DJ Photography, courtesy Dukem

The Prince of Petworth posted a reader complaint yesterday about Dukem, one of the mainstay Ethiopian restaurants on U Street, opening a second floor dining room and applying for a 24-hour service license. “Why do they feel the need to be open 24 hours a day?” asks the reader. We checked in with the restaurant to find out.

“There’s no place you can eat breakfast around the clock on U Street,” says Getachew Zewdie, a manager at Dukem. The restaurant is already working on a 24-hour breakfast menu if the permit comes through with dishes similar to those already on the morning menu: kinche (creamy crushed wheat, the Ethiopian equivalent to oatmeal); scrambled eggs with tomato and peppers; and shredded injera tossed with lamb stew. And of course, plenty of coffee.

Dukem is also waiting on a permit for the second floor dining room, which they plan to reserve for private events.

PoP commentators battled it out over what 24-hour breakfast could mean for the neighborhood (noise! crime! heartburn!), but Zewdie says the service isn’t meant to encourage an all-night party.

“After people drink, they need to cool off, and have some coffee, tea, and food to sober them up,” says Zewdie. “I don’t see any problem as long as we don’t serve alcohol.” (There’s no move to extend liquor service, which ends at 2 AM on weekdays and 3 AM Friday and Saturday).

Zewdie says the Ward I Advisory Neighborhood Commission has already approved the extended license, but there’s a hearing on August 22nd with the District’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Board for all objectors before a new permit is granted. If all goes in favor of the Ethiopian restaurant, your 5 AM inerja craving  can be satisfied starting sometime this fall.

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Food Editor

Anna Spiegel covers the dining and drinking scene in her native DC. Prior to joining Washingtonian in 2010, she attended the French Culinary Institute and Columbia University’s MFA program in New York, and held various cooking and writing positions in NYC and in St. John, US Virgin Islands.

Senior editor

Andrew Beaujon joined Washingtonian in late 2014. He was previously with the Poynter Institute, TBD.com, and Washington City Paper. He lives in Del Ray.